| Literature DB >> 22408391 |
Alicia Reyes-Arellano1, Alejandro Bucio-Cano1, Mabel Montenegro-Sustaita1, Everardo Curiel-Quesada2, Héctor Salgado-Zamora1.
Abstract
A series of selected 2-substituted imidazolines were synthesized in moderate to excellent yields by a modification of protocols reported in the literature. They were evaluated as potential non-classical bioisosteres of AHL with the aim of counteracting bacterial pathogenicity. Imidazolines 18a, 18e and 18f at various concentrations reduced the violacein production by Chromobacterium violaceum, suggesting an anti-quorum sensing profile against Gram-negative bacteria. Imidazoline 18b did not affect the production of violacein, but had a bacteriostatic effect at 100 μM and a bactericidal effect at 1 mM. Imidazoline 18a bearing a hexyl phenoxy moiety was the most active compound of the series, rendering a 72% inhibitory effect of quorum sensing at 100 μM. Imidazoline 18f bearing a phenyl nonamide substituent presented an inhibitory effect on quorum sensing at a very low concentration (1 nM), with a reduction percentage of 28%. This compound showed an irregular performance, decreasing inhibition at concentrations higher than 10 μM, until reaching 100 μM, at which concentration it increased the inhibitory effect with a 49% reduction percentage. When evaluated on Serratia marcescens, compound 18f inhibited the production of prodigiosin by 40% at 100 μM.Entities:
Keywords: AHL bioisosteres; Chromobacterium violaceum; imidazoline synthesis; quorum sensing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22408391 PMCID: PMC3291960 DOI: 10.3390/ijms13021284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Classical bioisosteres of N-acyl homoserine lactones (AHL).
Figure 2Non-classical bioisosteres of AHL.
Figure 3Compounds with no structural or electronic resemblance to AHLs.
Preparation of synthetic intermediates of imidazoline derivatives.
| D | EWG | Reagents and reaction conditions | Ch | Compound number | Isolated yield (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHO | a, reflux | 80 | |||
| CHO | a, reflux | 85 | |||
| CHO | a, reflux | 81 | |||
| CHO | a, reflux | 81 | |||
| NH2 | CN | b, r.t. | NHCO-nC5H11 | 70 | |
| NH2 | CN | b, r.t. | NHCO-nC8H17 | 80 | |
Synthesis of the 2-arylimidazoline derivatives.
| Ch | EWG | Reagents and conditions | Compound number | Isolated yield (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHO | c, reflux | Quantitative | ||
| CHO | c, reflux | Quantitative | ||
| CHO | c, reflux | Quantitative | ||
| CHO | c, reflux | Quantitative | ||
| NHCO-nC5H11 | CN | d, MW | 50 | |
| NHCO-nC8H17 | CN | d, MW | 60 | |
Figure 4Evaluation of activity of imidazolines 18a–18f in violacein production on C. violaceum. Effect of biososteres in violacein production in C. violaceum. Blank control (brown), 18a (red), 18b (green), 18c (black), 18d (cyan), 18e (violet) and 18f (blue). Asterisks indicate statistically significant activity. Data were calculated by using a two way ANOVA test with Duncan correction and are displayed as the mean ± SE (n = 6).
Figure 5N-Acyl homoserine lactones utilized in quorum sensing by Serratia marcescens.
Figure 6Evaluation of activity of imidazoline 18f on Serratia marcescens. Data were analyzed employing the two way ANOVA test with Duncan correction, and are displayed as the mean ± SE (n = 6).