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A correlation study of biological activity and molecular docking of Asp and Glu linked bis-hydrazones of quinazolinones.
Kumara, H K; Suhas, R; Suyoga Vardhan, D M; Shobha, M; Channe Gowda, D.
Afiliación
  • Kumara HK; Department of Studies in Chemistry, University of Mysore Manasagangotri Mysuru - 570 006 Karnataka India dchannegowda@yahoo.co.in +91 821 2419664.
  • Suhas R; Department of Studies in Chemistry, University of Mysore Manasagangotri Mysuru - 570 006 Karnataka India dchannegowda@yahoo.co.in +91 821 2419664.
  • Suyoga Vardhan DM; Department of Studies in Chemistry, University of Mysore Manasagangotri Mysuru - 570 006 Karnataka India dchannegowda@yahoo.co.in +91 821 2419664.
  • Shobha M; Department of Studies in Chemistry, University of Mysore Manasagangotri Mysuru - 570 006 Karnataka India dchannegowda@yahoo.co.in +91 821 2419664.
  • Channe Gowda D; Department of Studies in Chemistry, University of Mysore Manasagangotri Mysuru - 570 006 Karnataka India dchannegowda@yahoo.co.in +91 821 2419664.
RSC Adv ; 8(19): 10644-10653, 2018 Mar 13.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35540474
ABSTRACT
The present investigation involves the synthesis and spectroscopic and biological activity studies of the bis-hydrazones of quinazolinones derived from aspartic acid and glutamic acid. The antioxidant activities of the compounds were evaluated using DPPH, DMPD and ABTS radical scavenging assays whose results revealed that the IC50 of compounds 6, 7, 11, 12, 20, 21, 25 and 26 was lower than those of the standard references. The anti-inflammatory activity was evaluated with a haemolysis assay using a human blood erythrocytes suspension and the results demonstrated that compounds 8, 9, 13, 14, 22, 23, 27 and 28 were excellent anti-inflammatory agents. In addition, the antibacterial and antifungal activities against various clinical pathogens of human origin revealed that compounds 7, 9, 12, 14, 21, 23, 26 and 28 possessed potent antimicrobial properties. Furthermore, to understand the correlation between biological activity and drug-receptor interaction, molecular docking was performed on the active sites of tyrosine kinase (PDB ID 2HCK), cyclooxygenase-2 (PDB ID 1CX2) and glucosamine-6-phosphate (GlcN-6-P) synthase (PDB ID 2VF5) which showed good binding profiles with the targets that can potentially hold the title compounds. The correlation study revealed that compounds containing EDGs (-OH, -OCH3) were excellent antioxidants, compounds with EWGs (-Cl, -NO2) exhibited good anti-inflammatory activity and compounds bearing -OH and -NO2 groups were very good antimicrobials.