This study investigates the relationship
between the chemical stability of itraconazole (ITZ) adsorbed on silica and its
NMR relaxation. The authors applied time domain NMR to measure the NMR relaxation
of hydrogen nuclei in ITZ before storage, excluding silica signals. Since NMR
relaxation reflects molecular mobility, the measurement provides insight into
the dynamic state of the adsorbed drug. ITZ was adsorbed onto silica powder. A
positive correlation was found between the relaxation rate and the amount of
degradant after storage, especially for Aerosil 200, suggesting its potential
as a predictor of chemical stability.
mRNA is a promising platform for therapies
such as cancer vaccines and protein replacement, with chemically synthesized
mRNA offering added advantages. However, its short length poses sequence design
challenges. This study achieved the successful adaptation of ribosome and
polysome profiling methods, commonly used for long mRNAs, to optimize
untranslated regions in short chemically synthesized mRNAs. The authors
identified novel 9-nucleotide 5’-UTR sequences that enhance translation
efficiency compared to conventional Kozak sequence. These findings offer a
practical framework for enhancing chemically synthesized mRNA design and expand
its potential in next-generation therapeutic applications.
The addition of cellulose nanofiber
(CNF) to mini-tablet (MT) formulations during direct compression has attracted
increasing attention as a means to achieve both MT strength and disintegration.
However, the large variation in the weight and drug content of the resulting MT
remained a challenge. Therefore, this study analyzed the physical properties of
CNF-containing MT of different particle sizes and evaluated the effect of the particle
size on MT manufacturing. Thus, using smaller CNF particle sizes enabled the
manufacturing of an orally disintegrating MT with adequate hardness and
disintegration properties while also minimizing variations in MT weight and
drug content.
[Highlighted Paper selected by Editor-in-Chief]
This
study presents an innovative approach to natural product discovery by using
bacterial membrane vesicles (MVs) to activate silent biosynthetic gene clusters.
By applying MVs derived from Burkholderia multivorans to Streptomyces
eurocidicus, the authors isolated five teleocidin analogs, including two
novel congeners. Notably, this study reveals a two-step regulatory role of MVs
in teleocidin biosynthesis: enhancing core metabolite production while
suppressing downstream acetylation. The work offers a powerful framework for
unlocking silent metabolites and offers new insights into the biosynthetic
regulation and structural diversity of teleocidin analogs.
Neurotoxic
steroidal alkaloid veratridine is structurally characterized by its highly
functionalized hexacyclic structure and serves as a formidable synthetic challenge.
In this manuscript, the authors describe the synthesis of the 6/6/5-membered ABC-ring
system of veratridine. Starting from 1,5-pentanediol, the AB-ring was
constructed by the intramolecular Diels-Alder reaction based on the literature
method. After the dihydroxylation of the C3-C4 double bond on the AB-ring and site-selective
acylation of the C3-hydroxy group, the C-ring was formed through the
C8-vinylation, chemo and stereoselective (allyl)2Zn-mediated
C9-allylation, and ring-closing metathesis. The ABC-ring system would play a
key intermediate in further synthetic studies of veratridine.
[Highlighted Paper selected by Editor-in-Chief]
The δ-opioid receptor (DOR) has emerged as
a promising target for treating chronic pain and stress-related disorders. This
study investigates the structure–signal relationship of KNT-127 derivatives
bearing systematic modifications to the quinoline moiety. Functional assays,
molecular docking, and molecular dynamics simulations reveal that specific
substituents on the quinoline ring, which is fused to the morphinan scaffold,
attenuate β-arrestin recruitment and modulate signaling bias. These findings
provide structural insights into DOR ligand bias and expand the message–address
concept, to guide the rational development of safer, functionally selective DOR
agonists.
The pandemic of COVID-19 caused by the new coronavirus SARS-CoV-2
remains a serious global concern. In this paper, we present new anti-SARS-CoV-2
drugs based on the chemical structure of amodiaquine, which is known as an antimalarial
drug. Some amodiaquine analogues functionalized with dialkylamino-pendant
aminophenol moieties have been identified as having effective anti-SARS-CoV-2
activity and low toxicity. These drugs could be useful for designing and
synthesizing low-molecular-weight antiviral agents to fight against not only SARS-CoV-2
but also other viral infections.
4ʹ-Modified
nucleosides have been used as antiviral drugs and raw
materials to produce oligonucleotide therapeutics. Thus, a new synthetic method for the 4ʹ-modified
nucleosides is significant. In this manuscript, the authors
reported a concise approach to prepare 4ʹ-modified thymidines from oxime imidates of
thymidine. This strategy involves the generation of 4ʹ-carbon radicals via
1,5-hydrogen atom transfer (1,5-HAT) of iminyl radicals, the intermolecular
1,4-addition to electron-deficient olefines, and the hydrolysis of the imidate
intermediates under acidic conditions. Moreover, using basic hydrolysis instead
of acidic one allowed to isolate a 4ʹ-modified thymidine in a
diastereoselective form.
The disubstituted oxindoles comprising
spiro-fused oxindoles have garnered significant attention as privileged
scaffolds found in natural products, and pharmaceuticals.
The
authors demonstrated the first study accomplishing stereoselective oxidative
cyclization from indole propionic acids using a squaramide organocatalyst, N-iodosuccinimide,
and hydrogen peroxide under metal-free and mild reaction conditions. The
asymmetric oxidative lactonization afforded the spiro-fused 2-oxindoles in
moderate-to-good yields and enantioselectivities (up to 90% yield, 81% ee). The
resulting spiro-fused 2-oxindoles offer a valuable pathway for the synthesis of
natural products and medicinal compounds.
