Biomedicines (Jan 2023)

Nano-Zirconium Dioxide Catalyzed Multicomponent Synthesis of Bioactive Pyranopyrazoles That Target Cyclin Dependent Kinase 1 in Human Breast Cancer Cells

  • Basappa Basappa,
  • Lisha K. Poonacha,
  • Zhang Xi,
  • Divakar Vishwanath,
  • Ji-Rui Yang,
  • Omantheswara Nagaraja,
  • Ananda Swamynayaka,
  • Mahendra Madegowda,
  • Arunachalam Chinnathambi,
  • Sulaiman Ali Alharbi,
  • Doddahosuru Mahadevappa Gurudatt,
  • Vijay Pandey,
  • Nanjundaswamy Shivananju,
  • Kwang Seok Ahn,
  • Gautam Sethi,
  • Peter E. Lobie,
  • Priya Babu Shubha

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11010172
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 172

Abstract

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Small molecules are being used to inhibit cyclin dependent kinase (CDK) enzymes in cancer treatment. There is evidence that CDK is a drug-target for cancer therapy across many tumor types because it catalyzes the transfer of the terminal phosphate of ATP to a protein that acts as a substrate. Herein, the identification of pyranopyrazoles that were CDK inhibitors was attempted, whose synthesis was catalyzed by nano-zirconium dioxide via multicomponent reaction. Additionally, we performed an in-situ analysis of the intermediates of multicomponent reactions, for the first-time, which revealed that nano-zirconium dioxide stimulated the reaction, as estimated by Gibbs free energy calculations of spontaneity. Functionally, the novel pyranopyrazoles were tested for a loss of cell viability using human breast cancer cells (MCF-7). It was observed that compounds 5b and 5f effectively produced loss of viability of MCF-7 cells with IC50 values of 17.83 and 23.79 µM, respectively. In vitro and in silico mode-of-action studies showed that pyranopyrazoles target CDK1 in human breast cancer cells, with lead compounds 5b and 5f having potent IC50 values of 960 nM and 7.16 μM, respectively. Hence, the newly synthesized bioactive pyranopyrazoles could serve as better structures to develop CDK1 inhibitors against human breast cancer cells.

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