Molecules (Jul 2017)

Development of 2-Methoxyhuprine as Novel Lead for Alzheimer’s Disease Therapy

  • Eva Mezeiova,
  • Jan Korabecny,
  • Vendula Sepsova,
  • Martina Hrabinova,
  • Petr Jost,
  • Lubica Muckova,
  • Tomas Kucera,
  • Rafael Dolezal,
  • Jan Misik,
  • Katarina Spilovska,
  • Ngoc Lam Pham,
  • Lucia Pokrievkova,
  • Jaroslav Roh,
  • Daniel Jun,
  • Ondrej Soukup,
  • Daniel Kaping,
  • Kamil Kuca

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules22081265
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 8
p. 1265

Abstract

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Tacrine (THA), the first clinically effective acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitor and the first approved drug for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), was withdrawn from the market due to its side effects, particularly its hepatotoxicity. Nowadays, THA serves as a valuable scaffold for the design of novel agents potentially applicable for AD treatment. One such compound, namely 7-methoxytacrine (7-MEOTA), exhibits an intriguing profile, having suppressed hepatotoxicity and concomitantly retaining AChE inhibition properties. Another interesting class of AChE inhibitors represents Huprines, designed by merging two fragments of the known AChE inhibitors—THA and (−)-huperzine A. Several members of this compound family are more potent human AChE inhibitors than the parent compounds. The most promising are so-called huprines X and Y. Here, we report the design, synthesis, biological evaluation, and in silico studies of 2-methoxyhuprine that amalgamates structural features of 7-MEOTA and huprine Y in one molecule.

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