Abstract

A series of 4-methoxy-3-arylamido-N-(substitutedphenyl)benzamides 6a-u were designed according to the splicing principle of structural design in the medicinal chemistry theory and were synthesized in five steps: nitration, acylation, ammoniation, reduction, and secondary ammoniation. The structures of the target compounds were characterized and verified by infrared, 1 H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), 13 C NMR, and electron spray ionization spectroscopy. Their in vitro antiplatelet aggregation activities induced by adenosine diphosphate (ADP) or arachidonic acid (AA) were assessed by Born's method. The biological evaluation revealed that all compounds exhibited certain levels of activities in both of the antiplatelet aggregation assays; compounds 6c (IC50 = 3.84 μM) and 6f (IC50 = 3.12 μM) displayed the strongest antiplatelet aggregation activities in the ADP-induced and AA-induced assay, separately. Moreover, compounds that had stronger activities were chosen for cell toxicity testing via the cell counting kit-8 assay. The results indicated that none of the compounds had obvious cell toxicity against L929 cells at the doses of 10 and 20 μM. It is worth pointing out that compound 6c showed the highest antiplatelet activity and the lowest cell toxicity. In general, 4-methoxy-3-arylamido-N-(substitutedphenyl)benzamides have the potential to become a kind of safer and more effective antiplatelet agents.

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