Combating acquired drug resistance of EGFR tyrosine kinase (TK) is a great challenge and an urgent necessity in the management of non-small cell lung cancers. The advanced EGFR (L858R/T790M/C797S) triple mutation has been recently reported, and there have been no specific drugs approved for this strain. Therefore, our research aimed to search for effective agents that could impede the function of EGFR (L858R/T790M/C797S) TK by the integration of in silico and in vitro approaches. Our in-house quinoxalinone-containing compounds were screened through molecular docking and their biological activity was then verified by enzyme- and cell-based assay. We found that the four quinoxalinone-containing compounds including CPD4, CPD15, CPD16, and CPD21 were promising to be novel EGFR (L858R/T790M/C797S) TK inhibitors. The IC50 values measured by the enzyme-based assay were 3.04 ± 1.24 nM; 6.50 ± 3.02 nM,10.50 ± 1.10 nM; and 3.81 ± 1.80 nM, respectively, which are at a similar level to a reference drug; osimertinib (8.93 ± 3.01 nM). Besides that, they displayed cytotoxic effects on a lung cancer cell line (H1975) with IC50 values in the range of 3.47 to 79.43 μM. In this proposed study, we found that all screened compounds could interact with M793 at the hinge regions and two mutated residues including M790 and S797; which may be the main reason supporting the inhibitory activity in vitro. The structural dynamics revealed that the screened compounds have sufficient non-native contacts with surrounding amino acids and could be well-buried in the binding site's cleft. In addition, all predicted physicochemical parameters were favorable to be drug-like based on Lipinski's rule of five, and no extreme violation of toxicity features was found. Altogether, this study proposes a novel EGFR (L858R/T790M/C797S) TK inhibitor scaffold and provides a detailed understanding of compounds' recognition and susceptibility at the molecular level.
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