5241-64-5Relevant articles and documents
A Facile Approach to the Synthesis of Benzothiazoles from N-Protected Amino Acids
Arfan, M.,Fatima, T.,Mannan, A.,Tahira, A.
, p. 292 - 297 (2020/04/21)
Abstract: –A simple trituration method for the synthesis of 2-substituted benzothiazoles derived from N-protected amino acids and 2-aminothiophenol using molecular iodine as a mild Lewis acid catalyst has been proposed. The reaction occurs in one step for 20–25 min in solve-free conditions and provides the target products in excellent yields.
Development of Small-Molecules Targeting Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-κB Ligand (RANKL) - Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-κB (RANK) Protein-Protein Interaction by Structure-Based Virtual Screening and Hit Optimization
Jiang, Min,Peng, Lei,Yang, Kai,Wang, Tianqi,Yan, Xueming,Jiang, Tao,Xu, Jianrong,Qi, Jin,Zhou, Hanbing,Qian, Niandong,Zhou, Qi,Chen, Bo,Xu, Xing,Deng, Lianfu,Yang, Chunhao
supporting information, p. 5370 - 5381 (2019/06/24)
Targeting RANKL/RANK offers the possibility of developing novel therapeutic approaches to treat bone metabolic diseases. Multiple efforts have been made to inhibit RANKL. For example, marketed monoclonal antibody drug Denosumab could inhibit the maturation of osteoclasts by binding to RANKL. This study is an original approach aimed at discovering small-molecule inhibitors impeding RANKL/RANK protein interaction. We identified compound 34 as a potent and selective RANKL/RANK inhibitor by performing structure-based virtual screening and hit optimization. Disruption of the RANKL/RANK interaction by 34 effectively inhibits RANKL-induced osteoclastogenesis and bone resorption. The expression of osteoclast marker genes was also suppressed by treatment of 34. Furthermore, 34 markedly blocked the NFATc1/c-fos pathway. Thus, our current work demonstrates that the chemical tractability of the difficult PPI (RANKL/RANK) target by a small-molecule compound 34 offers a potential lead compound to facilitate the development of new medications for bone-related diseases.
Amino acid conjugated antimicrobial drugs: Synthesis, lipophilicity- activity relationship, antibacterial and urease inhibition activity
Ullah, Atta,Iftikhar, Fatima,Arfan, Muhammad,Batool Kazmi, Syeda Tayyaba,Anjum, Muhammad Naveed,Haq, Ihsan-ul,Ayaz, Muhammad,Farooq, Sadia,Rashid, Umer
, p. 140 - 153 (2018/01/10)
Present work describes the in vitro antibacterial evaluation of some new amino acid conjugated antimicrobial drugs. Structural modification was attempted on the three existing antimicrobial pharmaceuticals namely trimethoprim, metronidazole, isoniazid. Twenty one compounds from seven series of conjugates of these drugs were synthesized by coupling with some selected Boc-protected amino acids. The effect of structural features and lipophilicity on the antibacterial activity was investigated. The synthesized compounds were evaluated against five standard American type culture collection (ATCC) i.e. Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus subtilis, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Salmonella typhi strains of bacteria. Our results identified a close relationship between the lipophilicity and the activity. Triazine skeleton proved beneficial for the increase in hydrophobicity and potency. Compounds with greater hydrophobicity have shown excellent activities against Gram-negative strains of bacteria than Gram-positive. 4-amino unsubstituted trimethoprim-triazine derivative 7b have shown superior activity with MIC = 3.4 μM (2 μg/mL) for S. aureus and 1.1 μM (0.66 μg/mL) for E. coli. The synthesized compounds were also evaluated for their urease inhibition study. Microbial urease from Bacillus pasteurii was chosen for this study. Triazine derivative 7a showed excellent inhibition with IC50 = 6.23 ± 0.09 μM. Docking studies on the crystal structure of B. pasteurii urease (PDB ID 4UBP) were carried out.