329944-26-5Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Rhodium-Catalyzed Directing-Group-Assisted Aldehydic C–H Arylations with Aryl Halides
Rao, Maddali L. N.,Ramakrishna, Boddu S.
, p. 5080 - 5093 (2017/09/20)
A rhodium-catalyzed general protocol for the directing-group-assisted arylation of aromatic aldehydic C–H bonds was developed. This method involves either hydroxy- or amino-group-directed aldehyde C–H arylation with various aryl halides. A broad synthetic scope for the preparation of 2-hydroxybenzophenones was established with electronically variant salicylaldehydes and aryl halides with chemo- and regioselective possibilities. The developed protocol was also applied in the synthesis of medicinally important 3-salicyloylpyridines in high yields.
Structure-activity relationship studies of novel benzophenones leading to the discovery of a potent, next generation HIV nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor
Romines, Karen R.,Freeman, George A.,Schaller, Lee T.,Cowan, Jill R.,Gonzales, Steve S.,Tidwell, Jeffrey H.,Andrews III, Clarence W.,Stammers, David K.,Hazen, Richard J.,Ferris, Robert G.,Short, Steven A.,Chan, Joseph H.,Boone, Lawrence R.
, p. 727 - 739 (2007/10/03)
Despite the progress of the past two decades, there is still considerable need for safe, efficacious drugs that target human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). This is particularly true for the growing number of patients infected with virus resistant to currently approved HIV drugs. Our high throughput screening effort identified a benzophenone template as a potential nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI). This manuscript describes our extensive exploration of the benzophenone structure-activity relationships, which culminated in the identification of several compounds with very potent inhibition of both wild type and clinically relevant NNRTI-resistant mutant strains of HIV. These potent inhibitors include 70h (GW678248), which has in vitro antiviral assay IC50 values of 0.5 nM against wild-type HIV, 1 nM against the K103N mutant associated with clinical resistance to efavirenz, and 0.7 nM against the Y181C mutant associated with clinical resistance to nevirapine. Compound 70h has also demonstrated relatively low clearance in intravenous pharmacokinetic studies in three species, and it is the active component of a drug candidate which has progressed to phase 2 clinical studies.
