Abstract

Background: Chemotherapeutic medication treatment for cancer is typically used in conjunction with other techniques as part of a routine regimen. It is well established that the capacity of different chemotherapeutic drugs to induce apoptosis is correlated with their anticancer efficacy. Quinazolinone-based drugs have demonstrated excellent responses from several cancer cell types. These substances have a lot of potential for use as building blocks in the creation of apoptosis inducers. Objective: To assess the new quinazolinone derivatives (M1 and M2) that were recently synthesized for their potential to halt wound healing and to use the acridine orange/propidium iodide (AO/PI) double stain to assess their capacity to induce apoptosis in the chosen cancer cell lines. Methods: Using the breast carcinoma cell line (MCF-7) and the lung adenocarcinoma cell line (A549), two quinazolinone derivatives (M1 and M2) were investigated for their capacity to inhibit wound healing and induce apoptosis. Results: In both cell lines, the chemicals were found to be effective inducers of apoptosis and to considerably limit wound healing. Conclusions: In cancer cell lines (MCF-7 and A549), compounds M1 and M2 efficiently inhibited wound repair and triggered apoptosis.

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