A series of tetrahydrobenzofuranyl and tetrahydrobenzothienyl propenoic acids that showed potent agonist activity against RXRalpha were synthesized via a structure-based design approach. Among the compounds studied, 46a,b showed not only very good potency against RXRalpha (K(i) = 6 nM) but was also found to be greater than 167-fold selective vs RARalpha (K(i) > 1000 nM). This compound profiled out as a full agonist in a cell-based transient transfection assay (EC(50) = 3 nM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ligand-binding domain (LBD) of apo-nuclear receptors in solution is thought to be a very dynamic structure with many possible conformations. Upon ligand binding, the structure is stabilized to a more rigid conformation. The dynamic stabilization assay is a LBD reassembly assay that takes advantage of the high specificity of the intramolecular interactions that comprise the ligand-bound LBD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioorg Med Chem Lett
December 2001
A series of PPARgamma agonists were synthesized from L-tyrosine that incorporated low molecular weight N-substituents. The most potent analogue, pyrrole (4e), demonstrated a K(i) of 6.9nM and an EC(50) of 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of oxadiazole-substituted alpha-isopropoxy phenylpropanoic acids with dual agonist activity on PPARalpha and PPARgamma is described. Several of these compounds also showed partial agonist activity on PPARdelta. Resolution of one analogue showed that PPARalpha and PPARgamma activity resided in mainly one enantiomer, whereas PPARdelta activity was retained in both enantiomers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBcl-2 protein expression has been found to block apoptosis and its overexpression has been implicated in lymphoid malignancies where the chromosomal translocation t(14;18) is present. In this study we investigated bcl-2 transcription and protein expression in cultured cervical carcinoma cell lines and keratinocytes. Western blotting and immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated bcl-2 expression in the cytoplasm of 4 out of 5 cervical carcinoma cell lines examined (HeLa, CaSki, C-33A, and HT-3, but not SiHa).
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