6922-89-0Relevant articles and documents
Triaryl methane derivatives as antiproliferative agents
Al-Qawasmeh, Raed A.,Lee, Yoon,Cao, Ming-Yu,Gu, Xiaoping,Vassilakos, Aikaterini,Wright, Jim A.,Young, Aiping
, p. 347 - 350 (2007/10/03)
Clotrimazole (CLT) 1, a synthetic anti-fungal imidazole derivative, inhibits tumor cell proliferation and angiogenesis. In the current study, flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that the decrease in tumor cell growth by CLT 1 was associated with inhibition of cell cycle progression at the G 1-S phase transition, resulting in G0-G1 arrest. A series of CLT 1 analogues has been generated in order to develop CLT 1 derivatives that are devoid of the imidazole moiety which is responsible for the hepatoxicity associated with CLT 1 while retaining CLT 1 efficacy. The majority of these analogues demonstrate in vitro antiproliferative activity ranging from submicromolar to micromolar concentrations.
Reactivities of triarylmethyl and diarylmethyl cations with azide ion investigated by laser flash photolysis. Diffusion-controlled reactions
McClelland, Robert A.,Kanagasabapathy,Banait, Narinder S.,Steenken, Steen
, p. 1009 - 1014 (2007/10/02)
By use of the technique of laser flash photolysis, rate constants kAz and ks have been directly measured for the reactions at 20 °C in acetonitrile-water (AN-W) solutions of varying composition of 18 triarylmethyl and 10 diarylmethyl cations with azide and solvent. The cations have ks that depend on substituent and vary from ~101 to ~107 s-1. For the more stable ions kAz also varies, increasing with decreased electron donation and also increasing by as much as 103 with increasing acetonitrile content. For less stable cations, however, the rate constant becomes independent of substituent. The break occurs when ks has reached ~105 s-1. The limiting rate constants have magnitudes in the vicinity of 1010 M-1 s-1; these do depend on solvent and type of cation, with diarylmethyl cations reacting at the limit 1.6 ± 0.2 times faster than triarylmethyl. The data can be fit by a model where there is diffusional encounter of the cation and azide to form an ion pair, with the combination within the ion pair rate-limiting for the more stable cations and the diffusion step rate-limiting for the less stable ones. The limiting rate constants represent the latter, diffusional encounter of the cation and azide. The Debye-Smoluchowski equation for diffusion-controlled reactions predicts rate constants that are larger than observed by factors of 2-2.5 for diarylmethyl and 4 for triarylmethyl. Deviations can be attributed to nonproductive encounters where the anion has approached the cation in the plane of one of the rings and thus cannot form a proper reacting configuration. The difference between the two types of cations is explained by the greater difficulty of achieving this configuration with the more sterically congested triarylmethyl cation. Ratios kAz/ks obtained from product analysis (competition kinetics) have previously been found to show adherence to the reactivity-selectivity principle. This has been interpreted (Rappoport, Jencks) in terms of the reaction with azide having reached the diffusion limit. The directly measured kAz establish that this is indeed the case. This study also validates the use of azide as a "clock" (Jencks, Richard) for converting such ratios to absolute rate constants through use of a value of 5 × 109 M-1 s-1 for kAz. The directly measured diffusion-limited kAz are somewhat larger than this, but the differences are small, at most a factor of 4.