91419-53-3Relevant articles and documents
Mechanistic Insight Facilitates Discovery of a Mild and Efficient Copper-Catalyzed Dehydration of Primary Amides to Nitriles Using Hydrosilanes
Liu, Richard Y.,Bae, Minwoo,Buchwald, Stephen L.
supporting information, p. 1627 - 1631 (2018/02/17)
Metal-catalyzed silylative dehydration of primary amides is an economical approach to the synthesis of nitriles. We report a copper-hydride(CuH)-catalyzed process that avoids a typically challenging 1,2-siloxane elimination step, thereby dramatically increasing the rate of the overall transformation relative to alternative metal-catalyzed systems. This new reaction proceeds at ambient temperature, tolerates a variety of metal-, acid-, or base-sensitive functional groups, and can be performed using a simple ligand, inexpensive siloxanes, and low catalyst loading.
Carbazole inhibitors of histamine receptors for the treatment of disease
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, (2012/01/04)
The present invention relates to carbazole compounds, pharmaceutical compositions comprising them, and methods which may be useful as inhibitors of H1R and/or H4R for the treatment or prevention of inflammatory, autoimmune, allergic, and ocular diseases.
Dihydroxypyrimidine-4-carboxamides as novel potent and selective HIV integrase inhibitors
Pace, Paola,Di Francesco, M. Emilia,Gardelli, Cristina,Harper, Steven,Muraglia, Ester,Nizi, Emanuela,Orvieto, Federica,Petrocchi, Alessia,Poma, Marco,Rowley, Michael,Scarpelli, Rita,Laufer, Ralph,Paz, Odalys Gonzalez,Monteagudo, Edith,Bonelli, Fabio,Hazuda, Daria,Stillmock, Kara A.,Summa, Vincenzo
, p. 2225 - 2239 (2007/10/03)
Human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) integrase, one of the three constitutive viral enzymes required for replication, is a rational target for chemotherapeutic intervention in the treatment of AIDS that has also recently been confirmed in the clinical setting. We report here on the design and synthesis of N-benzyl-5,6-dihydroxypyrimidine-4-carboxamides as a class of agents which exhibits potent inhibition of the HIV-integrase-catalyzed strand transfer process. In the current study, structural modifications on these molecules were made in order to examine effects on HIV-integrase inhibitory potencies. One of the most interesting compounds for this series is 2-[1-(dimethylamino)-1-methylethyl]-N-(4-fluorobenzyl)-5,6-dihydroxypyrimidine- 4-carboxamide 38, with a CIC95 of 78 nM in the cell-based assay in the presence of serum proteins. The compound has favorable pharmacokinetic properties in preclinical species (rats, dogs, and monkeys) and shows no liabilities in several counterscreening assays, highlighting its potential as a clinically useful antiviral agent.