Stable and Potent Analogues Derived from the Modification of the Dicarbonyl Moiety of Curcumin

Chakraborti, Soumyananda ; Dhar, Gopa ; Dwivedi, Vishnu ; Das, Amlan ; Poddar, Asim ; Chakraborti, Gopal ; Basu, Gautam ; Chakrabarti, Pinak ; Surolia, Avadhesha ; Bhattacharyya, Bhabatarak (2013) Stable and Potent Analogues Derived from the Modification of the Dicarbonyl Moiety of Curcumin Biochemistry, 52 (42). pp. 7449-7460. ISSN 0006-2960

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1021/bi400734e

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi400734e

Abstract

Curcumin has shown promising therapeutic utilities for many diseases, including cancer; however, its clinical application is severely limited because of its poor stability under physiological conditions. Here we find that curcumin also loses its activity instantaneously in a reducing environment. Curcumin can exist in solution as a tautomeric mixture of keto and enol forms, and the enol form was found to be responsible for the rapid degradation of the compound. To increase the stability of curcumin, several analogues were synthesized in which the diketone moiety of curcumin was replaced by isoxazole (compound 2) and pyrazole (compound 3) groups. Isoxazole and pyrazole curcumins were found to be extremely stable at physiological pH, in addition to reducing atmosphere, and they can kill cancer cells under serum-depleted condition. Using molecular modeling, we found that both compounds 2 and 3 could dock to the same site of tubulin as the parent molecule, curcumin. Interestingly, compounds 2 and 3 also show better free radical scavenging activity than curcumin. Altogether, these results strongly suggest that compounds 2 and 3 could be good replacements for curcumin in future drug development.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Chemical Society
ID Code:129016
Deposited On:07 Nov 2022 09:46
Last Modified:07 Nov 2022 09:46

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