Chroman-4-one scaffolds as a platform for anticancer and antiviral lead discovery
Oleksii S. Timokhin, Viktoriia S. Moskvina, Olexandr V. Kucher, Kathy A. Keith, Emma A. Harden, Caroll B. Hartline, Scott H. James, Volodymyr S. BrovaretsChroman-4-one derivatives, a class of oxygen-containing heterocycles commonly found in biologically active natural products, continue to attract significant attention for their potential in anticancer and antiviral drug discovery. In this study, a small library of eight chroman-4-one compounds was synthesized via Kabbe condensation and screened for antiproliferative activity against the NCI-60 human cancer cell line panel. Most compounds demonstrated low cytotoxicity at a concentration of 10 μM; however, several derivatives exhibited selective growth-inhibitory effects against specific tumor cell lines, including non-small cell lung cancer and melanoma. In parallel, 7-hydroxyspiro[chromane-2,1'-cyclohexan]-4-one (compound 6) was evaluated for antiviral activity against a panel of DNA and RNA viruses. While it showed no significant activity against RNA viruses such as herpesviruses, it demonstrated selective antiviral activity against HPV-11 (EC50 = 3.35 µM, SI50 >45) and moderate activity against BK virus (EC50 = 15.88 µM, SI50 >9), with low associated cytotoxicity. These findings support the chroman-4-one scaffold as a promising chemotype for the development of biologically active agents and identify compound 6 as a preliminary lead for further investigation of its antiviral potential