Benzo[b]thiophenesulfonamide 1,1-dioxide derivatives (BTS) were described as candidate antineoplastic drugs. In the hope of finding new compounds with improved antitumour activity and reduced toxicity, we have designed and synthesized a small series of benzo[b]thiophene-6-carboxamide 1,1-dioxide derivatives (BTC) structurally related with the best reported BTS. Growth inhibition of HTB-54, CCRF-CEM and HeLa tumour cells lines at nanomolar concentrations was exhibited by some of the BTC. Hydrophobic substituents on the carboxamide group increased cytotoxicity but substitution by a hydroxy group diminished it, thus pointing to the electronic density on benzo[b]thiophene nucleus as a determinant factor. The process of cell death induced by BTC derivatives was further analyzed in CCRF-CEM cells, where these compounds induced apoptosis in a time and dose-dependent manner and cell cycle arrest at S phase. BTC derivatives also induced a significant increase in intracellular ROS levels in this cell line. Previous treatment of the cells with the antioxidant N-acetyl-cysteine abrogated the induction of apoptosis by BTC indicating that ROS generation is a previous event required to trigger the BTC induced apoptotic process.
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