Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry, volume 12, issue 14, pages 3763-3782
Synthesis, pharmacological evaluation, and structure–activity relationships of benzopyran derivatives with potent SERM activity
Gabriele Amari
1
,
Elisabetta Armani
1
,
Silvia Ghirardi
1
,
Maurizio Delcanale
1
,
Maurizio Civelli
2
,
Paola Caruso
2
,
Elisabetta Galbiati
2
,
Milco Lipreri
3
,
S. Rivara
4
,
Alessio Lodola
4
,
Marco Mor
4
1
Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A., via Palermo 26/A, I-43100 Parma, Italy.
|
3
Department of Pharmacology, Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A., via Palermo 26/A, I-43100 Parma, Italy
|
4
Department of Analytical Chemistry, Chiesi Farmaceutici S.p.A., via Palermo 26/A, I-43100 Parma, Italy
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2004-07-01
Journal:
Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry
scimago Q2
SJR: 0.614
CiteScore: 6.8
Impact factor: 3.3
ISSN: 09680896, 14643391
PubMed ID:
15210143
Organic Chemistry
Drug Discovery
Biochemistry
Molecular Biology
Pharmaceutical Science
Clinical Biochemistry
Molecular Medicine
Abstract
The synthesis, binding affinity for estrogen receptor subtypes (ER alpha and ER beta) and pharmacological activity on rat uterus of a new class of potent ligands, characterized by a 3-phenylbenzopyran scaffold with a basic side chain in position 4, are reported. Some of these compounds, endowed with very high receptor affinity, showed potent inhibition of agonist-stimulated uterine growth, with no or limited proliferative effect. Binding affinity mostly depended on the nature and position of substituents at the 3-phenyl ring, while the uterine activity seems to be affected by basic chain length. Compound 9c (CHF4227) showed excellent binding affinity and antagonist activity on the uterus. The docking of benzopyran derivatives explained the structure-affinity relationships observed for 3-phenyl substitution: a small, hydrophobic 4'-substituent could interact with a small accessory binding cavity, while di-substitution at 4' and 3' led to some ER alpha selectivity. This selectivity can be ascribed to differences in amino acid composition and side chain conformation in the region accommodating the 3-phenyl ring at human ER alpha and ER beta ligand-binding domain.
Found
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