Uses of ethyl benzoylacetate for the synthesis of thiophene, thiazole, pyridine, and pyran derivatives with antitumor activities

7Citations
Citations of this article
3Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

The reaction of ethyl benzoylacetate with malononitrile in an oil bath at 120°C gave the condensation product 3. The latter compound underwent a series of heterocyclization to give thiophene, thiazole, pyridine, and pyran derivatives. The structures of the synthesized products were established on the basis of analytical and spectral data. The antitumor evaluation of the newly synthesized products against the six cancer cell lines namely human gastric cancer (NUGC and HR), human colon cancer (DLD1), human liver cancer (HA22T and HEPG2), human breast cancer (MCF), nasopharyngeal carcinoma (HONE1), and normal fibroblast cells (WI38) indicated that many compounds expressed high inhibition against the six cancer cell lines. Compounds 3, 8a, 8c, 14b, 16b, 16c, 16d, 19a, 19b, 20a, 22a, 27b, and 28a were the most cytotoxic compounds among the tested compounds.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Mohareb, R. M., & Mostafa, B. M. (2020). Uses of ethyl benzoylacetate for the synthesis of thiophene, thiazole, pyridine, and pyran derivatives with antitumor activities. Journal of Heterocyclic Chemistry, 57(3), 1275–1290. https://doi.org/10.1002/jhet.3865

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free