Search results for "relationship"
showing 10 items of 3616 documents
In vivo stimulation of murine haematopoiesis by the antineoplastic agent bryostatin-1
1990
A density functional study of flavonoid compounds with anti-HIV activity.
2005
Abstract Quantum chemical calculations at the DFT/B3LYP theory level, with the 6-31G* basis set, was employed to calculate a set of molecular properties of 26 flavonoid compounds with anti-HIV activity. The correlation between biological activity and structural properties was obtained by using the multiple linear regression method. The model obtained showed not only statistical significance but also predictive ability. We demonstrate in this paper that the anti-HIV activity of compounds can be related with the molecular hydrophobicity (ClogP), the electronegativity ( χ ) and the charges on some key atoms, while that the toxicity can be related with the electronic affinities (EA), ClogP and …
Chemistry and biology of new marine alkaloids from the indole and annelated indole series.
2003
Chemistry and biology of marine natural products from the indole and annelated indole series have become an attractive research field for development of new pharmacological lead substances. In the past years some of the isolated natural organic compounds were synthesized by chemists and evaluated with great enthusiasm to find new lead natural compounds against different diseases. In this review the latest results for new compounds including isolation, biological evaluation, synthetic pathways and some retrosynthetic analyses are summarized.
Evidence of a flip-flop phenomenon in acamprosate pharmacokinetics: an in vivo study in rats.
2006
The pharmacokinetics of acamprosate were examined in the rat after oral and intravenous administration in order to detect the possible presence of a flip-flop phenomenon. Rats received 9.3 or 73.3 mg/kg of the drug as an intravenous bolus. The same doses were orally administered via gastric intubation. Plasma samples were taken from the jugular vein for determination of acamprosate concentration by liquid scintillation counting. The drug content was also quantified in urine and faeces. The acamprosate bioavailability was close to 20%, the amount recovered in the faeces being around 80% of the administered dose. The terminal slope of the oral plasma curve was significantly lower than that ob…
Prediction of tyrosinase inhibition activity using atom-based bilinear indices.
2007
A set of novel atom-based molecular fingerprints is proposed based on a bilinear map similar to that defined in linear algebra. These molecular descriptors (MDs) are proposed as a new means of molecular parametrization easily calculated from 2D molecular information. The nonstochastic and stochastic molecular indices match molecular structure provided by molecular topology by using the kth nonstochastic and stochastic graph-theoretical electronic-density matrices, M(k) and S(k), respectively. Thus, the kth nonstochastic and stochastic bilinear indices are calculated using M(k) and S(k) as matrix operators of bilinear transformations. Chemical information is coded by using different pair com…
New agents active against Mycobacterium avium complex selected by molecular topology: a virtual screening method
2003
Objectives: In order to select new drugs and to predict their in vitro activity against Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC), new quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) models were developed. Methods: The activities against MAC of 29 structurally heterogeneous drugs were examined by means of linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and multilinear regression analysis (MLRA) by using topological indices (TI) as structural descriptors. In vitro antimycobacterial activities were determined by a broth microdilution method with 7H9 medium. Results: The topological model obtained successfully classifies over 80% of compounds as active or inactive; consequently, it was applied in the search fo…
Phenothiazine: the seven lives of pharmacology's first lead structure.
2011
Rooted in the early days of organic dye chemistry, the phenothiazine structure and its derivatives have since held a prominent place in pharmacology and biomedicine. Initially used for histochemical stains of plasmodia by Paul Ehrlich, anthelmintic and antibiotic properties of phenothiazines were globally exploited in the 1930s and 1940s. Clinical use of N-substituted phenothiazines as antihistaminics (1940s), sedatives and antipsychotics (1950s) followed and continues to this day. Recently, interest in these structures has re-emerged for a variety of fascinating features in relation to neurodegenerative disease, spearheaded by the unique redox chemistry of phenothiazine--arguably the most …
Pyrrolo[1,2-f]phenanthridines and related non-rigid analogues as antiviral agents.
2002
Abstract The pyrrolo[1,2- f ]phenanthridines 8 – 22 and the corresponding non-rigid analogues 23 – 41 were synthesised and their ability to inhibit the replication of HIV-1 was tested. Only the polycyclic derivatives 10 , 11 , and 13 showed a weak anti -HIV activity, whereas several pyrrolo-phenanthridines ( 8 , 10 , 16 – 18 ) were found to stimulate the multiplication of MT-4 cells at low concentrations. Derivative 10 demonstrated to possess the unique property of stimulating the multiplication of lymphocytes joined to HIV inhibition.
3D-QSAR pharmacophore modeling and in silico screening of new Bcl-xl inhibitors.
2010
Bcl-2 proteins family members play several roles in tumoral proliferation: they inhibit proapoptotic activity during oncogenesis, support tumor cells survival, induce chemoresistance. The discovery of new small inhibitors of Bcl-xl represents a new frontier for cancer treatment. In this study, a 3D-QSAR pharmacophore model was developed, based on 42 biarylacylsulfonamides, and used to understand the structural factors affecting the inhibitory potency of these derivatives. Aromatic, negative charge, and hydrogen bond acceptor effects contribute to the inhibitory activity. The model was then employed as 3D search query to screen ZINC drug-like database in order to select new scaffolds. Finall…
A review of natural and modified betulinic, ursolic and echinocystic acid derivatives as potential antitumor and anti-HIV agents.
2003
The aim of this review is to update current knowledge on the betulinic, ursolic and echinocystic acids and their natural and semisynthetic analogs, focussing on their cytotoxic and anti-HIV activities. Then, the last results of the authors' team on unusual semisynthetic derivatives of these triterpenoids will be presented in order to establish structure/activity relationships.