4.5 Article

An orally antitumor chalcone hybrid inhibited HepG2 cells growth and migration as the tubulin binding agent

Journal

INVESTIGATIONAL NEW DRUGS
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 784-790

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10637-019-00737-z

Keywords

Chalcone; Liver cancer; Cell growth; Migration; Tubulin

Funding

  1. fund of The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University

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Liver cancer is a kind of high mortality cancer due to the difficulty of early diagnosis. It is necessary to develop the anticancer agents to treat liver cancer. Here, a novel chalcone derivative was synthesized and evaluated for anticancer activity in vitro against liver cancer cell lines (HepG2, SNU-423, SMMC7221, and SNU-398). The chalcone hybrid 9 displayed the antiproliferative effect against HepG2, SNU-423, SMMC7221 and SNU-398 cells with IC50 values of 0.9 mu M, 2.7 mu M, 6.2 mu M and 4.6 mu M, respectively. Cellular mechanisms showed that derivative 9 could obviously inhibit HepG2 cells growth and colony formation in a concentration-dependent manner. Analogue 9 inhibited the migration by regulating the expression levels of migration-releated markers and transcription factors (Snail and Slug). Tubulin polymerization inhibition assay illustrated that chalcone hybrid 9 might be a potent tubulin polymerization inhibitor. Importantly, compound 9 displayed the antitumor activity against liver cancer HepG2 cells in vivo with the low toxicity toward mice. Therefore, compound 9 as a novel tubulin polymerization inhibitor deserves further investigation to treat liver cancer.

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