| Literature DB >> 33673047 |
Lyudmila Kayukova1, Anna Vologzhanina2, Kaldybai Praliyev1, Gulnur Dyusembaeva1, Gulnur Baitursynova1, Asem Uzakova1, Venera Bismilda3, Lyailya Chingissova3, Kydyrmolla Akatan4.
Abstract
The analysis of stability of biologically active compounds requires an accurate determination of their structure. We have found that 5-aryl-3-(2-aminoethyl)-1,2,4-oxadiazoles are generally unstable in the presence of acids and bases and are rearranged into the salts of spiropyrazolinium compounds. Hence, there is a significant probability that it is the rearranged products that should be attributed to biological activity and not the primarily screened 5-aryl-3-(2-aminoethyl)-1,2,4-oxadiazoles. A series of the 2-amino-8-oxa-1,5-diazaspiro[4.5]dec-1-en-5-ium (spiropyrazoline) benzoates and chloride was synthesized by Boulton-Katritzky rearrangement of 5-substituted phenyl-3-[2-(morpholin-1-yl)ethyl]-1,2,4-oxadiazoles and characterized using FT-IR and NMR spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction. Spiropyrazolylammonium chloride demonstrates in vitro antitubercular activity on DS (drug-sensitive) and MDR (multidrug-resistant) of MTB (M. tuberculosis) strains (1 and 2 µg/mL, accordingly) equal to the activity of the basic antitubercular drug rifampicin; spiropyrazoline benzoates exhibit an average antitubercular activity of 10-100 μg/mL on MTB strains. Molecular docking studies revealed a series of M. tuberculosis receptors with the energies of ligand-receptor complexes (-35.8--42.8 kcal/mol) close to the value of intermolecular pairwise interactions of the same cation in the crystal of spiropyrazolylammonium chloride (-35.3 kcal/mol). However, only in complex with transcriptional repressor EthR2, both stereoisomers of the cation realize similar intermolecular interactions.Entities:
Keywords: 1,2,4-oxadiazoles; X-ray diffraction; in vitro antitubercular screening; molecular docking; spiropyrazolinium compounds
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33673047 PMCID: PMC7917742 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26040967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411