19692-45-6Relevant articles and documents
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Clement et al.
, p. 2449,2452 (1960)
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Discovery of Novel Azetidine Amides as Potent Small-Molecule STAT3 Inhibitors
Brotherton-Pleiss, Christine,Yue, Peibin,Zhu, Yinsong,Nakamura, Kayo,Chen, Weiliang,Fu, Wenzhen,Kubota, Casie,Chen, Jasmine,Alonso-Valenteen, Felix,Mikhael, Simoun,Medina-Kauwe, Lali,Tius, Marcus A.,Lopez-Tapia, Francisco,Turkson, James
supporting information, p. 695 - 710 (2021/01/14)
We optimized our previously reported proline-based STAT3 inhibitors into an exciting new series of (R)-azetidine-2-carboxamide analogues that have sub-micromolar potencies. 5a, 5o, and 8i have STAT3-inhibitory potencies (IC50) of 0.55, 0.38, and 0.34 μM, respectively, compared to potencies greater than 18 μM against STAT1 or STAT5 activity. Further modifications derived analogues, including 7e, 7f, 7g, and 9k, that addressed cell membrane permeability and other physicochemical issues. Isothermal titration calorimetry analysis confirmed high-affinity binding to STAT3, with KD of 880 nM (7g) and 960 nM (9k). 7g and 9k inhibited constitutive STAT3 phosphorylation and DNA-binding activity in human breast cancer, MDA-MB-231 or MDA-MB-468 cells. Furthermore, treatment of breast cancer cells with 7e, 7f, 7g, or 9k inhibited viable cells, with an EC50 of 0.9-1.9 μM, cell growth, and colony survival, and induced apoptosis while having relatively weaker effects on normal breast epithelial, MCF-10A or breast cancer, MCF-7 cells that do not harbor constitutively active STAT3.
Lewis Base Catalysis Enables the Activation of Alcohols by means of Chloroformates as Phosgene Substitutes
Zoller, Ben,Stach, Tanja,Huy, Peter H.
, p. 5637 - 5643 (2020/09/21)
Nucleophilic substitutions (SN) are typically promoted by acid chlorides as sacrificial reagents to improve the thermodynamic driving force and lower kinetic barriers. However, the cheapest acid chloride phosgene (COCl2) is a highly toxic gas. Against this background, phenyl chloroformate (PCF) was discovered as inherently safer phosgene substitute for the SN-type formation of C?Cl and C?Br bonds using alcohols. Thereby, application of the Lewis bases 1-formylpyrroldine (FPyr) and diethylcyclopropenone (DEC) as catalysts turned out to be pivotal to shift the chemoselectivity in favor of halo alkane generation. Primary, secondary and tertiary, benzylic, allylic and aliphatic alcohols are appropriate starting materials. A variety of functional groups are tolerated, which includes even acid labile moieties such as tert-butyl esters and acetals. Since the by-product phenol can be isolated, a recycling to PCF with inexpensive phosgene would be feasible on a technical scale. Eventually, a thorough competitive study demonstrated that PCF is indeed superior to phosgene and other substitutes.