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Multifunctional Isosteric Pyridine Analogs-Based 2-Aminothiazole: Design, Synthesis, and Potential Phosphodiesterase-5 Inhibitory Activity

Research Authors
Abdel Haleem M Hussein, Ahmed A Khames, Abu-Bakr A El-Adasy, Ahmed A Atalla, Mohamed Abdel-Rady, Mohamed IA Hassan, Mahrous A Abou-Salim, Yaseen AMM Elshaier, Assem Barakat
Research Abstract

The elaboration of new small molecules that target phosphodiesterase enzymes (PDEs), especially those of type 5 (PDE5), is an interesting and emerging topic nowadays. A new series of heterocycle-based aminothiazoles were designed and synthesized from the key intermediate, 3-oxo-N-(thiazol-2-yl)butanamide (a PDE5 inhibitor that retains its amidic function), as an essential pharmacophoric moiety. The PDE5 inhibitors prevent the degradation of cyclic guanosine monophosphate, thereby causing severe hypotension as a marked side effect. Hence, an in vivo testing of the target compounds was conducted to verify its relation with arterial blood pressure. Utilizing sildenafil as the reference drug, Compounds 5, 10a, and 11b achieved 100% inhibitions of PDE5 without significantly lowering the mean arterial blood pressures (115.95 ± 2.91, 110.3 ± 2.84, and 78.3 ± 2.57, respectively). The molecular docking study revealed that the tested compounds exhibited docking poses that were similar to that of sildenafil (exploiting the amide functionality that interacted with GLN:817:A). The molecular shape and electrostatic similarity revealed a comparable physically achievable electrostatic potential with the reference drug, sildenafil. Therefore, these concomitant results revealed that the tested compounds exerted sildenafil-like inhibitory effects (although without its known drawbacks) on blood circulation, thus suggesting that the tested compounds might represent a cornerstone of beneficial drug candidates for the safe treatment for erectile dysfunction

Research Date
Research Department
Research Journal
Molecules
Research Publisher
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Research Vol
4
Research Year
2021
Research Pages
902