Synthesis, characterization and studies on antitubercular activity of some 1,3,4-thiadiazole based molecules
Date
2016
Authors
Ramprasad, J.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
In the last few decades, the process of drug discovery program has undergone
a fundamental transformation, thanks to the integrated approach of chemists and
biologists resulting in the development of new chemical entities (NCEs). Although the
increasing costs of production, research and development worries the pharmaceutical
industry, synthetic organic approach towards designing innovative and low molecular
weight chemical structures, which are also biologically active, will definitely aid in
combating the ailments prevailing universally. Such endeavours have led us to
domain of heterocyclic chemistry and thiadiazole is one such frequently encountered
heterocycle which has proven itself with a diverse range of biological activities.
Owing to this therapeutic degree of thiadiazole and its derivatives, in the current
work, it has been planned to integrate various potent heterocyclic units with the
thiadiazole skeleton to form a new molecular framework. Accordingly, five different
libraries of thiadiazole based compounds comprising of benzimidazole (T1-T29),
1,2,3-triazole (T30-T49), thiazole (T50-T72), phenothiazine derivatives (T73-T93)
and pyrazinamide (T94-T111) have been successfully synthesized through multistep
organic synthetic protocols. Derivatives T1-T72 and T93-T111 were synthesized with
a pharmacophore substitution at position-5 of imidazo[2,1-b] [1,3,4]thiadiazole ring.
Derivatives of T73-T93 were synthesized by the reaction of 1,3,4-thiadiazole core
with substituted phenothiazine as the pharmacophore unit. The chemical structures of
the prepared molecules were established by various spectroscopic techniques viz. 1H
NMR, 13C NMR, ESI-MS and elemental analyses. Additionally, 3-dimensional
structures of a few molecules were confirmed by single crystal X-ray diffraction
(SCXRD) studies. Further, the synthesized title compounds were subjected to
preliminary in vitro antitubercular and antibacterial screening. The active molecules
in each series were identified and tested for their toxicity on the benign noncancerous
cells. The in silico molecular modeling studies of these active derivatives were also
carried out.
Description
Keywords
Department of Chemistry, Imidazo[2,1-b][1,3,4]thiadiazole, 1,3,4-thiadiazole, benzimidazole, 1,2,3- triazole, thiazole, phenothiazine, pyrazinamide, antitubercular activity, antibacterial activity, cytotoxicity studies, in silico molecular modeling