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Synthesis and Molecular Docking Studies of Alkoxy- and Imidazole-Substituted Xanthones as α-Amylase and α-Glucosidase Inhibitors.

Authors :
Aguila-Muñoz, Dolores G.
Vázquez-Lira, Gabriel
Sarmiento-Tlale, Erika
Cruz-López, María C.
Jiménez-Montejo, Fabiola E.
López y López, Víctor E.
Escalante, Carlos H.
Andrade-Pavón, Dulce
Gómez-García, Omar
Tamariz, Joaquín
Mendieta-Moctezuma, Aarón
Source :
Molecules. May2023, Vol. 28 Issue 10, p4180. 26p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Current antidiabetic drugs have severe side effects, which may be minimized by new selective molecules that strongly inhibit α-glucosidase and weakly inhibit α-amylase. We have synthesized novel alkoxy-substituted xanthones and imidazole-substituted xanthones and have evaluated them for their in silico and in vitro α-glucosidase and α-amylase inhibition activity. Compounds 6c, 6e, and 9b promoted higher α-glucosidase inhibition (IC50 = 16.0, 12.8, and 4.0 µM, respectively) and lower α-amylase inhibition (IC50 = 76.7, 68.1, and >200 µM, respectively) compared to acarbose (IC50 = 306.7 µM for α-glucosidase and 20.0 µM for α-amylase). Contrarily, derivatives 10c and 10f showed higher α-amylase inhibition (IC50 = 5.4 and 8.7 µM, respectively) and lower α-glucosidase inhibition (IC50 = 232.7 and 145.2 µM, respectively). According to the structure–activity relationship, attaching 4-bromobutoxy or 4′-chlorophenylacetophenone moieties to the 2-hydroxy group of xanthone provides higher α-glucosidase inhibition and lower α-amylase inhibition. In silico studies suggest that these scaffolds are key in the activity and interaction of xanthone derivatives. Enzymatic kinetics studies showed that 6c, 9b, and 10c are mainly mixed inhibitors on α-glucosidase and α-amylase. In addition, drug prediction and ADMET studies support that compounds 6c, 9b, and 10c are candidates with antidiabetic potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14203049
Volume :
28
Issue :
10
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecules
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163986083
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules28104180