10 research outputs found
Standardization of serum neutralization assay of Japanese encephalitis virus (Nakayama NIH strain) on BHK-21 (Cl-13) cell line
Nucleophilic 1,2-Shifts of Alkoxycarbonyl and Carboxylate Groups in the Benzilic-Acid Type Rearrangement of ?,?-Dioxobutyric Esters
Awareness and Usage of Emerald Insight Database as Determinant of Research Output for Researcher Scholar of Aligarh Muslim University, India
Plasmid mediated enterotoxin production and drug resistance amongstEscherichia coli from cases of infantile diarrhea
Stereochemistry of Valine Biosynthesis. Configuration of the Product of Rearrangement of alpha-Acetolactate
Prevalence of multiple drug resistance amongst strains of Esch.coli isolated from cases of diarrhea
Sandwich and half-sandwich derivatives of Platensimycin: synthesis and biological evaluation
The multistep synthesis and biological evaluation of five structurally diverse, chiral and achiral CpMn(CO)3 (4, 7 and 8), (η6-arene)Cr(CO)3 (5), and [3]ferrocenophane-1-one (6) containing platensimycin (1) derivatives are described in this report. The structures were inspired by the antibiotic platensimycin. All the chiral compounds presented in this report are racemates. The new compounds were unambiguously characterized by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, IR spectroscopy, and elemental analysis and in certain cases by X-ray crystallography (4, 16, 18, and 29). The antibacterial and antitumor activity of selected derivatives was tested. Molecular modeling suggests that the derivatives described here may well fit into the active site of the FabF enzyme, which is the biological target of platensimycin. Hence, the antimicrobial activities of our new bioorganometallices 4–8 and the protected amide intermediates 15, 17, 18, 23, 28, 29, and 31 were tested against various Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacterial strains. However, all compounds were inactive up to concentrations of 180 μg/mL. The cytotoxicity of compounds 4 and 6 and the protected amide intermediates 15, 17, 18, 23, 28, 29, and 31 was tested against HepG2 and PT45 mammalian cancer cell lines. Surprisingly, all compounds containing a trimethylsilylethyl ester functionality at the aromatic ring (17, 23, 29, and 31) displayed rather high cytotoxicity between 2 and 9 μM
