1736-71-6Relevant articles and documents
Discovery of Novel Thiazol-2-Amines and Their Analogues as Bioactive Molecules: Design, Synthesis, Docking and Biological Evaluation
Verma, Anil Kumar,Bishnoi, Abha,Fatma, Shaheen,Parveen, Huda,Singh, Vineeta
, p. 222 - 231 (2018)
A simple and highly efficient procedure for the synthesis of novel thiazol-2-amines, via Mannich reaction with secondary amines, is described. The newly synthesized derivatives 8(a-e) and 9(a-e) were characterized by 1 H NMR, 13 C NMR, IR, Mass spectroscopy and elemental analysis. All the derivatives were evaluated for their in-vitro anti-microbial activity against a panel of pathogenic strains of bacteria and fungi. The SAR showed that the secondary amines had a significant impact on the in-vitro antimicrobial activity of this class of agents. The most potent analogue N-((1H-benzo[d]imidazol-1-yl)methyl)-N-(2(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)-4,5-dihydrothiazol-2-amine (8c) showed excellent inhibition with MIC (zoi) 6.25 (22.5), 25 (21.5) and 25 (18) μg/mL against E. coli, S. typhi and P. aeruginosa respectively as compared to the standard drug. Molecular docking results suggest that compound exhibited inhibitory activity by binding of the title compound within the active sites of the inhibiting Enoyl ACP reductase, Lipid A, Pyridoxal kinase and type I DHQase enzymes. The compound exhibited promising anti-microbial activity which can be further explored as potential lead for the development of cheaper, safe, effective and potent drugs against resistant microbial parasites.
Search for the Active Ingredients from a 2-Aminothiazole DMSO Stock Solution with Antimalarial Activity
Ropponen, Henni-Karoliina,Bader, Chantal D.,Diamanti, Eleonora,Illarionov, Boris,Rottmann, Matthias,Fischer, Markus,Witschel, Matthias,Müller, Rolf,Hirsch, Anna K. H.
, p. 2089 - 2093 (2021/05/10)
Chemical decomposition of DMSO stock solutions is a common incident that can mislead biological screening campaigns. Here, we share our case study of 2-aminothiazole 1, originating from an antimalarial class that undergoes chemical decomposition in DMSO at room temperature. As previously measured biological activities observed against Plasmodium falciparum NF54 and for the target enzyme PfIspE were not reproducible for a fresh batch, we tackled the challenge to understand where the activity originated from. Solvent- and temperature-dependent studies using HRMS and NMR spectroscopy to monitor the decomposition led to the isolation and in vitro evaluation of several fractions against PfIspE. After four days of decomposition, we successfully isolated the oxygenated and dimerised compounds using SFC purification and correlated the observed activities to them. Due to the unstable nature of the two isolates, it is likely that they undergo further decomposition contributing to the overall instability of the compound.
Synergism of fused bicyclic 2-aminothiazolyl compounds with polymyxin B against: Klebsiella pneumoniae
Wang, Rong,Hou, Shuang,Dong, Xiaojing,Chen, Daijie,Shao, Lei,Qian, Liujia,Li, Zhong,Xu, Xiaoyong
supporting information, p. 2060 - 2066 (2017/11/22)
A series of fused bicyclic 2-aminothiazolyl compounds were synthesized and evaluated for their synergistic effects with polymyxin B (PB) against Klebsiella pneumoniae (SIPI-KPN-1712). Some of the synthesized compounds exhibited synergistic activity. When 4 μg ml-1 compound B1 was combined with PB, it showed potent antibacterial activity, achieving 64-fold reduction of the MIC of PB. Furthermore, compound B1 showed prominent synergistic efficacy in both concentration gradient and time-kill curves in vitro. In addition, B1 combined with PB also exhibited synergistic and partial synergistic effect against E. coli (ATCC25922 and its clinical isolates), Acinetobacter baumannii (ATCC19606 and its clinical isolates), and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pae-1399).