Cargando…

Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks?

In order to provide a more detailed view on the structure–antimycobacterial activity relationship (SAR) of phenylcarbamic acid derivatives containing two centers of protonation, 1-[2-[({[2-/3-(alkoxy)phenyl]amino}carbonyl)oxy]-3-(dipropylammonio)propyl]pyrrolidinium oxalates (1a–d)/dichlorides (1e–h...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Malík, Ivan, Csöllei, Jozef, Solovič, Ivan, Pospíšilová, Šárka, Michnová, Hana, Jampílek, Josef, Čížek, Alois, Kapustíková, Iva, Čurillová, Jana, Pecháčová, Mária, Stolaříková, Jiřina, Pecher, Daniel, Oravec, Michal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6222509/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30274224
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules23102493
_version_ 1783369221899550720
author Malík, Ivan
Csöllei, Jozef
Solovič, Ivan
Pospíšilová, Šárka
Michnová, Hana
Jampílek, Josef
Čížek, Alois
Kapustíková, Iva
Čurillová, Jana
Pecháčová, Mária
Stolaříková, Jiřina
Pecher, Daniel
Oravec, Michal
author_facet Malík, Ivan
Csöllei, Jozef
Solovič, Ivan
Pospíšilová, Šárka
Michnová, Hana
Jampílek, Josef
Čížek, Alois
Kapustíková, Iva
Čurillová, Jana
Pecháčová, Mária
Stolaříková, Jiřina
Pecher, Daniel
Oravec, Michal
author_sort Malík, Ivan
collection PubMed
description In order to provide a more detailed view on the structure–antimycobacterial activity relationship (SAR) of phenylcarbamic acid derivatives containing two centers of protonation, 1-[2-[({[2-/3-(alkoxy)phenyl]amino}carbonyl)oxy]-3-(dipropylammonio)propyl]pyrrolidinium oxalates (1a–d)/dichlorides (1e–h) as well as 1-[2-[({[2-/3-(alkoxy)phenyl]amino}carbonyl)oxy]-3-(di-propylammonio)propyl]azepanium oxalates (1i–l)/dichlorides (1m–p; alkoxy = butoxy to heptyloxy) were physicochemically characterized by estimation of their surface tension (γ; Traube’s stalagmometric method), electronic features (log ε; UV/Vis spectrophotometry) and lipophilic properties (log k(w); isocratic RP-HPLC) as well. The experimental log k(w) dataset was studied together with computational logarithms of partition coefficients (log P) generated by various methods based mainly on atomic or combined atomic and fragmental principles. Similarities and differences between the experimental and in silico lipophilicity descriptors were analyzed by unscaled principal component analysis (PCA). The in vitro activity of compounds 1a–p was inspected against Mycobacterium tuberculosis CNCTC My 331/88 (identical with H(37)R(v) and ATCC 2794, respectively), M. tuberculosis H(37)R(a) ATCC 25177, M. kansasii CNCTC My 235/80 (identical with ATCC 12478), the M. kansasii 6509/96 clinical isolate, M. kansasii DSM 44162, M. avium CNCTC My 330/80 (identical with ATCC 25291), M. smegmatis ATCC 700084 and M. marinum CAMP 5644, respectively. In vitro susceptibility of the mycobacteria to reference drugs isoniazid, ethambutol, ofloxacin or ciprofloxacin was tested as well. A very unique aspect of the research was that many compounds from the set 1a–p were highly efficient almost against all tested mycobacteria. The most promising derivatives showed MIC values varied from 1.9 μM to 8 μM, which were lower compared to those of used standards, especially if concerning ability to fight M. tuberculosis H(37)R(a) ATCC 25177, M. kansasii DSM 44162 or M. avium CNCTC My 330/80. Current in vitro biological assays and systematic SAR studies based on PCA approach as well as fitting procedures, which were supported by relevant statistical descriptors, proved that the compounds 1a–p represented a very promising molecular framework for development of ‘non-traditional’ but effective antimycobacterial agents.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6222509
