Abderrahim Diane , Salima Ben Tahar , Abdennacer El Mrabet , Reda Rabie , Taoufiq Saffaj , Bouchaib Ihssane
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Targeting cancer cells through drug-based treatment or combination therapy protocols involving chemical compounds can be challenging due to multiple factors, including their resistance to bioactive compounds and the potential of drugs to damage healthy cells. This study aims to investigate the relationship between the structure of novel sulfur-containing shikonin oxime compounds and the corresponding cytotoxicity against four cancer types, namely colon, gastric, liver, and breast cancers, through computational chemistry tools. This investigation is suggested to help build insights into how the structure of the compounds influences their activity and understand the mechanisms behind it and subsequently might be used in multi-cancer drug design process to propose novel optimized compounds that potentially exhibit the desired activity. The findings showed that the cytotoxic activity against the four cancer types was accurately predictable (R2 > 0.7, NRMSE <20%) by a combination of search and machine learning algorithms, based on the information on the structure of the compounds, including their lipophilicity, surface area, and volume. Overall, this study is supposed to play a crucial role in effective multi-cancer drug design in cancer research areas.
期刊介绍:
Toxicology in Vitro publishes original research papers and reviews on the application and use of in vitro systems for assessing or predicting the toxic effects of chemicals and elucidating their mechanisms of action. These in vitro techniques include utilizing cell or tissue cultures, isolated cells, tissue slices, subcellular fractions, transgenic cell cultures, and cells from transgenic organisms, as well as in silico modelling. The Journal will focus on investigations that involve the development and validation of new in vitro methods, e.g. for prediction of toxic effects based on traditional and in silico modelling; on the use of methods in high-throughput toxicology and pharmacology; elucidation of mechanisms of toxic action; the application of genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics in toxicology, as well as on comparative studies that characterise the relationship between in vitro and in vivo findings. The Journal strongly encourages the submission of manuscripts that focus on the development of in vitro methods, their practical applications and regulatory use (e.g. in the areas of food components cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, and industrial chemicals). Toxicology in Vitro discourages papers that record reporting on toxicological effects from materials, such as plant extracts or herbal medicines, that have not been chemically characterized.