Wang, Shengzheng’s team published research in Journal of Medicinal Chemistry in 2015-08-27 | 252932-48-2

Journal of Medicinal Chemistry published new progress about Antitumor agents. 252932-48-2 belongs to class esters-buliding-blocks, and the molecular formula is C7H10N2O2, Recommanded Product: Ethyl 3-amino-1H-pyrrole-2-carboxylate.

Wang, Shengzheng; Fang, Kun; Dong, Guoqiang; Chen, Shuqiang; Liu, Na; Miao, Zhenyuan; Yao, Jianzhong; Li, Jian; Zhang, Wannian; Sheng, Chunquan published the artcile< Scaffold diversity inspired by the natural product evodiamine: discovery of highly potent and multitargeting antitumor agents>, Recommanded Product: Ethyl 3-amino-1H-pyrrole-2-carboxylate, the main research area is evodiamine scaffold antitumor neoplasm.

A critical question in natural product-based drug discovery is how to translate the product into drug-like mols. with optimal pharmacol. properties. The generation of natural product-inspired scaffold diversity is an effective but challenging strategy to investigate the broader chem. space and identify promising drug leads. Extending the efforts to the natural product evodiamine, a diverse library containing 11 evodiamine-inspired novel scaffolds and their derivatives were designed and synthesized. Most of them showed good to excellent antitumor activity against various human cancer cell lines. In particular, 3-chloro-10-hydroxyl thio-evodiamine I showed excellent in vitro and in vivo antitumor efficacy with good tolerability and low toxicity. Antitumor mechanism and target profiling studies indicate that compound I is the first-in-class triple topoisomerase I/topoisomerase II/tubulin inhibitor. Overall, this study provided an effective strategy for natural product-based drug discovery.

Journal of Medicinal Chemistry published new progress about Antitumor agents. 252932-48-2 belongs to class esters-buliding-blocks, and the molecular formula is C7H10N2O2, Recommanded Product: Ethyl 3-amino-1H-pyrrole-2-carboxylate.

Referemce:
Ester – Wikipedia,
Ester – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics