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Development of a New Class of Monoamine Oxidase-B Inhibitors by Fine-Tuning the Halogens on the Acylhydrazones.

Jayalakshmi JayanJiseong LeeSunil KumarAmritha ManoharanAnishma Payyappilliparambil NarayananReenoo JauhariMohamed A AbdelgawadMohammed M GhoneimHasnaa Ali EbrahimSubin Mary ZachariahHoon KimBijo Mathew
Published in: ACS omega (2023)
A total of 14 acyl hydrazine derivatives ( ACH1-ACH14 ) were developed and examined for their ability to block monoamine oxidase (MAO). Thirteen analogues showed stronger inhibition potency against MAO-B than MAO-A. With a half-maximum inhibitory concentration of 0.14 μM, ACH10 demonstrated the strongest inhibitory activity against MAO-B, followed by ACH14 , ACH13 , ACH8 , and ACH3 (IC 50 = 0.15, 0.18, 0.20, and 0.22 μM, respectively). Structure-activity relationships suggested that the inhibition effect on MAO-B resulted from the combination of halogen substituents of the A- and/or B-rings. This series concluded that when -F was substituted to the B-ring, MAO-B inhibitory activities were high, except for ACH6 . In the inhibition kinetics study, the compounds ACH10 and ACH14 were identified as competitive inhibitors, with K i values of 0.097 ± 0.0021 and 0.10 ± 0.038 μM, respectively. In a reversibility experiment using the dialysis methods, ACH10 and ACH14 showed effective recoveries of MAO-B inhibition as much as lazabemide, a reversible reference. These experiments proposed that ACH10 and ACH14 were efficient, reversible competitive MAO-B inhibitors. In addition, the lead molecules showed good blood-brain barrier permeation with the PAMPA method. The molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulation study confirmed that the hit compound ACH10 can form a stable protein-ligand complex by forming a hydrogen bond with the NH atom in the hydrazide group of the compound.
Keyphrases
  • molecular docking
  • molecular dynamics
  • blood brain barrier
  • density functional theory
  • binding protein
  • peritoneal dialysis
  • fluorescent probe