Abstract

The crucial role of the microtubule in cell division has identified tubulin as a target for the development of therapeutics for cancer; in particular, tubulin is a target for antineoplastic agents that act by interfering with the dynamic stability of microtubules. A molecular modeling study was carried out to accurately represent the complex structure and the binding mode of a new class of stilbene-based tubulin inhibitors that bind at the αβ-tubulin colchicine site. Computational docking along with HINT (Hydropathic INTeractions) score analysis fitted these inhibitors into the colchicine site and revealed detailed structure–activity information useful for inhibitor design. Quantitative analysis of the results was in good agreement with the in vitro antiproliferative activity of these derivatives (ranging from 3 nM to 100 μM) such that calculated and measured free energies of binding correlate with an r2 of 0.89 (standard error ± 0.85 kcal mol−1). This correlation suggests that the activity of unknown compounds may be predicted.

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