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Conjugates of Tacrine with Salicylamide as Promising Multitarget Agents for Alzheimer's Disease.

Maria V GrishchenkoGalina F MakhaevaYanina V BurgartElena V RudakovaNatalia P BoltnevaNadezhda V KovalevaOlga G SerebryakovaSofya V LushchekinaTatiana Yu AstakhovaEkaterina F ZhilinaEvgeny V ShchegolkovRudy J RichardsonVictor I Saloutin
Published in: ChemMedChem (2022)
New conjugates of tacrine and salicylamide with alkylene spacers were synthesized and evaluated as potential multifunctional agents for Alzheimer's disease (AD). The compounds exhibited high acetylcholinesterase (AChE, IC 50 to 0.224 μM) and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE, IC 50 to 0.0104 μM) inhibitory activities. They were also rather poor inhibitors of carboxylesterase, suggesting a low tendency to exert potential unwanted drug-drug interactions in clinical use. The conjugates were mixed-type reversible inhibitors of both cholinesterases and demonstrated dual binding to the catalytic and peripheral anionic sites of AChE in molecular docking that, along with experimental results on propidium iodide displacement, suggest their potential to block AChE-induced β-amyloid aggregation. The new conjugates exhibited high ABTS .+ -scavenging activity. N-(6-(1,2,3,4-Tetrahydroacridin-9-ylamino)hexyl)salicylamide is a lead compound that also demonstrates metal chelating ability toward Cu 2+ , Fe 2+ and Zn 2+ . Thus, the new conjugates have displayed the potential to be multifunctional anti-AD agents for further development.
Keyphrases
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