Abstract

The synthesis and structure-activity relationship (SAR) studies of the effect of varying the "A" group in a series of 5-(acetamidomethyl)oxazolidonone antibacterials (2) are described. Compounds 2 were principally prepared either by the six-step synthesis described previously (J. Med. Chem. 1989, 32, 1673) or by elaboration of the synthetic intermediate 2 (A = H) via electrophilic aromatic substitution or elaboration of the intermediate 2 (A = I) by transition metal catalyzed carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions. Antibacterial evaluation of compounds 2 with A = alkyl, ethenyl, ethynyl, hydroxyalkyl, aldo and keto, oximinoakyl, carboalkoxy, nitro, amino, halo and psi-halo, alkylthio, alkylsulfinyl, and alkysulfonyl against Staphylococcus aureus and Enterococcus faecalis led to the identification of several SAR trends. In several series of homologues (alkyl, ketyl, aximinoalkyl, amino, halo and psi-halo, and alkythio), antibacterial activity increased with increasing lipophilicity. But in series with where A is a substituent with a trior tetrasubstituted (substituent larger than H) quaternary atom attached directly to the aromatic ring (hydroxyalkyl, alkylsulfinyl, alkylsufonyl), the activity peaked at the member of the series with the "tert-butyl" connectivity pattern. Conjugated electron-withdrawing substituents also had increased activity relative to nonconjugated analogues of comparable lipophilicity.

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