A novel silver-catalyzed decarboxylative acylation of α-oxo-carboxylic acids was developed, by which various 3-acyl quinoxalin-2(1H)-ones were synthesized by direct C-H bond acylation of quinoxalin-2(1H)-ones. In this method, α-oxo-carboxylic acids served as efficient acylating reagents to in situ generate the required active acyl radical. Its excellent chemoselectivity allowed the molecular diversity of 3-acyl quinoxalin-2(1H)-ones to be achieved by convenient functionalizations of both N1- and C3-positions.
About specifics: A method for the regiospecific synthesis of the title compounds through an unprecedented Michael addition/deacylative diazo transfer/cyclization sequence has been established. The simple and practical method can be used for the modification of primary amines including chiral α‐amines. The process involves the formation three covalent bonds and the cleavage of two covalent bonds (see scheme, Ts=4‐toluenesulfonyl).
A general and efficient palladium-catalyzed oxidative cross-coupling reaction of N-tosylhydrazones with indoles providing N-vinylindoles has been developed. The reaction proceeds smoothly with various indoles and N-tosylhydrazones in a stereocontrolled manner, and a wide variety of N-vinylindoles were obtained up to 99% yields for 26 examples.
A highly reactive intermediate N-sulfonyl acetylketenimine was generated from a 3-butyn-2-one participating CuAAC/ring-opening method. Its high reactivity due to bearing two EWGs allowed us to offer the first example of a reaction between ketenimine and amide to synthesize N-sulfonyl amidines efficiently.
Malignant cancer is a devastating disease often associated with a poor clinical prognosis. For decades, modern drug discoveries have attempted to identify potential modulators that can impede tumor growth. Cancer stem cells however are more resistant to therapeutic intervention, which often leads to treatment failure and subsequent disease recurrence. Here in this study, we have developed a specific multi-target drug delivery nanoparticle system against breast cancer stem cells (BCSCs). Therapeutic agents curcumin and salinomycin have complementary functions of limiting therapeutic resistance and eliciting cellular death, respectively. By conjugation of CD44 cell-surface glycoprotein with poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) nanoparticles that are loaded with curcumin and salinomycin, we investigated the cellular uptake of BCSCs, drug release, and therapeutic efficacy against BCSCs. We determined CD44-targeting co-delivery nanoparticles are highly efficacious against BCSCs by inducing G1 cell cycle arrest and limiting epithelial–mesenchymal transition. This curcumin and salinomycin co-delivery system can be an efficient treatment approach to target malignant cancer without the repercussion of disease recurrence.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.