Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists: Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists : Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling. / Frølund, Bente; Jensen, Lars S.; Guandalini, Luca; Canillo, Carolina; Vestergaard, Henrik T.; Kristiansen, Uffe; Nielsen, Birgitte; Stensbøl, Tine B.; Madsen, Christian; Krogsgaard-Larsen, Povl; Liljefors, Tommy.

In: Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, Vol. 48, No. 2, 27.01.2005, p. 427-439.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Frølund, B, Jensen, LS, Guandalini, L, Canillo, C, Vestergaard, HT, Kristiansen, U, Nielsen, B, Stensbøl, TB, Madsen, C, Krogsgaard-Larsen, P & Liljefors, T 2005, 'Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists: Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling', Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 48, no. 2, pp. 427-439. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm049256w

APA

Frølund, B., Jensen, L. S., Guandalini, L., Canillo, C., Vestergaard, H. T., Kristiansen, U., Nielsen, B., Stensbøl, T. B., Madsen, C., Krogsgaard-Larsen, P., & Liljefors, T. (2005). Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists: Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 48(2), 427-439. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm049256w

Vancouver

Frølund B, Jensen LS, Guandalini L, Canillo C, Vestergaard HT, Kristiansen U et al. Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists: Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 2005 Jan 27;48(2):427-439. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm049256w

Author

Frølund, Bente ; Jensen, Lars S. ; Guandalini, Luca ; Canillo, Carolina ; Vestergaard, Henrik T. ; Kristiansen, Uffe ; Nielsen, Birgitte ; Stensbøl, Tine B. ; Madsen, Christian ; Krogsgaard-Larsen, Povl ; Liljefors, Tommy. / Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists : Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling. In: Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 2005 ; Vol. 48, No. 2. pp. 427-439.

Bibtex

@article{7161948a12284bbca793aa59575907c2,
title = "Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists: Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling",
abstract = "We have previously described a series of competitive GABAA antagonists derived from the low-efficacy partial agonist 5-(4-piperidyl)-3- isoxazolol (4-PIOL, 4). The 2-naphthylmethyl analogue, 4-(2-naphthylmethyl)-5- (4-piperidyl)-3-isoxazolol (5), provided affinity for the GABAA receptor site higher than that of the standard GABAA receptor antagonist, SR 95531 (3). Molecular modeling studies of these compounds exposed a cavity at the receptor recognition site capable of accommodating aromatic groups of substantial size in the 4-position in the 3-isoxazolol ring. Here we present a series of analogues of 5, with various substituents in different positions in the naphthyl ring system (6a-k), and compounds with aromatic substituents directly attached to the 4-position of the 3-isoxazolol ring (71-n). The compounds have been pharmacologically characterized using receptor-binding assays and electrophysiological whole-cell patch-clamp techniques. All of the tested compounds show affinity for the GABAA receptor site. While the 5-, 7-, and 8-bromo analogues, 6b-d, showed receptor affinities (Ki = 45, 109, and 80 nM, respectively) comparable with that of 5 (Ki = 49 nM), the 1-bromo analogue, 6a, provided the highest receptor affinity of the series (Ki = 10 nM). Introduction of a series of different substituents in the 1-position in the 2-naphthyl ring system led to compounds, 6c-k, with retained high affinity for the GABA A receptor (Ki = 16-250 nM). Introduction of a phenyl ring directly into the 4-position on the 3-isoxazolol ring gave a 41-fold increase in affinity relative to that of 4-PIOL. In whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from cultured cerebral cortical neurons, all of the tested compounds were able to inhibit the effect of the specific GABAA agonist isoguvacine, 6a showing antagonist potency (IC50 = 42 nM) markedly higher than that of 3 (IC50 = 240 nM). Molecular modeling studies, based on the compounds described, emphasized the importance of the distal ring in 5 for receptor affinity and the considerable dimensions of the proposed receptor cavity. Furthermore, the phenyl rings in 71 and in 6k were shown to represent highly favorable positions for an aromatic ring in previously unexplored receptor regions in terms of a pharmacophore model.",
author = "Bente Fr{\o}lund and Jensen, {Lars S.} and Luca Guandalini and Carolina Canillo and Vestergaard, {Henrik T.} and Uffe Kristiansen and Birgitte Nielsen and Stensb{\o}l, {Tine B.} and Christian Madsen and Povl Krogsgaard-Larsen and Tommy Liljefors",
year = "2005",
month = jan,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1021/jm049256w",
language = "English",
volume = "48",
pages = "427--439",
journal = "Journal of Medicinal Chemistry",
issn = "0022-2623",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Potent 4-aryl- or 4-arylalkyl-substituted 3-isoxazolol GABAA antagonists

T2 - Synthesis, pharmacology, and molecular modeling

AU - Frølund, Bente

AU - Jensen, Lars S.

AU - Guandalini, Luca

AU - Canillo, Carolina

AU - Vestergaard, Henrik T.

