A new series of antiproliferative casein kinase 2a (CK2a) inhibitors were synthesized incorporating either a hydrophilic group (carboxylic or hydrazide) or a hydrophobic group (ester) at N1 or N2 of 4,5,6,7-tetrabromobenzotriazole (TBBt). New compounds were prepared via N-alkylation of TBBt followed by base-catalysed hydrolysis or hydrazinolysis. All the compounds demonstrated low sub-micromolar inhibition of CK2a and antiproliferative activity against both breast and lung cancer cell lines (MCF-7, and A549, respectively), at low micromolar concentrations with N2-regioisomers exhibiting higher activity than their corresponding N1-isomers. The most active compound incorporates an acetic acid hydrazide moiety at the N2 of the TBBt triazole nucleus with IC50 at 0.131 mM (CK2a), 9.1 mM (MCF-7) and 6.3 mM (A549). It induced apoptosis in the MCF-7 cell line through upregulation of bax (pro-apoptotic gene) four to five times higher than the corresponding ester or acid analogues. Molecular docking suggests that the hydrophilic group at N2 of the TBBt triazole nucleus provides binding with important residues (Asp175, Lys68 and Trp176) in the ATP binding site of the CK2a enzyme. We are the first to experimentally estimate the lipophilicity of TBBt derivatives. Our study demonstrated that TBBt hydrazides are more lipophilic than their corresponding acids in contrast to the contradicting calculated lipophilicity using four well-known software programs. This may explain the higher anticancer activity of the most active hydrazide over its corresponding acid despite their nearly equipotent enzyme inhibition.
Research Department	
              
          Research Journal	
              New J. Chem.
          Research Publisher	
              Royal Society of Chemistry
          Research Rank	
              1
          Research Vol	
              44 (30)
          Research Website	
              https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2020/NJ/D0NJ01194K#!divAbstract
          Research Year	
              2020
          Research Member	
          
      Research Abstract