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-62225092018-11-13 Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks? Malík, Ivan Csöllei, Jozef Solovič, Ivan Pospíšilová, Šárka Michnová, Hana Jampílek, Josef Čížek, Alois Kapustíková, Iva Čurillová, Jana Pecháčová, Mária Stolaříková, Jiřina Pecher, Daniel Oravec, Michal Molecules Article In order to provide a more detailed view on the structure–antimycobacterial activity relationship (SAR) of phenylcarbamic acid derivatives containing two centers of protonation, 1-[2-[({[2-/3-(alkoxy)phenyl]amino}carbonyl)oxy]-3-(dipropylammonio)propyl]pyrrolidinium oxalates (1a–d)/dichlorides (1e–h) as well as 1-[2-[({[2-/3-(alkoxy)phenyl]amino}carbonyl)oxy]-3-(di-propylammonio)propyl]azepanium oxalates (1i–l)/dichlorides (1m–p; alkoxy = butoxy to heptyloxy) were physicochemically characterized by estimation of their surface tension (γ; Traube’s stalagmometric method), electronic features (log ε; UV/Vis spectrophotometry) and lipophilic properties (log k(w); isocratic RP-HPLC) as well. The experimental log k(w) dataset was studied together with computational logarithms of partition coefficients (log P) generated by various methods based mainly on atomic or combined atomic and fragmental principles. Similarities and differences between the experimental and in silico lipophilicity descriptors were analyzed by unscaled principal component analysis (PCA). The in vitro activity of compounds 1a–p was inspected against Mycobacterium tuberculosis CNCTC My 331/88 (identical with H(37)R(v) and ATCC 2794, respectively), M. tuberculosis H(37)R(a) ATCC 25177, M. kansasii CNCTC My 235/80 (identical with ATCC 12478), the M. kansasii 6509/96 clinical isolate, M. kansasii DSM 44162, M. avium CNCTC My 330/80 (identical with ATCC 25291), M. smegmatis ATCC 700084 and M. marinum CAMP 5644, respectively. In vitro susceptibility of the mycobacteria to reference drugs isoniazid, ethambutol, ofloxacin or ciprofloxacin was tested as well. A very unique aspect of the research was that many compounds from the set 1a–p were highly efficient almost against all tested mycobacteria. The most promising derivatives showed MIC values varied from 1.9 μM to 8 μM, which were lower compared to those of used standards, especially if concerning ability to fight M. tuberculosis H(37)R(a) ATCC 25177, M. kansasii DSM 44162 or M. avium CNCTC My 330/80. Current in vitro biological assays and systematic SAR studies based on PCA approach as well as fitting procedures, which were supported by relevant statistical descriptors, proved that the compounds 1a–p represented a very promising molecular framework for development of ‘non-traditional’ but effective antimycobacterial agents. MDPI 2018-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6222509/ /pubmed/30274224 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules23102493 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Malík, Ivan
Csöllei, Jozef
Solovič, Ivan
Pospíšilová, Šárka
Michnová, Hana
Jampílek, Josef
Čížek, Alois
Kapustíková, Iva
Čurillová, Jana
Pecháčová, Mária
Stolaříková, Jiřina
Pecher, Daniel
Oravec, Michal
Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks?
title Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks?
title_full Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks?
title_fullStr Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks?
title_full_unstemmed Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks?
title_short Dibasic Derivatives of Phenylcarbamic Acid against Mycobacterial Strains: Old Drugs and New Tricks?
title_sort dibasic derivatives of phenylcarbamic acid against mycobacterial strains: old drugs and new tricks?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6222509/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30274224
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules23102493
work_keys_str_mv AT malikivan dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT csolleijozef dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT solovicivan dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT pospisilovasarka dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT michnovahana dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT jampilekjosef dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT cizekalois dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT kapustikovaiva dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT curillovajana dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT pechacovamaria dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT stolarikovajirina dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT pecherdaniel dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks
AT oravecmichal dibasicderivativesofphenylcarbamicacidagainstmycobacterialstrainsolddrugsandnewtricks