AU - Kristiansen, Uffe

AU - Nielsen, Birgitte

AU - Stensbøl, Tine B.

AU - Madsen, Christian

AU - Krogsgaard-Larsen, Povl

AU - Liljefors, Tommy

PY - 2005/1/27

Y1 - 2005/1/27

N2 - We have previously described a series of competitive GABAA antagonists derived from the low-efficacy partial agonist 5-(4-piperidyl)-3- isoxazolol (4-PIOL, 4). The 2-naphthylmethyl analogue, 4-(2-naphthylmethyl)-5- (4-piperidyl)-3-isoxazolol (5), provided affinity for the GABAA receptor site higher than that of the standard GABAA receptor antagonist, SR 95531 (3). Molecular modeling studies of these compounds exposed a cavity at the receptor recognition site capable of accommodating aromatic groups of substantial size in the 4-position in the 3-isoxazolol ring. Here we present a series of analogues of 5, with various substituents in different positions in the naphthyl ring system (6a-k), and compounds with aromatic substituents directly attached to the 4-position of the 3-isoxazolol ring (71-n). The compounds have been pharmacologically characterized using receptor-binding assays and electrophysiological whole-cell patch-clamp techniques. All of the tested compounds show affinity for the GABAA receptor site. While the 5-, 7-, and 8-bromo analogues, 6b-d, showed receptor affinities (Ki = 45, 109, and 80 nM, respectively) comparable with that of 5 (Ki = 49 nM), the 1-bromo analogue, 6a, provided the highest receptor affinity of the series (Ki = 10 nM). Introduction of a series of different substituents in the 1-position in the 2-naphthyl ring system led to compounds, 6c-k, with retained high affinity for the GABA A receptor (Ki = 16-250 nM). Introduction of a phenyl ring directly into the 4-position on the 3-isoxazolol ring gave a 41-fold increase in affinity relative to that of 4-PIOL. In whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from cultured cerebral cortical neurons, all of the tested compounds were able to inhibit the effect of the specific GABAA agonist isoguvacine, 6a showing antagonist potency (IC50 = 42 nM) markedly higher than that of 3 (IC50 = 240 nM). Molecular modeling studies, based on the compounds described, emphasized the importance of the distal ring in 5 for receptor affinity and the considerable dimensions of the proposed receptor cavity. Furthermore, the phenyl rings in 71 and in 6k were shown to represent highly favorable positions for an aromatic ring in previously unexplored receptor regions in terms of a pharmacophore model.

AB - We have previously described a series of competitive GABAA antagonists derived from the low-efficacy partial agonist 5-(4-piperidyl)-3- isoxazolol (4-PIOL, 4). The 2-naphthylmethyl analogue, 4-(2-naphthylmethyl)-5- (4-piperidyl)-3-isoxazolol (5), provided affinity for the GABAA receptor site higher than that of the standard GABAA receptor antagonist, SR 95531 (3). Molecular modeling studies of these compounds exposed a cavity at the receptor recognition site capable of accommodating aromatic groups of substantial size in the 4-position in the 3-isoxazolol ring. Here we present a series of analogues of 5, with various substituents in different positions in the naphthyl ring system (6a-k), and compounds with aromatic substituents directly attached to the 4-position of the 3-isoxazolol ring (71-n). The compounds have been pharmacologically characterized using receptor-binding assays and electrophysiological whole-cell patch-clamp techniques. All of the tested compounds show affinity for the GABAA receptor site. While the 5-, 7-, and 8-bromo analogues, 6b-d, showed receptor affinities (Ki = 45, 109, and 80 nM, respectively) comparable with that of 5 (Ki = 49 nM), the 1-bromo analogue, 6a, provided the highest receptor affinity of the series (Ki = 10 nM). Introduction of a series of different substituents in the 1-position in the 2-naphthyl ring system led to compounds, 6c-k, with retained high affinity for the GABA A receptor (Ki = 16-250 nM). Introduction of a phenyl ring directly into the 4-position on the 3-isoxazolol ring gave a 41-fold increase in affinity relative to that of 4-PIOL. In whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from cultured cerebral cortical neurons, all of the tested compounds were able to inhibit the effect of the specific GABAA agonist isoguvacine, 6a showing antagonist potency (IC50 = 42 nM) markedly higher than that of 3 (IC50 = 240 nM). Molecular modeling studies, based on the compounds described, emphasized the importance of the distal ring in 5 for receptor affinity and the considerable dimensions of the proposed receptor cavity. Furthermore, the phenyl rings in 71 and in 6k were shown to represent highly favorable positions for an aromatic ring in previously unexplored receptor regions in terms of a pharmacophore model.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=19944433629&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1021/jm049256w

DO - 10.1021/jm049256w

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 15658856

AN - SCOPUS:19944433629

VL - 48

SP - 427

EP - 439

JO - Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

JF - Journal of Medicinal Chemistry

SN - 0022-2623

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 225120852