Search results for "Medicinal"
showing 10 items of 2966 documents
Search of Chemical Scaffolds for Novel Antituberculosis Agents
2005
3 A method to identify chemical scaffolds potentially active against Mycobacterium tuberculosis is presented. The molecular features of a set of structurally heterogeneous antituberculosis drugs were coded by means of structural invariants. Three tech- niques were used to obtain equations able to model the antituberculosis activity: linear discriminant analysis, multilinear re- gression, and shrinkage estimation-ridge regression. The model obtained was statistically validated through leave-n-out test, and an external set and was applied to a database for the search of new active agents. The selected compounds were assayed in vitro, and among those identified as active stand reserpine, N,N,N…
Inhibition of Formation of Rev-RRE Complex by Pyronin Y
1993
The interaction of pyronin Y, an RNA intercalating drug, with the binding of Rev protein from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) to Rev-responsive element (RRE)-containing env RNA was studied. In gel retardation assays, recombinant Rev protein tightly bound to in vitro transcribed RRE RNA. Nitrocellulose-filter-binding studies revealed a dissociation constant of ≈(1–2) = 10−10M (Pfeifer et al., 1991). Pyronin Y efficiently suppressed formation of the Rev-RRE complex. At a concentration of 1 μg ml−1, complex formation was almost completely inhibited. Electron microscopy showed that Rev oligomerizes in the presence of RRE-containing RNA with the formation of short rod-like structures…
QuBiLS-MAS, open source multi-platform software for atom- and bond-based topological (2D) and chiral (2.5D) algebraic molecular descriptors computati…
2017
Background In previous reports, Marrero-Ponce et al. proposed algebraic formalisms for characterizing topological (2D) and chiral (2.5D) molecular features through atom- and bond-based ToMoCoMD-CARDD (acronym for Topological Molecular Computational Design-Computer Aided Rational Drug Design) molecular descriptors. These MDs codify molecular information based on the bilinear, quadratic and linear algebraic forms and the graph-theoretical electronic-density and edge-adjacency matrices in order to consider atom- and bond-based relations, respectively. These MDs have been successfully applied in the screening of chemical compounds of different therapeutic applications ranging from antimalarials…
Potential of Central, Eastern and Western Africa Medicinal Plants for Cancer Therapy: Spotlight on Resistant Cells and Molecular Targets
2017
Cancer remains a major health hurdle worldwide and has moved from the third leading cause of death in the year 1990 to second place after cardiovascular disease since 2013. Chemotherapy is one of the most widely used treatment modes; however, its efficiency is limited due to the resistance of cancer cells to cytotoxic agents. The present overview deals with the potential of the flora of Central, Eastern and Western African (CEWA) regions as resource for anticancer drug discovery. It also reviews the molecular targets of phytochemicals of these plants such as ABC transporters, namely P-glycoprotein (P-gp), multi drug-resistance-related proteins (MRPs), breast cancer resistance protein (BCRP,…
Quadruplex detection in human cells
2020
Abstract The precise detection of both DNA and RNA quadruplexes in human cells remains challenging. Efforts are being invested to design, synthesize and operate molecular tools to track and detect quadruplexes in cells. Such probes now have sufficient molecular specificity and suitable spectroscopic properties to shed light on quadruplexes in their cellular context, thus providing reliable details about their existence in cells. Herein, the most important steps in this line of development are summarized, from the very first attempts with organometallic complexes to the development of immunodetection technologies; and from in vitro to live-cell investigations performed with cell-permeable qu…
The Galactose-Specific Lectin from the Sponge Chondrilla Nucula Displays Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Activity in vitro via Stimulation of the (…
1990
A new lectin has been isolated from the sponge Chondrilla nucula. The purified CN lectin is a protein composed of four polypeptide chains with a molecular weight (MW) of 15600. The isoelectric point is 4.5 and the amino acid composition is rich in aspartic and glutamic acid. The lectin precipitates erythrocytes from humans (A, B, O) with a titre between 25 and 210. The CN lectin is d-galactose-specific and displays a moderate mitogenic effect on spleen lymphocytes from mice and on CD4-positive human H9 cells. An interesting feature of this lectin is its ability to stimulate the (2′-5′)oligoriboadenylate [(2′-5′)A] metabolic pathway in non-infected and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1)-i…
Synergistic Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Viral (HIV-1) Effect of the Immunomodulator Ampligen (Mismatched Double-Stranded RNA) with Inhibitors of Reve…
1993
The potent antiviral effect of double stranded RNA, such as the mismatched poly(l)·poly(C12U) [Ampligen], 2′,3′-dideoxy-3′-fluorothymidine (FddThd) and antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (ODN) has been established in in vitro systems using cells infected with the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We report here that the immunomodulator poly(l)·poly(C12U) interacts synergistically with (1) the reverse transcriptase inhibitor FddThd (FIC value: 0.43), (2) the modified (5′- and 3′-end capped thioates) antisense ODN-4 directed against the splice acceptor site of the HIV-1/ tat gene (FIC value: 0.66) and (3) also with pyronin Y, a compound which prevents binding of HIV-1 Rev protein to t…
Structure-Activity Relationship Analysis of 3-Phenylcoumarin-Based Monoamine Oxidase B Inhibitors
2018
Monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B) catalyzes deamination of monoamines such as neurotransmitters dopamine and norepinephrine. Accordingly, small-molecule MAO-B inhibitors potentially alleviate the symptoms of dopamine-linked neuropathologies such as depression or Parkinson's disease. Coumarin with a functionalized 3-phenyl ring system is a promising scaffold for building potent MAO-B inhibitors. Here, a vast set of 3-phenylcoumarin derivatives was designed using virtual combinatorial chemistry or rationally de novo and synthesized using microwave chemistry. The derivatives inhibited the MAO-B at 100 nM−1 μM. The IC50 value of the most potent derivative 1 was 56 nM. A docking-based structure-activi…
Evaluating ancient Egyptian prescriptions today: Anti-inflammatory activity of Ziziphus spina-christi.
2015
Abstract Background Ziziphus spina-christi (L.) Desf. (Christ's Thorn Jujube) is a wild tree today found in Jordan, Israel, Egypt, and some parts of Africa, which was already in use as a medicinal plant in Ancient Egypt. In ancient Egyptian prescriptions, it was used in remedies against swellings, pain, and heat, and thus should have anti-inflammatory effects. Nowadays, Z. spina-christi, is used in Egypt (by Bedouins, and Nubians), the Arabian Peninsula, Jordan, Iraq, and Morocco against a wide range of illnesses, most of them associated with inflammation. Pharmacological research undertaken to date suggests that it possesses anti-inflammatory, hypoglycemic, hypotensive and anti-microbial e…
The unusual structure of Ruminococcin C1 antimicrobial peptide confers clinical properties.
2020
The emergence of superbugs developing resistance to antibiotics and the resurgence of microbial infections have led scientists to start an antimicrobial arms race. In this context, we have previously identified an active RiPP, the Ruminococcin C1, naturally produced by Ruminococcus gnavus E1, a symbiont of the healthy human intestinal microbiota. This RiPP, subclassified as a sactipeptide, requires the host digestive system to become active against pathogenic Clostridia and multidrug-resistant strains. Here, we report its unique compact structure on the basis of four intramolecular thioether bridges introduced post-translationally by a specific radical-SAM sactisynthase. This structure con…