Synthesis of Carvacrol Derivatives as Potential New Anticancer Agent against Lung Cancer
Abstract
Lung cancer remains a major public health concern among all cancer diseases due to the
toxicity and side-effects of the available commercially synthesized drugs. Natural product-derived
synthesized anticancer drugs are now of promising interest to fight against cancer death. Carvacrol
is a major component of most essential oil-bearing plants with potential pharmacological activity,
especially against various cancer cell lines. Among the other organometallic compounds, copper
complexes have been reported to be effective anticancer agents against various cancer cell lines,
especially lung and leukemia cancers, due to the nontoxic nature of copper in normal cells since
it is an endogenic metal. In this study, we synthesized three carvacrol derivatives, i.e., carvacrol
aldehyde, Schiff base, and copper–Schiff base complex, through an established synthesis protocol
and characterized the synthesized product using various spectroscopic techniques. The synthesized
derivatives were evaluated for in vitro cytotoxic activity against different cancer cell lines, including
human lung cancer (A549) and human fibroblast (BALB-3T3). Our findings showed that the copper–
Schiff base complex derived from carvacrol inhibited the proliferation and migration of the A549 cell
lines in a dose-dependent manner. This activity might be due to the inhibition of cell proliferation
and migration at the G2/M cell-cycle phase, as well as apoptosis, possibly through the activation
of the mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the activity
of the copper–Schiff base complex of carvacrol against A549 cell lines. Our result highlights that a
new synthesized copper complex from carvacrol could be a novel potential drug in the treatment of
lung cancer.
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