Pharmaceuticals (May 2024)

Discovery and Anticancer Screening of Novel Oxindole-Based Derivative Bearing Pyridyl Group as Potent and Selective Dual FLT3/CDK2 Kinase Inhibitor

  • Aya Soudi,
  • Onur Bender,
  • Ismail Celik,
  • Amer Ali Abd El-Hafeez,
  • Rumeysa Dogan,
  • Arzu Atalay,
  • Eslam B. Elkaeed,
  • Aisha A. Alsfouk,
  • Elshimaa M. N. Abdelhafez,
  • Omar M. Aly,
  • Wolfgang Sippl,
  • Taha F. S. Ali

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ph17050659
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 5
p. 659

Abstract

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Protein kinases regulate cellular activities and make up over 60% of oncoproteins and proto-oncoproteins. Among these kinases, FLT3 is a member of class III receptor tyrosine kinase family which is abundantly expressed in individuals with acute leukemia. Our previous oxindole-based hit has a particular affinity toward FLT3 (IC50 = 2.49 μM) and has demonstrated selectivity towards FLT3 ITD-mutated MV4-11 AML cells, with an IC50 of 4.3 μM. By utilizing the scaffold of the previous hit, sixteen new compounds were synthesized and screened against NCI-60 human cancer cell lines. This leads to the discovery of a potent antiproliferative compound, namely 5l, with an average GI50 value against leukemia and colon cancer subpanels equalling 3.39 and 5.97 µM, respectively. Screening against a specific set of 10 kinases that are associated with carcinogenesis indicates that compound 5l has a potent FLT3 inhibition (IC50 = 36.21 ± 1.07 nM). Remarkably, compound 5l was three times more effective as a CDK2 inhibitor (IC50 = 8.17 ± 0.32 nM) compared to sunitinib (IC50 = 27.90 ± 1.80 nM). Compound 5l was further analyzed by means of docking and molecular dynamics simulation for CDK2 and FLT3 active sites which provided a rational for the observed strong inhibition of kinases. These results suggest a novel structural scaffold candidate that simultaneously inhibits CDK2 and FLT3 and gives encouragement for further development as a potential therapeutic for leukemia and colon cancer.

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