5619-09-0Relevant articles and documents
Lithocholic acid-tryptophan conjugate (UniPR126) based mixed micelle as a nano carrier for specific delivery of niclosamide to prostate cancer via EphA2 receptor
Jannu, Arun Kumar,Puppala, Eswara Rao,Gawali, Basveshwar,Syamprasad,Alexander, Amit,Marepally, Srujan,Chella, Naveen,Gangasani, Jagadeesh Kumar,Naidu
, (2021/07/13)
Targeted delivery of chemotherapeutic agents is considered a prominent strategy for the treatment of cancer due to its site-specific delivery, augmented penetration, bioavailability, and improved therapeutic efficiency. In the present study, we employed UniPR126 as a carrier in a mixed nanomicellar delivery system to target and deliver anticancer drug NIC specifically to cancer cells via EphA2 receptors as these receptors are overexpressed in cancer cells but not in normal cells. The specificity of the carrier was confirmed from the significant enhancement in the uptake of coumarin-6 loaded mixed nanomicelle by EphA2 highly expressed PC-3 cells compared to EphA2 low expressed H4 cells. Further, niclosamide-loaded lithocholic acid tryptophan conjugate-based mixed nanomicelle has shown significant synergistic cytotoxicity in PC-3 but not in H4 cells. In vivo anticancer efficacy data in PC-3 xenograft revealed a significant reduction in the tumor volume (66.87%) with niclosamide-loaded lithocholic acid tryptophan conjugate nanomicelle, where pure niclosamide showed just half of the activity. Molecular signaling data by western blotting also indicated that niclosamide-loaded lithocholic acid tryptophan conjugate nanomicelle interfered with the EphA2 receptor signaling and inhibition of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway and resulted in the synergistic anticancer activity compared to niclosamide pure drug.
Convenient method for the synthesis of some novel chiral methyl 2-(2-oxo-2H-benzo[e][1,3]oxazin-3(4H)-yl)propanoate derivatives and biological evaluation of their antioxidant, cytotoxic, and molecular docking properties
Matam, Sivakumar,Kaliyan, Prabakaran,Selvaraj, Loganathan,Muthu, Seenivasa Perumal,Lohanathan, Bharathi Priya,Viswanadhan, Vijaya Padma,Makala, Himesh,Venkatasubramanian, Ulaganathan
supporting information, p. 569 - 579 (2020/12/11)
Ten chiral methyl 2-(2-oxo-2H-benzo[e][1,3]oxazin-3(4H)-yl)propanoate derivatives 6a-6j have been synthesized from optically pure amino methyl phenol 5 and 4-nitrophenyl chloroformate. These derivatives 6a-6j are characterized by 1H NMR, 13C NMR, FT-IR, and HRMS spectral techniques. Optical purity of these derivatives was confirmed by chiral HPLC method. Ten synthesized ester derivatives 6a-6j were screened for their in vitro antioxidant activity. Among the compounds 6b-d and 6h-j have exhibited comparable antioxidant activity with ascorbic acid as a standard. Compounds 6a and 6e-g have shown moderate antioxidant activity. Further, the in vitro cytotoxicity of these compounds were studied through MTT cell proliferation assay in addition the effect on LDH leakage and NO release. Among the derivatives, 6j showed extremely best activity and the IC50 value (12.54 ± 0.71 μM) is very close to doxorubicin (7.2 ± 0.58 μM) as a standard. Compounds 6b, 6h, and 6i showed better inhibition next to compound 6j on the viability of HepG2 cells with an IC50 value (μM) of 56.02 ± 1.4, 41.76 ± 0.58, and 38.17 ± 0.34, respectively. Also, molecular docking studies have been carried out with STAT-3 (PDB ID: 1BG1) and BCL-2 (PDB ID: 4AQ3) proteins against the four active compounds 6b, 6h, 6i, and 6j. The binding energies of the tested compounds were in the range of ?7.76 to ?8.41 kcal/mol, which is very close to doxorubicin (?8.53 kcal/mol) as a standard. These molecular docking results are in good agreement with the in vitro studies.
Ribose conversion with amino acids into pyrraline platform chemicals-expeditious synthesis of diverse pyrrole-fused alkaloid compounds
Cho, Soohyeon,Gu, Lina,In, Ik Joon,Kim, Hakwon,Koo, Sangho,Lee, Taehoon,Wu, Bo
, p. 31511 - 31525 (2021/11/30)
One-pot conversion of sustainable d-ribose with l-amino acid, methyl esters produced pyrrole-2-carbaldehydes 5 in reasonable yields (32-63%) under pressurized conditions of 2.5 atm at 80 °C. The value-added pyrraline compounds 5 as platform chemicals were utilized for quick installation of poly-heterocyclic cores for the development of pyrrole-motif natural and artificial therapeutic agents. A pyrrole-fused piperazin-2-one scaffold 6 was prepared by reductive amination of pyrralines 5 with benzylamine. While further cyclization of pyrralines 5 with ethane-1,2-diamine produced pyrrolo-piperazin-2-ones 7 with an extra imidazolidine ring, the reaction with 2-amino alcohols derived from natural l-amino acids, alanine, valine, and phenylalanine, respectively provided pyrrolo-piperazin-2-ones 8, 9, and 10 with oxazolidine as the third structural core. Cell viability and an anti-inflammatory effect of the synthesized compounds were briefly tested by the MTT method and the Griess assay, among which 8h and 10g exhibited significant anti-inflammatory effects with negligible cell toxicity.