Abstract

The synthesis of all N-Me and N-H analogues of ent-verticilide is described, enabling a structure-activity relationship study based on cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) calcium ion channel inhibition. The use of permeabilized cardiomyocytes allowed us to correlate the degree of N-methylation with activity without concern for changes in passive membrane permeability that these modifications can cause. A key hypothesis was that the minimal pharmacophore may be repeated in this cyclic oligomeric octadepsipeptide (a 24-membered macrocycle), opening the possibility that target engagement will not necessarily be lost with a single N-Me → N-H modification. The effect in the corresponding 18-membered ring oligomer (ent-verticilide B1) was also investigated. We report here that a high degree of N-methyl amide content is critical for activity in the ent-verticilide series but not entirely so for the ent-verticilide B1 series.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call