Antiinflammation Derived Suzuki-Coupled Fenbufens as COX-2 Inhibitors: Minilibrary Construction and Bioassay |
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Authors: | Shiou-Shiow Farn Yen-Buo Lai Kuo-Fong Hua Hsiang-Ping Chen Tzu-Yi Yu Sheng-Nan Lo Li-Hsin Shen Rong-Jiun Sheu Chung-Shan Yu |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Biomedical Engineering and Environmental Sciences, National Tsinghua University, Hsinchu 30013, Taiwan; (S.-S.F.); (Y.-B.L.); (H.-P.C.); (T.-Y.Y.); (L.-H.S.);2.Isotope Application Division, Institute of Nuclear Energy Research, Taoyuan 32546, Taiwan;3.Department of Biotechnology and Animal Science, National Ilan University, Ilan 26007, Taiwan;4.Institute of Nuclear Engineering and Science, National Tsinghua University, Hsinchu 30013, Taiwan; |
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Abstract: | A small fenbufen library comprising 18 compounds was prepared via Suzuki Miyara coupling. The five-step preparations deliver 9–17% biphenyl compounds in total yield. These fenbufen analogs exert insignificant activity against the IL-1 release as well as inhibiting cyclooxygenase 2 considerably. Both the para-amino and para-hydroxy mono substituents display the most substantial COX-2 inhibition, particularly the latter one showing a comparable activity as celecoxib. The most COX-2 selective and bioactive disubstituted compound encompasses one electron-withdrawing methyl and one electron-donating fluoro groups in one arene. COX-2 is selective but not COX-2 to bioactive compounds that contain both two electron-withdrawing groups; disubstituted analogs with both resonance-formable electron-donating dihydroxy groups display high COX-2 activity but inferior COX-2 selectivity. In silico simulation and modeling for three COX-2 active—p-fluoro, p-hydroxy and p-amino—fenbufens show a preferable docking to COX-2 than COX-1. The most stabilization by the p-hydroxy fenbufen with COX-2 predicted by theoretical simulation is consistent with its prominent COX-2 inhibition resulting from experiments. |
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Keywords: | COX-2 selectivity synergistic COVID-19 biaryl inflammasome |
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