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1241744-84-2

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1241744-84-2 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 1241744-84-2 includes 10 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 7 digits, 1,2,4,1,7,4 and 4 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 8 and 4 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 1241744-84:
(9*1)+(8*2)+(7*4)+(6*1)+(5*7)+(4*4)+(3*4)+(2*8)+(1*4)=142
142 % 10 = 2
So 1241744-84-2 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

1241744-84-2Upstream product

1241744-84-2Downstream Products

1241744-84-2Relevant academic research and scientific papers

Role of aromatic rings in the molecular recognition of aminoglycoside antibiotics: Implications for drug design

Vacas, Tatiana,Corzana, Francisco,Jimenez-Oses, Gonzalo,Gonzalez, Carlos,Gomez, Ana M.,Bastida, Agatha,Revuelta, Julia,Asensio, Juan Luis

supporting information; experimental part, p. 12074 - 12090 (2010/10/19)

Aminoglycoside antibiotics participate in a large variety of binding processes involving both RNA and proteins. The description, in recent years, of several clinically relevant aminoglycoside/receptor complexes has greatly stimulated the structural-based design of new bioactive derivatives. Unfortunately, design efforts have frequently met with limited success, reflecting our incomplete understanding of the molecular determinants for the antibiotic recognition. Intriguingly, aromatic rings of the protein/RNA receptors seem to be key actors in this process. Indeed, close inspection of the structural information available reveals that they are frequently involved in CH/π stacking interactions with sugar/aminocyclitol rings of the antibiotic. While the interaction between neutral carbohydrates and aromatic rings has been studied in detail during past decade, little is known about these contacts when they involve densely charged glycosides. Herein we report a detailed experimental and theoretical analysis of the role played by CH/π stacking interactions in the molecular recognition of aminoglycosides. Our study aims to determine the influence that the antibiotic polycationic character has on the stability, preferred geometry, and dynamics of these particular contacts. With this purpose, different aminoglycoside/aromatic complexes have been selected as model systems. They varied from simple bimolecular interactions to the more stable intramolecular CH/π contacts present in designed derivatives. The obtained results highlight the key role played by electrostatic forces and the desolvation of charged groups in the molecular recognition of polycationic glycosides and have clear implications for the design of improved antibiotics.

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