School of Medicine Publications and Presentations
Medicinal significance of sp2/sp3 hybridized at C-3-substituted indole-containing lead molecules and FDA-approved drugs
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-13-2024
Abstract
Herein, the privilege in favor of biological importance of indole-containing scaffolds related to the semi-synthetic and extracted from natural sources is summarized. Such compounds have shown notable medicinal significance and are used in the treatment of various carcinomas after FDA approval. The chemistry of indoles’ skeleton derivatives showed various conformations at specific conditions, including tautomerization, when they came into contact with polar solvents; consequently, such phenomena are responsible for enhancing the biological effect on enzymes. In the foregoing review study in the past decade, we demonstrated the biological significance and the transformation of drug analysis owing to resonating structures. Functionalize groups, it was noted that pi-bonds-unsaturated functions, sp1/2/3 hybridized methylene groups, cyclic ethers, primary amino groups, halogens, and staggered conformations displayed the most potent active drug-like molecules. The aim of this report is that drugs like lead molecules could be derivatized for the discovery of more effective drugs on the basis of their possible active sites on the surface in the future.
Recommended Citation
Faiyyaz, Mohd; Tiwari, Akanksha; Bashir, Nuzhat; Nasibullah, Malik; Alvi, Sahir S.; Siddiqui, Mohammed Haris; and Asif, Mohd, "Medicinal significance of sp2/sp3 hybridized at C-3-substituted indole-containing lead molecules and FDA-approved drugs" (2024). School of Medicine Publications and Presentations. 1593.
https://scholarworks.utrgv.edu/som_pub/1593
Publication Title
Medicinal Chemistry Research
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00044-024-03308-x
Academic Level
fellow
Mentor/PI Department
Immunology and Microbiology
Comments
Copyright © 2024, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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