Design, synthesis, in silico molecular docking, and ADMET studies of quinoxaline-isoxazole-piperazine conjugates as EGFR-targeting agents

CHEMICAL BIOLOGY & DRUG DESIGN(2024)

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Abstract
In this paper, we report the synthesis of quinoxaline-isoxazole-piperazine conjugates. The anticancer activity was evaluated against three human cancer cell lines, including MCF-7 (breast), HepG-2 (liver), and HCT-116 (colorectal). The outcomes of the tested compounds 5d, 5e, and 5f have shown more potent activity when compared to the standard drug erlotinib. In a cell survivability test (MCF-10A), three potent compounds (5d, 5e, and 5f) were evaluated against the normal breast cell line, although neither of them displayed any significant cytotoxicity with IC50 values greater than 84 mu M. Furthermore, the compounds 5d, 5e, and 5f were tested for tyrosine kinase EGFR inhibitory action using erlotinib as the reference drug and compound 5e was shown to be more potent in inhibiting the tyrosine kinase EGFR than sorafenib. In addition to this, molecular docking studies of compounds 5d, 5e, and 5f demonstrated that these compounds had more EGFR-binding interactions. The potent compounds 5d, 5e, and 5f were subjected to in silico pharmacokinetic assessment by SWISS, ADME, and pkCSM. While the compounds 5d, 5e, and 5f followed Lipinski, Veber, Egan, and Muegge rules without any deviation.
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Key words
in vitro anticancer,molecular docking,quinoxaline-isoxazole-piperazine conjugates,SARs and ADMET studies,tyrosine kinase EGFR inhibitory activity
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