There remains a high unmet medical need for a safe oral therapy for thrombotic disorders. The serine protease factor Xa (fXa), with its central role in the coagulation cascade, is among the more promising targets for anticoagulant therapy and has been the subject of intensive drug discovery efforts. Investigation of a hit from high-throughput screening identified a series of thiophene-substituted anthranilamides as potent nonamidine fXa inhibitors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of thiophene-containing non-amidine factor Xa inhibitors is described. Simple methyl-substituted thiophene analogs were relatively weak inhibitors. However, introduction of hydrophilic substituents at C-4 or C-5 of the thiophene afforded inhibitors with low nanomolar potency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF[reaction: see text] The fluorescence emission intensity of the dansyl group is significantly diminished upon appending an ethyldimethylamino group to the N1 nitrogen substituent. Addition of acids and metal ions (i.e.
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