13512-31-7Relevant articles and documents
Synthesis of Carbamates Using Yttria-Zirconia Based Lewis Acid Catalyst
Pandey, Rajesh K.,Dagade, Sharda P.,Dongare, Mohan K.,Kumar, Pradeep
, p. 4019 - 4027 (2003)
A variety of amines react with chloroformates in the presence of catalytic amount of yttria-zirconia based catalyst to afford the corresponding carbamates in excellent yields.
Tailoring the Substitution Pattern on 1,3,5-Triazine for Targeting Cyclooxygenase-2: Discovery and Structure-Activity Relationship of Triazine-4-Aminophenylmorpholin-3-one Hybrids that Reverse Algesia and Inflammation in Swiss Albino Mice
Singh, Palwinder,Kaur, Sukhmeet,Kumari, Priya,Kaur, Baljit,Kaur, Manpreet,Singh, Gurjit,Bhatti, Rajbir,Bhatti, Manpreet
supporting information, p. 7929 - 7941 (2018/09/06)
Here, we report analgesic and anti-inflammatory activity of a series of compounds obtained by appending 4-aminophenylmorpholin-3-one and acyclic, cyclic, or heterocyclic moieties on 1,3,5-triazine. The structures of compounds 4b and 6b are optimized for the best inhibition of COX-2 with IC50 values of 0.06 and 0.08 μM, respectively, and selectivity over COX-1 of 166 and >125, respectively. At the dose of 5 mg kg-1, these compounds significantly reduced acetic acid induced writhings, and their ED50 values were found to be 2.2 and 1.9 mg kg-1, respectively. Besides the cell-based and animal-based experiments showing the modes of action of these compounds targeting COX-2, the interaction behavior of 4b with COX-2 was also characterized, with physicochemical experiments including ITC, NMR, UV-vis, and molecular-modeling studies. Characteristically, these compounds interact with R120, Y355, and W385, the residues responsible for holding the substrate and mediating the process of electron transfer during the metabolic phase of the enzyme.
Synthesis, bioactivity, docking and molecular dynamics studies of furan-based peptides as 20s proteasome inhibitors
Sun, Qi,Xu, Bo,Niu, Yan,Xu, Fengrong,Liang, Lei,Wang, Chao,Yu, Jiapei,Yan, Gang,Wang, Wei,Jin, Hongwei,Xu, Ping
, p. 498 - 510 (2015/03/18)
Proteasome inhibitors are promising compounds for a number of therapies, including cardiovascular and eye diseases, diabetes, and cancers. We previously reported a series of furanbased peptidic inhibitors with moderate potencies against the proteasome b5 subunit, hypothesizing that the C-terminal furyl ketone motif could form a covalent bond with the catalytic residue, threonine 1. In this context, we describe further optimizations of the furan-based peptides, and a series of dipeptidic and tripeptidic inhibitors were designed and synthesized, aiming at improved potency and better solubility. Most of the tripeptidic inhibitors demonstrated improved potency and selectivity as b5 subunit inhibitors in both enzymatic and cellular assays, and good antineoplastic activities in various tumor cell lines were also observed. However, no inhibitory effects were observed for the dipeptidic compounds, which led us to presume that a noncovalent binding mode is adopted. Docking studies and molecular dynamics simulations were carried out to verify this presumption, with results showing that the distance between the furyl ketone motif and Thr1 is slightly too long to form covalent bond.