| Literature DB >> 28468231 |
Lamya H Al-Wahaibi1, Hanan M Hassan2, Amal M Abo-Kamar3,4, Hazem A Ghabbour5, Ali A El-Emam6.
Abstract
A new series of adamantane-isothiourea hybrid derivatives, namely 4-arylmethyl (Z)-N'-(adamantan-1-yl)-morpholine-4-carbothioimidates 7a-e and 4-arylmethyl (Z)-N'-(adamantan-1-yl)-4-phenylpiperazine-1-carbothioimidates 8a-e were prepared via the reaction of N-(adamantan-1-yl)morpholine-4-carbothioamide 5 and N-(adamantan-1-yl)-4-phenylpiperazine-1-carbothioamide 6 with benzyl or substituted benzyl bromides, in acetone, in the presence of anhydrous potassium carbonate. The structures of the synthesized compounds were confirmed by ¹H-NMR, 13C-NMR, electrospray ionization mass spectral (ESI-MS) data, and X-ray crystallographic data. The in vitro antimicrobial activity of the new compounds was determined against certain standard strains of pathogenic bacteria and the yeast-like pathogenic fungus Candida albicans. Compounds 7b, 7d and 7e displayed potent broad-spectrum antibacterial activity, while compounds 7a, 7c, 8b, 8d and 8e were active against the tested Gram-positive bacteria. The in vivo oral hypoglycemic activity of the new compounds was carried on streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats. Compounds 7a, 8ab, and 8b produced potent dose-independent reduction of serum glucose levels, compared to the potent hypoglycemic drug gliclazide.Entities:
Keywords: adamantane; antimicrobial activity; carbothioimidate; hypoglycaemic activity; isothiourea; synthesis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28468231 PMCID: PMC6154638 DOI: 10.3390/molecules22050710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Biologically-active adamantane-based derivatives.
Scheme 1Synthetic approach for the target compounds 7a–e and 8a–e.
Crystallization solvents, melting points, yield percentages, molecular formulae, and molecular weights of compounds 7a–e and 8a–e.
| Comp. No. | R | Cryst. Solv. | M.p. (°C) | Yield (%) | Mol. Formula (Mol. Wt.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H | EtOH/H2O | 108–110 | 91 | C22H30N2OS (370.55) | |
| 4-Cl | EtOH | 92–94 | 76 | C22H29ClN2OS (405.0) | |
| 4-Br | EtOH | 98–100 | 85 | C22H29BrN2OS (449.45) | |
| 4-NO2 | EtOH | 118–120 | 95 | C22H29N3O3S (415.55) | |
| 3,5-(CF3)2 | EtOH/H2O | 106–108 | 72 | C24H28F6N2OS (506.55) | |
| H | EtOH/H2O | 137–139 | 88 | C28H35N3S (445.66) | |
| 4-Cl | EtOH | 153–155 | 90 | C28H34ClN3S (480.11) | |
| 4-Br | EtOH | 140–142 | 92 | C28H34BrN3S (524.56) | |
| 4-NO2 | EtOH | 145–147 | 96 | C28H34N4O2S (490.66) | |
| 3,5-(CF3)2 | EtOH/H2O | 113–115 | 75 | C30H33F6N3S (581.66) |
Single-crystal X-ray crystallographic data of compounds 7d and 8d.
| Data | Compound 7d | Compound 8d |
|---|---|---|
| Formula | C22H29N3O3S | C28H34N4O2S |
| Formula weight | 415.55 | 490.66 |
| Temperature (K) | 293 | 293 |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.71073 | 0.71073 |
| Crystal system | Monoclinic | Orthorhombi |
| Space group | ||
| 6.9204 (5), 29.775 (3), 10.2725 (10) | 6.9426 (9), 9.6472 (12), 39.086 (5) | |
| V (Å3) | 2116.7 (3) | 2617.8 (6) |
|
| 4 | 4 |
| Radiation type | Mo | Mo |
| 0.18 | 0.16 | |
| No. of reflections | 11033 | 25091 |
| No. of unique reflections/obs. reflections | 3718/2253 | 4609/1447 |
| No. of parameters | 262 | 318 |
| No. of restraints | 0 | 0 |
| Δρmax, Δρmin (e Å−3) | 0.28, −0.21 | 0.44, −0.40 |
| 0.939, 0.989 | 0.924, 0.957 | |
|
| 0.073 | 0.526 |
| Crystal size (mm) | 0.35 × 0.11 × 0.06 | 0.85 × 0.21 × 0.05 |
| R[ | 0.052, 0.192, 0.65 | 0.128, 0.296, 1.02 |
| CCDC number | 1525183 | 1523432 |
Figure 2ORTEP diagram of compound 7d drawn at 40% ellipsoids for non-hydrogen atoms.
Figure 3Molecular packing of compound 7d viewed hydrogen bonds, which are drawn as dashed lines.
Figure 4ORTEP diagram of compound 8d drawn at 40% ellipsoids for non-hydrogen atoms.
Figure 5Molecular packing of compound 8d viewed hydrogen bonds, which are drawn as dashed lines.
