43 research outputs found

    Synthesis, enzyme inhibitory kinetics mechanism and computational study of N-(4-methoxyphenethyl)-N-(substituted)-4-methylbenzenesulfonamides as novel therapeutic agents for Alzheimer’s disease

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    The present study comprises the synthesis of a new series of sulfonamides derived from 4-methoxyphenethylamine (1). The synthesis was initiated by the reaction of 1 with 4-methylbenzenesulfonyl chloride (2) in aqueous sodium carbonate solution at pH 9 to yield N-(4-methoxyphenethyl)-4-methylbenzensulfonamide (3).This parent molecule 3 was subsequently treated with various alkyl/aralkyl halides, (4a–j), using N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) as solvent and LiH as activator to produce a series of new N-(4-methoxyphenethyl)-N-(substituted)-4-methylbenzenesulfonamides (5a–j). The structural characterization of these derivatives was carried out by spectroscopic techniques like IR, 1H-NMR, and 13C-NMR. The elemental analysis data was also coherent with spectral data of these molecules. The inhibitory effects on acetylcholinesterase and DPPH were evaluated and it was observed that N-(4-Methoxyphenethyl)-4-methyl-N-(2-propyl)benzensulfonamide (5c) showed acetylcholinesterase inhibitory activity 0.075 ± 0.001 (IC50 0.075 ± 0.001 µM) comparable to Neostigmine methylsulfate (IC50 2.038 ± 0.039 µM).The docking studies of synthesized ligands 5a–j were also carried out against acetylcholinesterase (PDBID 4PQE) to compare the binding affinities with IC50 values. The kinetic mechanism analyzed by Lineweaver-Burk plots demonstrated that compound (5c) inhibits the acetylcholinesterase competitively to form an enzyme inhibitor complex. The inhibition constants Ki calculated from Dixon plots for compound (5c) is 2.5 µM. It was also found from kinetic analysis that derivative 5c irreversible enzyme inhibitor complex. It is proposed on the basis of our investigation that title compound 5c may serve as lead structure for the design of more potent acetylcholinesterase inhibitors

    Mushroom Tyrosinase:  Recent Prospects

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    Crystal structure of 5-hydroxymethyl-2-methoxyphenol

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    In the title compound, C8H10O3, the hydroxymethyl group is twisted by 74.51 (13)° from the plane of the benzene ring to which it is connected. By contrast, the benzene and methoxy groups are almost coplanar, making a dihedral angle of 4.0 (2)°. In the crystal, O—H...O hydrogen bonds link the molecules into a three-dimensional network

    Acetylcholinesterase immobilization, characterization and comparison of porous silicon immobilized enzyme activity with the free counter part

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    Abstract A successful prescription of physically adsorbed acetylcholinesterase on mesoporous silicon surface with promising hydrolysis response toward acetylthiocholine iodide is presented. The catalytic behavior of immobilized enzyme was assessed by spectrophotometric bioassay employing neostigmine methyl sulfate as standard acetycholinesterase inhibitors. The surface modification was studied through FE-SEM, FT-IR, EDS, CL and XPS analysis, photoluminescence measurement and spectrophotometric bioassay. The porous silicon immobilized enzyme not only yielded greater amount of enzyme stability, but also significantly improved the native room temperature photoluminescence of bare porous silicon architecture. The results indicated the auspicious catalytic behavior of immobilized enzyme comparable with that of free counterpart with magnanimous stability; ameliorate reusability and facile separation from the reaction mixture. The porous silicon immobilized enzyme was found to retained 50 % of its activity with promising thermal stability up to 90 °C, reusability up to 3 cycles, pH stability over broad span of pH 4-9 and shelf life of 44 days with optimum hydrolysis response toward acetylthiocholine iodide concerning variable drug concentrations. On the basis of these findings, it was believed that the porous silicon immobilized enzyme might be exploited as reusable biocatalyst and screening of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors from crude plant extract and synthesized organic compounds. Moreover the immobilized enzyme can offer a great deal of interest as viable biocatalyst in bioprocessing for the chemical industry, pharmaceutical industry, and bioremediation to enhance productivity and robustness

    Acetylcholinesterase immobilization and characterization, and comparison of the activity of the porous silicon-immobilized enzyme with its free counterpart

