3 resultados para Evaluation of different sources of proteins

em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland


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This thesis describes work carried out on the synthesis of novel 5- and 11-substituted ellipticines and derivatives of the ellipticine analogues, isoellipticine and deazaellipticine, followed by investigation of their potential as anti-cancer agents. Preparation of the key 5- and 11-substituted ellipticine targets involved the development of regiospecific, sequential alkylation reactions with alkenyllithium and Grignard reagents. Investigation of these novel reactions resulted in a new route towards 5-substituted ellipticines via Grignard reaction with vinylmagnesium bromide. These novel 5-vinylellipticine derivatives were further functionalised in an ozonolysis reaction, followed by oxidation to give a range of novel 5-substituted ellipticines. Less success was encountered in the 11-substituted ellipticine series, however preparation of these derivatives using a previously published route was accomplished, and the resulting 11-formylellipticine was further derivatised to give a panel of novel 9- and 11-substituted ellipticines, incorporating amide, carboxylate, imine and amine functionality. The successful route towards 5-substituted ellipticines was applied to the preparation of a range of novel 11-substituted isoellipticines and 6-substituted deazaellipticines, the first time substantial synthesis has been undertaken with these analogues. In addition to this, the first preparation of isoellipticinium salts is described, and a panel of novel isoellipticinium, 7 formylisoellipticinium and 7-hydroxyisoellipticinium salts were synthesised in good yields. Biological evaluation of a panel of 43 novel ellipticine, isoellipticine and deazaellipticine derivatives was accomplished with a topoisomerase II decatenation assay and submission to the NCI 60-cell line screen. Four novel isoellipticine topoisomerase II inhibitors were identified from the decatenation assay, with strong activity at 10 μM. In addition to this, NCI screening identified five highly cytotoxic ellipticine and isoellipticine compounds with remarkable selectivity profiles for different cancer types. These novel lead compounds represent new templates for further research and synthesis.

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The main objective of this thesis is to outline the synthetic chemistry involved in the preparation of a range of novel lanostane and cholestane derivatives, and subsequent investigation into their biological activity in cancer cells. The biological results obtained throughout the project have driven the strategic synthesis of new compounds, in an effort to optimise the anti cancer potential of lanostane and cholestane derivatives. The first chapter begins with an overview of steroidal compounds and details a literature review of the natural sources of these moieties, as well as their biosynthesis and reported synthetic derivatives. The biological activity of interesting natural and synthetic analogues is also discussed. In addition, an insight into some currently prescribed pharmaceutical compounds, with functional groups relevant to this project, is presented. The second chapter discusses the methods employed for the synthesis of these novel lanostane and cholestane derivatives, and comprises three main sections. Firstly, various oxidation products of lanosterol are synthesised, mainly via epoxidations of the C-8,9 and C- 24,25 alkenes, and also allylic oxidations at these positions. Secondly, amine derivatives of lanosterol are formed by cleaving the lanostane side chain, thereby yielding a new cholestane nucleus, and performing several reductive aminations on the resulting key aldehyde intermediates. Various amines such as piperidine, morpholine, diethylamine and aniline are employed in the reductive amination reactions to yield novel cholestane steroids with amine side chains. Finally, starting from stigmasterol and proceeding with the same methodology of cleaving the steroidal side chain and subsequently performing reductive aminations, novel cholestane derivatives of the biologically active amines are synthesised. The cytotoxicity of these compounds against CaCo-2 and U937 cell lines is presented in terms of percentage viability of cells, IC50 value and apoptosis. The MTT assay is used to determine the percentage viability of cells, and the IC50 data is generated from the MTT results. Apoptosis is measured in terms of fold increase relative to a carrier control. In summary, the compounds formed are discussed in terms of chemical synthesis, spectroscopic interpretation and biological activity. The main reaction pathways involved in the chemistry within this project are various oxidations and reductive amination. The final chapter is a detailed account of the full experimental procedures for the compounds synthesised during this work, including characterisation using spectroscopic and analytical data.

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Existing work in Computer Science and Electronic Engineering demonstrates that Digital Signal Processing techniques can effectively identify the presence of stress in the speech signal. These techniques use datasets containing real or actual stress samples i.e. real-life stress such as 911 calls and so on. Studies that use simulated or laboratory-induced stress have been less successful and inconsistent. Pervasive, ubiquitous computing is increasingly moving towards voice-activated and voice-controlled systems and devices. Speech recognition and speaker identification algorithms will have to improve and take emotional speech into account. Modelling the influence of stress on speech and voice is of interest to researchers from many different disciplines including security, telecommunications, psychology, speech science, forensics and Human Computer Interaction (HCI). The aim of this work is to assess the impact of moderate stress on the speech signal. In order to do this, a dataset of laboratory-induced stress is required. While attempting to build this dataset it became apparent that reliably inducing measurable stress in a controlled environment, when speech is a requirement, is a challenging task. This work focuses on the use of a variety of stressors to elicit a stress response during tasks that involve speech content. Biosignal analysis (commercial Brain Computer Interfaces, eye tracking and skin resistance) is used to verify and quantify the stress response, if any. This thesis explains the basis of the author’s hypotheses on the elicitation of affectively-toned speech and presents the results of several studies carried out throughout the PhD research period. These results show that the elicitation of stress, particularly the induction of affectively-toned speech, is not a simple matter and that many modulating factors influence the stress response process. A model is proposed to reflect the author’s hypothesis on the emotional response pathways relating to the elicitation of stress with a required speech content. Finally the author provides guidelines and recommendations for future research on speech under stress. Further research paths are identified and a roadmap for future research in this area is defined.