A wide set of 264 compounds has been semisynthesized with high yields and purities. These compounds have been obtained through easy synthetic processes based on a solid-phase combinatorial methodology. All the members of this library have one central core of a natural pentacyclic triterpene (oleanolic or maslinic acid) and differ by 6 amino acids, coupled with the carboxyl group at C-28 of the triterpenoid skeleton, and by 10 different acyl groups attached to the hydroxyl groups of the A-ring of these molecules. According to the literature on the outstanding and promising pharmacological activities of other similar terpene derivatives, some of these compounds have been tested for their cytotoxic effects on the proliferation of three cancer cell lines: B16-F10, HT29, and Hep G2. In general, we have found that around 70% of the compounds tested show cytotoxicity in all three of the cell lines selected; around 60% of the cytotoxic compounds are more effective than their corresponding precursors, that is, oleanolic (OA) or maslinic (MA) acids; and nearly 50% of the cytotoxic derivatives have IC50 values between 2- to 320-fold lower than their corresponding precursor (OA or MA).
Pentacyclic triterpenes, such as
oleanolic acid (I), are promising scaffolds for diversification
through the use of
combinatorial methods to obtain derivatives that improve their biological
properties, increasing their bioavailability and enhancing their therapeutic
efficacy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the influence
that derivatives of oleanolic acid, conjugated with one or two amino
acids and an acyl group, might exert on HIV-1 protease inhibition.
The in vitro studies conducted suggested that the presence of a carboxyacyl
group generally improves the inhibition of HIV-1 protease, especially
when a phthaloyl group is present, with IC50 concentration
values below 5 μM. The gain in activity of three 3-phthaloyl
derivatives, with sub-micromolar IC50 values, was between
60- and 100-fold more active than oleanolic acid. A molecular docking
study has also been performed to elucidate the mode of binding to
the protease by these oleanolic acid derivatives. In general, the
derivatives that exhibited the highest inhibitory activity of HIV-1
protease also showed the highest binding energies in docking simulations.
The overall results suggest that the coupling of one or two amino
acids and a phthaloyl group to oleanolic acid improves HIV-1 protease
inhibition, implying that these triterpene derivatives may be promising
antiviral agents against HIV.
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