MAO inhibitory activity of bromo-2- phenylbenzofurans: synthesis, in vitro study, and docking calculations
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Royal Society of Chemistry
Abstract
Monoamine oxidase (MAO) is an enzyme responsible for metabolism of monoamine neurotransmitters which play an important role in brain development and function. This enzyme exists in two isoforms, and it has been demonstrated that MAO-B activity, but not MAO-A activity, increases with aging. MAO inhibitors show clinical value because besides the monoamine level regulation they reduce the formation of byproducts of the MAO catalytic cycle, which are toxic to the brain. A series of 2-phenylbenzofuran derivatives was designed, synthesized and evaluated against hMAO-A and hMAO-B enzymes. A bromine substituent
was introduced in the 2-phenyl ring, whereas position 5 or 7 of the benzofuran moiety was substituted with a methyl group. Most of the tested compounds inhibited preferentially MAO-B in a reversible manner, with IC50 values in the low micro or nanomolar range. The 2-(2′-bromophenyl)-5-methylbenzofuran (5) was the most active compound identified (IC50 = 0.20 μM). In addition, none of the studied compounds showed cytotoxic activity against the human neuroblastoma cell line SH-SY5Y. Molecular docking simulations were used to explain the observed hMAO-B structure–activity relationship for this type of compounds.
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Delogu, G.L., Pintus, F., Mayán, L., Matos, M.J., Vilar, S., Munín, J., Fontenla, J.A., Hripcsak, G., Borges, F., Viña, D. (2017), MAO inhibitory activity of bromo-2- phenylbenzofurans: synthesis, in vitro study, and docking calculations, "Med. Chem. Commun.", 8, 1788
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https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2017/md/c7md00311kSponsors
Financial support from the Consellería de Cultura, Educación e Ordenación Universitaria (EM2014/016 and the Centro Singular de Investigación de Galicia Accreditación 2016–2019, ED431G/05) and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) is gratefully acknowledged. Financial support from the Fondazione Banco di Sardegna – Università degli Studi di Cagliari – Progetti di Ricerca di Interesse Dipartimentale (PRID) is also acknowledged. The authors would like to thank “Angeles Alvariño, Plan Galego de Investigación, Innovación e Crecemento 2011–2015 (I2C)”, and the European Social Fund (ESF). G. L. Delogu is grateful to R. Mascia (University of Cagliari)
for his technical assistance.
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CC BY-NC







