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Antimycobacterial pyrroles: Synthesis, anti-Mycobacterium tuberculosis activity and QSAR studies

Ragno R., Marshall G.R., Di Santo R., Costi R., Massa S., Rompei R., Artico M., Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry, 2000


Abstract:

A number of known antifungal pyrrole derivatives and some newly synthesized compounds (5-33) were tested in vitro against Mycobacterium tuberculosis CIP 103471. The majority of tested compounds were efficient antimycobacterial agents showing MIC values ranging from 0.5 to 32 μg/mL. A 3-D-QSAR study has been performed on these pyrrole derivatives to correlate their chemical structures with their observed inhibiting activity against M. tuberculosis. Due to the absence of information on a putative receptor responsible for this activity, classical quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) and comparative molecular field analysis (CoMFA) have been applied. A model able to well correlate the antimycobacterial activity with the chemical structures of pyrrole derivatives 5-33 has been developed which is potentially helpful in the design of novel and more potent antituberculosis agents. The combination of CoMFA with classical QSAR descriptors led to a better hybrid 3-D-QSAR model, that successfully explains the structure-activity relationships (r2=0.86) of the training set. A comparison between the QSAR, CoMFA and mixed QSAR-CoMFA models is also presented. The hybrid model is to be preferred, however, because of its lowest values of the average absolute error of prediction toward a limited external test set. Copyright (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd.


Link to the article:

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0968-0896(00)00061-4