| Literature DB >> 26107513 |
Roberta Farina1, Leonardo Pisani1, Marco Catto1, Orazio Nicolotti1, Domenico Gadaleta1, Nunzio Denora1, Ramon Soto-Otero2, Estefania Mendez-Alvarez2, Carolina S Passos3, Giovanni Muncipinto1, Cosimo D Altomare1, Alessandra Nurisso3, Pierre-Alain Carrupt3, Angelo Carotti1.
Abstract
The multifactorial nature of Alzheimer's disease calls for the development of multitarget agents addressing key pathogenic processes. To this end, by following a docking-assisted hybridization strategy, a number of aminocoumarins were designed, prepared, and tested as monoamine oxidases (MAOs) and acetyl- and butyryl-cholinesterase (AChE and BChE) inhibitors. Highly flexible N-benzyl-N-alkyloxy coumarins 2-12 showed good inhibitory activities at MAO-B, AChE, and BChE but low selectivity. More rigid inhibitors, bearing meta- and para-xylyl linkers, displayed good inhibitory activities and high MAO-B selectivity. Compounds 21, 24, 37, and 39, the last two featuring an improved hydrophilic/lipophilic balance, exhibited excellent activity profiles with nanomolar inhibitory potency toward hMAO-B, high hMAO-B over hMAO-A selectivity and submicromolar potency at hAChE. Cell-based assays of BBB permeation, neurotoxicity, and neuroprotection supported the potential of compound 37 as a BBB-permeant neuroprotective agent against H2O2-induced oxidative stress with poor interaction as P-gp substrate and very low cytotoxicity.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26107513 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b00599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446