19814-98-3Relevant articles and documents
Inhibitory activities of anthraquinone and xanthone derivatives against transthyretin amyloidogenesis
Kitakami, Ryota,Inui, Kishin,Nakagawa, Yusuke,Sawai, Yurika,Katayama, Wakana,Yokoyama, Takeshi,Okada, Takuya,Kanamitsu, Kayoko,Nakagawa, Shinsaku,Toyooka, Naoki,Mizuguchi, Mineyuki
, (2021/07/06)
Transthyretin is a tetrameric protein which functions as a transporter of thyroxine and retinol-binding protein. Misfolding and amyloid aggregation of transthyretin are known to cause wild-type and hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis. Stabilization of the transthyretin tetramer by low molecular weight compounds is an efficacious strategy to inhibit the aggregation pathway in the amyloidosis. Here, we investigated the inhibitory activities of anthraquinone and xanthone derivatives against amyloid aggregation, and found that xanthone-2-carboxylic acid with one chlorine or methyl group has strong inhibitory activity comparable with that of diflunisal, which is one of the best known stabilizers of transthyretin. X-ray crystallographic structures of transthyretin in complex with the compounds revealed that the introduction of chlorine, which is buried in a hydrophobic region, is important for the strong inhibitory effect of the stabilizer against amyloidogenesis. An in vitro absorption, distribution, metabolism and elimination (ADME) study and in vivo pharmacokinetic study demonstrated that the compounds have drug-like features, suggesting that they have potential as therapeutic agents to stabilize transthyretin.
Microwave-assisted, Yb(OTf)3/TfOH cocatalyzed synthesis of xanthones and thioxanthones by intramolecular friedel-crafts reaction under solvent-free conditions
Li, Jie,Jin, Can,Su, Weike
experimental part, p. 855 - 866 (2011/05/12)
An efficient method for the synthesis of biologically interesting xanthones and thioxanthones was achieved using Yb(OTf)3/TfOH as co-catalysts by a microwave radiation-mediated reaction. Both electron-rich and electron-poor substrates could be cyclized in good yields.
Substituted xanthones as antimycobacterial agents*, part 1: Synthesis and assignment of 1H/13C NMR chemical shifts
Pickert, Martina,Frahm, August Wilhelm
, p. 177 - 192 (2007/10/03)
A series of substituted xanthones was synthesized in order to prove the hypothesis that electron-withdrawing substituents enhance the antimycobacterial activity of these compounds, which is described by means of a QSAR equation with 13C NMR che