3 resultados para Medicinal Chemistry

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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The marine world is an immense source of biodiversity that provides substances with striking potentials in medicinal chemistry and biotechnology. Sponges (Porifera) are marine animals that represent the most impressive example of organisms possessing the ability to metabolise silica through a family of enzymes known as silicateins. Complex skeletal structures (spicules) made of pure biogenic silica (biosilica) are produced under physiological conditions. Biosilica is a natural material comprising inorganic and organic components with unique mechanical, optical, and physico-chemical properties, including promising potential to be used for development of therapeutic agents in regenerative medicine. Unravelling the intimate physiological mechanisms occurring in sponges during the construction of their siliceous spicules is an on-going project, and several questions have been addressed by the studies proposed by our working group. In this doctoral work, the recombinant DNA technology is exploited for functional and structural characterisation of silicatein. Its precursors are produced as fusion proteins with a chaperone tag (named TF-Ps), and a robust method for the overexpression of native soluble proteins in high concentrations has been developed. In addition, it is observed and proven experimentally that the maturation of silicatein is an autocatalytic event that: (i) can be modulated by rational use of protease inhibitors; (ii) is influenced by the temperature of the environment; (iii) only slightly depends on the pH. In the same experimental framework, observations on the dynamics in the maturation of silicateins allow a better understanding of how the axial filaments form during the early stages of spicule construction. In addition, the definition of new distinct properties of silicatein (termed “structure-guiding” and “structure-forming”) is introduced. By homology models and through comparisons with similar proteins (the cathepsins), domains with significant surface hydrophobicity are identified as potential self-assembly mediators. Moreover, a high-throughput screening showed that TF-Ps could generate crystals under certain conditions, becoming promising for further structural studies. With the goal of optimise the properties of the recombinant silicatein, implementation of new production systems are tried for the first time. Success in the expression of silicatein-type proteins in insect and yeast cells, constitute a promising basis for further development, towards the establishment of an efficient method for the production of a high-value pure and soluble protein.

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Indolizines and pyrroles are considered as “privileged” structures since their skeletons were found in many biologically active natural products and they possess a wide range of pharmaceutical properties. Syntheses of these small drug-like molecules are very important in medicinal chemistry. However, most existent methodologies are usually limited to specific substitution patterns or require impractical starting materials or expensive catalysts. Therefore, developing new methodologies for the synthesis of indolizines and pyrroles from commercially available or readily accessible sources is highly desirable.rnIn this PhD thesis, several methods has been described for the synthesis of indolizines and pyrroles. In the first part, indolizines carrying substituents in positions 1-3 were synthesized via a formal [3+2]-cycloaddition of pyridinium ylides and nitroalkenes. Pyridinium salts were prepared by N-alkylation of pyridines with cyanohydrin triflates which could be prepared from corresponding aldehydes via a Strecker reaction followed by O-triflylation. Nitroalkenes were simply prepared from the corresponding aldehydes and nitroalkanes in a nitroaldol condensation. Overall, this modular approach allows to construct the indolizine framework with various substitution patterns starting from a pyridine, two different aldehydes and a nitroalkane. In contrast to reported methods, the produced indolizines do not have to contain an electron-withdrawing group.rnIt has also been found that nitrile-stabilized 2-alkylpyridinium ylides cyclize to unstable 2-aminoindolizines via an intramolecular 5-exo-dig cyclization. Using an in situ acetylation of the amino group, N-protected 2-aminoindolizines could be synthesized. As a less common substitution pattern, indolizines carrying substituents in positions 5–8 were synthesized from enones and 2-(1H-pyrrol-1-yl)nitriles obtained from α-aminonitriles using a modified Paal-Knorr pyrrole synthesis. The decoration of the pyridine unit in the indolizine skeleton has been achieved by a one-pot conjugate addition/cycloaromatization sequence.rnIn the second part of the thesis, the diversity-oriented synthesis of pyrroles from 3,5-diaryl substituted 2H-pyrrole-2-carbonitriles (cyanopyrrolines) obtained in a cyclocondensation of enones with aminoacetonitrile hydrochloride is being discussed. 2,4-Di-, 2,3,5-trisubstituted pyrroles, pyrrole-2-carbonitriles and 2,2’-bipyrroles were synthesized in a one- or two-step protocol. While the microwave-assisted thermal elimination of HCN from cyanopyrrolines gave 2,4-disubstituted pyrroles, DDQ-oxidation of the same intermediates furnished pyrrole-2-carbonitriles. Furthermore, 2,3,5-trisubstituted pyrroles were obtained via a C-2-alkylation of the deprotonated cyanopyrrolines followed by the elimination of HCN. Finally, it has also been found that tetraaryl substituted 2,2’-bipyrroles could be synthesized by the oxidative dimerization of cyanopyrrolines using copper (II) acetate at 100 °C.rn