A series of anthraquinonyl glucosaminosides (10a-e) were synthesized by Koenigs-Knorr glycosidation of the corresponding aglycones (11a-e) with bromo sugar 12 followed by saponification. These glycosides were intended to serve as models to study the role played by the hydroxyl substituents on the aglycone portion of the antitumor anthracycline antibiotics. Superoxide generation as measured in rat heart sarcosomes was found to increase with the addition of successive hydroxyl groups to the anthraquinone nucleus. The 1,8-dihydroxy pattern was determined to generate significantly less superoxide than the 1,4-dihydroxy pattern. Hydroxyl substitution was also observed to stabilize the complex formed between the anthraquinones and DNA and was required for antibacterial activity against a number of Gram-positive organisms.
Thalistyline, a monoquaternary bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloid isolated from Thalictrum sp. inhibited respiration in anesthetized dogs. Thalistyline is about one-fourth as potent as d-tubocurarine in blocking neuromuscular transmission in the rat hemidiaphragm preparation. The pharmacological mechanism of action of the alkaloid is similar to that of d-tubocurarine. Obamegine did not exhibit curare-like activity. On the isolated rabbit aorta, contractions induced by an alpha-adrenoreceptor agonist, phenylephrine, were antagonized by both alkaloids. Increasing concentrations of thalistyline produced parallel shifts to the right in the dose-response curves of phenylephrine. The pA2 value for the competitive pharmacological antagonism was 6.33. Obamegine also antagonized the effects of phenylephrine on the aorta, line and obamegine lowered blood pressure in normotensive dogs. The effect was transient. Repeated injections of the alkaloids resulted in tachyphylaxis to blood pressure lowering effects. Although alkaloids exhibited alpha adrenergic blockade in the vascular preparation, the mechanism for the hypotensive effect remains to be established.
The optical isomers and deoxy form of 2-(3,4, alpha-trihydroxybenzyl)imidazoline hydrochloride were examined for their alpha-adrenergic activity on rat aorta. The rank order of stimulant activity was deoxy (2) congruent to (R)-(-)-1 greater than (S)-(+)-1. This is in contrast to catecholamines in which the order of activity is (R)-(-)-epinephrine greater than (S)-(+)-epinephrine = epinine (deoxyepinephrine). The relative order of potency for the isomers of 2-(3,4, alpha-trihydroxybenzyl)imidazoline is different than that predicted by the Easson--Stedman theory for stereoisomers of catecholamines. Also, substitution of the deoxy compound 2 with substituents, methyl or benzyl, in the 4-position lowers the alpha-adrenergic agonist activity, and differences observed between optical isomers were small.
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