| Literature DB >> 28778369 |
Ravindra D Wavhale1, Elvis A F Martis1, Premlata K Ambre1, Baojie Wan2, Scott G Franzblau2, Krishna R Iyer1, Kavita Raikuvar1, Katarzyna Macegoniuk3, Łukasz Berlicki3, Santosh R Nandan4, Evans C Coutinho5.
Abstract
BM212 [1,5-diaryl-2-methyl-3-(4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)-methyl-pyrrole] is a pyrrole derivative with strong inhibitory activity against drug resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis and mycobacteria residing in macrophages. However, it was not pursued because of its poor pharmacokinetics and toxicity profile. Our goal was to design and synthesize new antimycobacterial BM212 analogs with lower toxicity and better pharmacokinetic profile. Using the scaffold hopping approach, three structurally diverse heterocycles - 2,3-disubstituted imidazopyridines, 2,3-disubstituted benzimidazoles and 1,2,4-trisubstituted imidazoles emerged as promising antitubercular agents. All compounds were synthesized through easy and convenient methods and their structures confirmed by IR, 1H NMR, 13C NMR and MS. In-vitro cytotoxicity studies on normal kidney monkey cell lines and HepG2 cell lines, as well as metabolic stability studies on rat liver microsomes for some of the most active compounds, established that these compounds have negligible cytotoxicity and are metabolically stable. Interestingly the benzimidazole compound (4a) is as potent as the parent molecule BM212 (MIC 2.3μg/ml vs 0.7-1.5μg/ml), but is devoid of the toxicity against HepG2 cell lines (IC50 203.10µM vs 7.8µM).Entities:
Keywords: 1,2,4-Trisubstituted imidazoles; 2,3-Disubstituted benzimidazoles; 2,3-Disubstituted imidazopyridines; Anti-tubercular activity; BM212; Microplate alamar blue assay; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Scaffold hopping
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28778369 DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2017.07.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioorg Med Chem ISSN: 0968-0896 Impact factor: 3.641