Antimicrobial activity of compounds 7a–e and 8a–e (200 μg/8 mm disc), the broad-spectrum antibacterial drugs gentamicin sulphate, ampicillin trihydrate and the antifungal drug clotrimazole (100 μg/8 mm disc) against Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 6571 (SA), Bacillus subtilis ATCC 5256 (BS), Micrococcus luteus ATCC 27141 (ML), Escherichia coli ATCC 8726 (EC), Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853 (PA), and the yeast-like pathogenic fungus Candida albicans MTCC 227 (CA).
| Comp. No. | Clog | Diameter of Growth Inhibition Zone (mm) a | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SA | BS | ML | EC | PA | CA | ||
|
| 5.584 | 22 (2) b | 21 (4) b | 20 (4) b | 18 (16) b | 14 (64) b | - |
|
| 6.297 | 24 (4) b | 28 (0.5) b | 22 (4) b | 22 (20) b | 15 (32) | 11 (>128) b |
|
| 6.447 | 22 (4) b | 18 (16) b | 14 (64) b | 13 (128) b | 12 (128) b | - |
|
| 5.327 | 31 (0.5) b | 32 (0.25) b | 28 (0.5) b | 22 (1) b | 18 (4) b | 14 (32) b |
|
| 7.350 | 33 (0.25) b | 34 (0.25) b | 28 (1) b | 24 (2) b | 20 (4) b | - |
|
| 7.130 | 18 (8) b | 18 (8) b | 14 (128) b | 12 (>128) b | 10 (>128) b | 10 (>128) b |
|
| 7.843 | 21 (8) b | 24 (2) b | 16 (32) b | 16 (64) b | 12 (>128) b | 13 (64) b |
|
| 7.993 | 17 (32) b | 19 (8) b | 14 (64) b | 11 (>128) b | 10 (>128) b | 12 (128) b |
|
| 6.873 | 24 (1) b | 28 (1) b | 20 (2) b | 18 (2) b | 14 (4) b | 16 (16) b |
|
| 8.896 | 28 (1) b | 31 (0.5) b | 22 (2) b | 19 (4) b | 18 (8) b | 14 (64) b |
|
| 27 (1) b | 26 (2) b | 20 (2) b | 22 (0.5) b | 21 (0.5) b | NT | |
|
| 22 (2) b | 23 (1) b | 20 (2) b | 16 (8) b | 16 (8) b | NT | |
|
| NT | NT | NT | NT | NT | 21 (4) b | |
a (-): inactive (inhibition zone < 10 mm), b Figures shown in parentheses represent the MIC values (μg/mL), NT: not tested.
Oral hypoglycemic activity of compounds 7a–c, 8a–c (10 and 20 mg/kg), and gliclazide (10 mg/kg) in STZ-induced diabetic rats.
| Treatment | Results | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| C0 (mg/dL) a | C24 (mg/dL) a | % Glucose Reduction b | |
| Group 1 c | 302.8 ± 11.64 | 290.2 ± 18.22 | 4.16% |
| Group 1 d | 299.2 ± 16.50 | 171.6 ± 12.32 * | 42.65% |
| 304.8 ± 13.26 | 212.4 ± 12.16 * | 30.31% (71.08) | |
| 300.6 ± 11.65 | 134.6 ± 9.75 * | 55.22% (64.74) | |
| 288.9 ± 12.15 | 245.2 ± 19.25 * | 15.13% (35.47) | |
| 294.8 ± 9.08 | 201.5 ± 9.60 * | 31.65% (37.13) | |
| 284.8 ± 19.55 | 281.2 ± 7.19 | 1.26% (2.69) | |
| 290.2 ± 21.64 | 286.8 ± 19.02 | 2.75% (1.37) | |
| 278.1 ± 16.24 | 282.2 ± 27.20 | −1.47% | |
| 302.6 ± 22.25 | 299.8 ± 18.80 | 0.93% (1.08) | |
| 306.2 ± 15.20 | 198.7 ± 19.10 * | 35.12 (82.32) | |
| Toxic | |||
| 294.6 ± 11.30 | 200.2 ± 9.88 * | 32.04% (75.13) | |
| 290.6 ± 8.60 | 108.4 ± 11.05 * | 62.70% (73.50) | |
| 301.4 ± 9.06 | 199.8 ± 10.01 * | 33.71% (79.04) | |
| 296.0 ± 11.02 | 144.6 ± 10.01 * | 51.15% (59.96) | |
| 320.5 ± 22.05 | 277.6 ± 16.20 | 13.39% (31.38) | |
| 313.5 ± 18.60 | 269.9 ± 20.12 | 13.91% (16.30) | |
| 295.0 ± 22.45 | 289.2 ± 25.28 | 1.97% (4.61) | |
| 304.5 ± 27.50 | 309.0 ± 25.95 | −1.48 | |
| 286.6 ± 13.22 | 178.2 ± 16.04 * | 37.82% (88.68) | |
| Toxic | |||
a Results are expressed as mean ± S.E.M. (n = 5), b The figures shown in parentheses are the relative potency compared with gliclazide, c Treated with a single oral dose of 0.5% (w/v) aqueous CMC solution (5 mL/kg), d Treated with 10 mg/kg gliclazide in 0.5% (w/v) aqueous CMC, * Significant difference at p < 0.01 compared with the corresponding control.