1138471-54-1Relevant articles and documents
Design, synthesis and study of antibacterial and antitubercular activity of quinoline hydrazone hybrids
Eswaran, Sumesh,Shruthi, T. G.,Subramanian, Sangeetha
, p. 137 - 147 (2020)
Emerging bacterial resistance is causing widespread problems for the treatment of various infections. Therefore, the search for antimicrobials is a never-ending task. Hydrazones and quinolines possess a wide variety of biological activities. Herewith, eleven quinoline hydrazone derivatives have been designed, synthesized, characterized and evaluated for their antibacterial activity and antitubercular potential against Mtb WT H37Rv. Compounds QH-02, QH-04 and QH-05 were found to be promising compounds with an MIC value of 4 μg/mL against Mtb WT H37Rv. Compounds QH-02, QH-04, QH-05, and QH-11 were also found to be active against bacterial strains including Acinetobacter baumanii, Escherichia coli and Staphylococcus aureus. Further, we have carried out experiments to confirm the cytotoxicity of the active compounds and found them to be non-toxic.
Highly chemoselective deoxygenation of N-heterocyclic: N -oxides under transition metal-free conditions
Kim, Se Hyun,An, Ju Hyeon,Lee, Jun Hee
, p. 3735 - 3742 (2021)
Because their site-selective C-H functionalizations are now considered one of the most useful tools for synthesizing various N-heterocyclic compounds, the highly chemoselective deoxygenation of densely functionalized N-heterocyclic N-oxides has received much attention from the synthetic chemistry community. Here, we provide a protocol for the highly chemoselective deoxygenation of various functionalized N-oxides under visible light-mediated photoredox conditions with Na2-eosin Y as an organophotocatalyst. Mechanistic studies imply that the excited state of the organophotocatalyst is reductively quenched by Hantzsch esters. This operationally simple technique tolerates a wide range of functional groups and allows high-yield, multigram-scale deoxygenation. This journal is
Synthesis, antituberculosis studies and biological evaluation of new quinoline derivatives carrying 1,2,4-oxadiazole moiety
Shruthi,Eswaran, Sumesh,Shivarudraiah, Prasad,Narayanan, Shridhar,Subramanian, Sangeetha
, p. 97 - 102 (2019)
Tuberculosis is the infectious disease caused by mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), responsible for the utmost number of deaths annually across the world. Herein, twenty-one new substituted 1,2,4-oxadiazol-3-ylmethyl-piperazin-1-yl-quinoline derivatives were designed and synthesized through multistep synthesis followed by in vitro evaluation of their antitubercular potential against Mtb WT H37Rv. The compound QD-18 was found to be promising with MIC value of 0.5 μg/ml and QD-19 to QD-21 were also remarkable with MIC value of 0.25 μg/ml. Additionally, we have carried out experiments to confirm the metabolic stability, cytotoxicity and pharmacokinetics of these compounds along with kill kinetics of QD-18. These compounds were found to be orally bioavailable and highly effective. Altogether, these results indicate that QD-18, QD-19, QD-20 and QD-21 are promising lead compounds for the development of a novel chemical class of antitubercular drugs.
Metal-Free Deoxygenation of Amine N-Oxides: Synthetic and Mechanistic Studies
Lecroq, William,Schleinitz, Jules,Billoue, Mallaury,Perfetto, Anna,Gaumont, Annie-Claude,Lalevée, Jacques,Ciofini, Ilaria,Grimaud, Laurence,Lakhdar, Sami
, p. 1237 - 1242 (2021/06/01)
We report herein an unprecedented combination of light and P(III)/P(V) redox cycling for the efficient deoxygenation of aromatic amine N-oxides. Moreover, we discovered that a large variety of aliphatic amine N-oxides can easily be deoxygenated by using only phenylsilane. These practically simple approaches proceed well under metal-free conditions, tolerate many functionalities and are highly chemoselective. Combined experimental and computational studies enabled a deep understanding of factors controlling the reactivity of both aromatic and aliphatic amine N-oxides.
Design and synthesis of 4(1H)-quinolone derivatives as autophagy inducing agents by targeting ATG5 protein
Jia, Yifan,Yu, Difei,Huang, Qiuhua,Zhang, Xiaodong,Qiu, Liqin,Cao, Rihui,Du, Runlei,Liu, Wenbin
, p. 884 - 890 (2020/07/10)
Background: Quinolines have been characterized as a class of potential antitumor agents, and a large number of natural and synthetic quinolines acting as antitumor agents were reported. Methods: A series of 7-chloro-4(1H)-quinolone derivatives were synthesized. The antiproliferative effect of these compounds was evaluated by MTT assay against five human tumor cell lines. The mechanism of action of the selected compound 7h was also investigated. Results and Discussion: Most of the compounds had more potent antiproliferative activities than the lead compound 7-chloro-4(1H)-quinolone 6b. Compound 7h was found to be the most potent antiproliferative agent against human tumor cell lines. Further investigation demonstrated that compound 7h triggered ATG5-dependent autophagy of colorectal cancer cells by promoting the functions of LC3 proteins. Conclusion: These results were useful for designing and discovering more potent novel antitumor agents endowed with better pharmacological profiles.