Abstract

The detailed theoretical and experimental (FT-IR, FT-Raman, UV-visible) spectroscopy analyses of the Ethyl Coumarin-3-Carboxylate (ECC) molecule were carried out. The ECC compound’s pharmacological properties were also investigated, utilizing antibacterial and anticancer activity investigations. Initially, the ECC molecule was optimized by the density functional theory B3LYP method with a 6-311 G++ (d,p) basis set using the Gaussian 09 W program. The optimized molecular structure provides the harmonic vibrational frequencies of the ECC molecule. The observed and computed vibrational wavenumbers were assigned and found to be well correlated. UV-Vis absorption spectrum analysis indicates that the molecule contains π →π* and n → π* electronic transitions. The Frontier molecular orbital analysis confirmed the molecular reactivity and bioactivity of ECC, while the Mulliken atomic charge distribution analysis pinpointed the molecule’s reactive sites. Antibacterial testing demonstrated the ECC compound’s inhibitory effect on various bacterial strains, with a particular impact on Klebsiella pneumonia. In vitro, anticancer assessments showcased ECC's stronger inhibitory effects on A549 lung cancer cell lines compared to HeLa cervical cancer cell lines. Additionally, in silico molecular docking investigations provided further validation that the ECC compound can inhibit the function of the epidermal growth factor receptor, a factor associated with lung cancer. As a result, this study lays the foundation for the development of novel drugs for lung cancer treatment.

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