Publication | Closed Access
Identification of Inhibitors for Mycobacterial Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase B (MptpB) by Biology‐Oriented Synthesis (BIOS)
61
Citations
33
References
2007
Year
Combinatorial ChemistryBioorganic ChemistryProtein PhosphatasesChemical BiologyPharmaceutical ChemistryMedicinal ChemistryBiosynthesisDiversity Oriented SynthesisAntimicrobial Drug DiscoveryBiochemistryDiversity-oriented SynthesisMolecular MicrobiologyBios PrinciplePharmacologyNatural Product SynthesisProtein PhosphorylationPhosphatase InhibitorsNatural SciencesSynthetic BiologyMicrobiologyMedicineSynthetic ChemistryDrug Discovery
Protein phosphatases have recently emerged as important targets for research in chemical biology and medicinal chemistry, and new classes of phosphatase inhibitors are in high demand. BIOS (biology-oriented synthesis) employs the criteria of relevance to nature and biological prevalidation for the design and synthesis of compound collections. In an application of the BIOS principle, an efficient solid-phase synthesis of highly substituted indolo[2,3-a]quinolizidines by using a vinylogous Mannich-Michael reaction in combination with phosgene- or acid-mediated ring closure was developed. Screening of this library for phosphatase inhibitors yielded a new inhibitor class for the Mycobacterium tuberculosis phosphatase MptpB.
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