5961-83-1Relevant articles and documents
BIFUNCTIONAL COMPOUNDS FOR DEGRADING BTK VIA UBIQUITIN PROTEOSOME PATHWAY
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Paragraph 0618-0619, (2021/05/15)
The present invention relates to compounds of formula (I) useful for degrading BTK via a ubiquitin proteolytic pathway. The invention also provides pharmaceutically acceptable compositions comprising said compounds and methods of using the compositions in the treatment of various disease, conditions, or disorders.
METHOD OF DETECTION OF ANALYTE ACTIVE FORMS AND DETERMINATION OF THE ABILITY OF SUBSTANCES TO BIND INTO ANALYTE ACTIVE SITES
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Page/Page column 42, (2016/04/09)
The invention provides a method for detection of active form of analytes in a sample and/or for determination of ability of tested substances to bind to the active site of these analytes, comprising the following steps: a) analyte or group of analytes from the sample is immobilized on the surface of a solid carrier either by non-specific non-covalent adsorption or by covalent binding of surface functional groups of the analyte and corresponding functional groups of the solid carrier, or preferably via a binding molecule which is bound to the surface of the solid carrier before immobilization of the analyte or group of analytes and is capable of selectively binding the analyte or group of analytes contained in the sample during incubation of the solid carrier with the sample; b) analyte or group of analytes is incubated with a detection probe which binds selectively to the analyte or group of analytes via a compound for selective binding to the analyte active site; whereas the probe consists of a low molecular compound for selective binding to the analyte active site; an oligonucleotide tag, optionally with a covalently attached fluorophore, biotin or a chemical group, and a chemical linker covalently linking the compound for selective binding to the analyte active site and the oligonucleotide tag; c) then the solid carrier is washed to remove unbound detection probe; and subsequently, the amount of bound detection probe is determined, whereas this amount is directly proportional to the amount of the analyte or group of analytes in the sample. The described method has broad application in medicine. Given the exceptional sensitivity of only a few dozen molecules, it provides the ability to determine the protein markers in blood in a concentration yet undetectable.
Synthesis of branched cores by poly-O-alkylation reaction under phase transfer conditions. A systematic study
Landeros, José M.,Silvestre, Hugo A.,Guadarrama, Patricia
, p. 412 - 419 (2013/04/23)
In the present paper is described a systematic study of poly-O-alkylation reactions of pentaerythritol (PE) and 1,1,1-tris(hydroxymethyl)ethane (TME) by 1,4 Michael addition, under phase transfer catalysis (PTC), considering the effect of: (1) the organophilicity of PTC (three different catalysts were tested), (2) PTC concentration (from catalytic to equimolar conditions), and (3) the regime of addition of reactants coexisting in the aqueous phase of the heterogeneous reaction system. The less organophilic transfer agent showed the best performance on these reactions. In our case, benzyltriethylammonium chloride (TEBAC) gathers the best features. The presence of NaOH as base, promotes the interfacial mechanism and not the bulk one. Out of the optimal range of concentration of NaOH (35-40%), competition between nucleophiles can occur, due to the saturation of the medium. Regarding the regime of addition of reactants, the scenario where NaOH and TEBAC are less time in contact, favors the formation of the desired products. Finally, the deprotection of tert-butyl groups of the poly-O-alkylated compounds is described, to get branched cores with terminal carboxylic acid groups in good yields (90-94%). Spectroscopic properties, such as IR, 1H and 13C NMR, of the synthesized compounds are also described.