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    Synopsis A successful prescription is presented for acetylcholinesterase physically adsorbed on to a mesoporous silicon surface, with a promising hydrolytic response towards acetylthiocholine iodide. The catalytic behaviour of the immobilized enzyme was assessed by spectrophotometric bioassay using neostigmine methyl sulfate as a standard acetycholinesterase inhibitor. The surface modification was studied through field emission SEM, Fourier transform IR spectroscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, cathode luminescence and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis, photoluminescence measurement and spectrophotometric bioassay. The porous silicon-immobilized enzyme not only yielded greater enzyme stability, but also significantly improved the native photoluminescence at room temperature of the bare porous silicon architecture. The results indicated the promising catalytic behaviour of immobilized enzyme compared with that of its free counterpart, with a greater stability, and that it aided reusability and easy separation from the reaction mixture. The porous silicon-immobilized enzyme was found to retain 50 % of its activity, promising thermal stability up to 90 • C, reusability for up to three cycles, pH stability over a broad pH of 4-9 and a shelf-life of 44 days, with an optimal hydrolytic response towards acetylthiocholine iodide at variable drug concentrations. On the basis of these findings, it was believed that the porous silicon-immobilized enzyme could be exploited as a reusable biocatalyst and for screening of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors from crude plant extracts and synthesized organic compounds. Moreover, the immobilized enzyme could offer a great deal as a viable biocatalyst in bioprocessing for the chemical and pharmaceutical industries, and bioremediation to enhance productivity and robustness

    Identification of Novel Natural Product Inhibitors against Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 Using Quantum Mechanical Fragment Molecular Orbital-Based Virtual Screening Methods

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    Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) are calcium-dependent zinc-containing endopeptidases involved in multiple cellular processes. Among the MMP isoforms, MMP-9 regulates cancer invasion, rheumatoid arthritis, and osteoarthritis by degrading extracellular matrix proteins present in the tumor microenvironment and cartilage and promoting angiogenesis. Here, we identified two potent natural product inhibitors of the non-catalytic hemopexin domain of MMP-9 using a novel quantum mechanical fragment molecular orbital (FMO)-based virtual screening workflow. The workflow integrates qualitative pharmacophore modeling, quantitative binding affinity prediction, and a raw material search of natural product inhibitors with the BMDMS-NP library. In binding affinity prediction, we made a scoring function with the FMO method and applied the function to two protein targets (acetylcholinesterase and fibroblast growth factor 1 receptor) from DUD-E benchmark sets. In the two targets, the FMO method outperformed the Glide docking score and MM/PBSA methods. By applying this workflow to MMP-9, we proposed two potent natural product inhibitors (laetanine 9 and genkwanin 10) that interact with hotspot residues of the hemopexin domain of MMP-9. Laetanine 9 and genkwanin 10 bind to MMP-9 with a dissociation constant (KD) of 21.6 and 0.614 μM, respectively. Overall, we present laetanine 9 and genkwanin 10 for MMP-9 and demonstrate that the novel FMO-based workflow with a quantum mechanical approach is promising to discover potent natural product inhibitors of MMP-9, satisfying the pharmacophore model and good binding affinity

    Synthesis of chiral pyrazolo[4,3-e][1,2,4]triazine sulfonamides with tyrosinase and urease inhibitory activity

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    A new series of sulfonamide derivatives of pyrazolo[4,3-e][1,2,4]triazine with chiral amino group has been synthesized and characterized. The compounds were tested for their tyrosinase and urease inhibitory activity. Evaluation of prepared derivatives demonstrated that compounds (8b) and (8j) are most potent mushroom tyrosinase inhibitors whereas all of the obtained compounds showed higher urease inhibitory activity than the standard thiourea. The compounds (8a), (8f) and (8i) exhibited excellent enzyme inhibitory activity with IC50 0.037, 0.044 and 0.042 μM, respectively, while IC50 of thiourea is 20.9 μM

    Sulfonamide-Linked Ciprofloxacin, Sulfadiazine and Amantadine Derivatives as a Novel Class of Inhibitors of Jack Bean Urease; Synthesis, Kinetic Mechanism and Molecular Docking

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    Sulfonamide derivatives serve as an important building blocks in the drug design discovery and development (4D) process. Ciprofloxacin-, sulfadiazine- and amantadine-based sulfonamides were synthesized as potent inhibitors of jack bean urease and free radical scavengers. Molecular diversity was explored and electronic factors were also examined. All 24 synthesized compounds exhibited excellent potential against urease enzyme. Compound 3e (IC50 = 0.081 ± 0.003 µM), 6a (IC50 = 0.0022 ± 0.0002 µM), 9e (IC50 = 0.0250 ± 0.0007 µM) and 12d (IC50 = 0.0266 ± 0.0021 µM) were found to be the lead compounds compared to standard (thiourea, IC50 = 17.814 ± 0.096 µM). Molecular docking studies were performed to delineate the binding affinity of the molecules and a kinetic mechanism of enzyme inhibition was propounded. Compounds 3e, 6a and 12d exhibited a mixed type of inhibition, while derivative 9e revealed a non-competitive mode of inhibition. Compounds 12a, 12b, 12d, 12e and 12f showed excellent radical scavenging potency in comparison to the reference drug vitamin C
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