Estrogen
receptors (ERs) and their ligands regulate a variety of physiological
processes, and altered ER signaling is associated with serious disorders.
Estrogens also binds to other receptors, and so fluorescent estrogen ligands
would be useful for various functional studies and for development of drug
candidates. In this manuscript, the authors describe fluorescent estrogen
receptor ligands, and they also function as pH-dependent OFF-ON-OFF type
fluorescent sensors, enabling the detection of specific ranges of pH. This
pH-dependent fluorescence would be potentially useful for visualization of the
ligand-bound receptor, and microenvironmental changes around the receptor
protein could potentially be visualized; for example, during endocytosis, the
pH is gradually changes.
In this manuscript, the authors investigate
the time-dependent deformation behavior of powdered or granular materials
during tableting using a compaction simulator. Four pharmaceutical excipients
with different compression characteristics were analyzed using a trapezoidal
punch displacement profile, where only the punch speed during loading was
varied. By evaluating strain rate sensitivity, mechanical energy, and stress
relaxation, differences in deformation behavior between the materials were
identified. The results suggest that an accurate understanding of the
time-dependent deformation characteristics of raw materials is important to
support appropriate scale-up of the tableting process.
Multivariate statistical process control
(MSPC) has attracted considerable attention as a monitoring method for
pharmaceutical continuous manufacturing. However, there are few examples of its
application in pharmaceutical manufacturing, and previous studies have shown
high false positive rates. In this study, the authors proposed a method to
improve the accuracy of anomaly detection using MSPC by determining the
appropriate scaling factor used for standardization and applied it to the
granulation and drying processes in pharmaceutical continuous manufacturing. The
proposed method reduces the false positive rate compared to conventional
methods and can detect changes in process parameters and raw materials.
[Highlighted Paper selected by Editor-in-Chief]
The δ-opioid receptor (DOR) is a promising
therapeutic target with reduced side effects compared to μ-opioid receptor
agonists. However, some DOR agonists, such as SNC80, have been reported to
induce convulsions, potentially involving β-arrestin signaling. This study
investigates the first structure–signal relationship of KNT-127, a
morphinan-based DOR agonist, and demonstrates that the morphinan skeleton
reduces β-arrestin recruitment, while the quinoline moiety modulates the bias
between G protein and β-arrestin pathways. These findings expand the classical
message–address concept and offer valuable insights into the rational design of
functionally selective DOR agonists with improved safety profiles.
β,β-Disubstituted α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds, which are characterized by two distinct substituents at the β-position, are found in various
bioactive molecules. In this paper, the authors report a concise and highly
stereoselective synthesis method
for β,β-disubstituted α,β-unsaturated esters. This
synthesis method comprises three well-known reactions: the aldol reaction of
acetic ester derivatives with ketones, the acetylation of tert-alcohols, and an elimination reaction utilizing
DBU. Two important findings, i.e., that the
acetylation of bulky tert-alcohol proceeded efficiently using Ac2O
and DMAP without DBU as a base, and that the formation of isomerized byproducts
in the elimination reaction was suppressed by removing excess DMAP, enabled the synthesis
of various β,β-disubstituted α,β-unsaturated
esters.
The alnumycin-class antibiotics
constitute a polyketide-derived benzoisochromanequinone core hybridized with a structurally
rearranged D-ribose. In this article, the authors reported the stereoselective
synthesis and absolute configuration of prealnumycin, the aglycon of alnumycin.
The key transformation involves the highly diastereoselective introduction of
an n-propyl group onto a tricyclic lactone via nucleophilic addition, followed
by silane reduction. Subsequent regioselective arene oxidation to naphthoquinone,
acidic deprotection, and dehydration afford prealnumycin in eight steps. The
findings from this synthesis provide insights into the total synthesis of this class
of natural products.
The authors developed potential injection glass
vials by using the novel vial-inner-surface treatment (VIST) technology to
homogenize the inner surface of the vials. Compared with those of common vials, the elution of alkali
contents and conductivity of these injection glass vials were reduced because
of the VIST technology resulting in the formation of smooth and homogeneous inner
surfaces of the vials. In addition, drug adsorption onto the inner surface of
the VIST vials was considerably lowered than that onto common vials. These results suggest that VIST
vials are of excellent quality and could become the standard injection glass
vials.
In
this manuscript, the authors described the design and synthesis of a derivative
of 1,5,9-triazacyclododecane ([12]aneN3) bearing an
anthracen-9-ylmethyl moiety (Ant-[12]aneN3) and evaluated its DNA
cleavage activity under UV irradiation at 365 nm. They found that its DNA
cleavage activity was dependent on UV irradiation but not on the presence of
zinc ions, despite the expectation that the [12]aneN3 moiety would facilitate
DNA cleavage through zinc ion chelation. The authors also investigated the DNA
cleavage activity of Ant-[12]aneN3 in comparison to structurally related
compounds and elucidated the unique role of the [12]aneN3 moiety in
Ant-[12]aneN3 in DNA cleavage. This work would contribute to the field of
cyclic polyamines and the photoreactivity of the anthracene moiety.
[Highlighted Paper selected by Editor-in-Chief]
Quaternary ammonium cations are difficult to
handle in organic chemistry owing to their ionic nature. Ion-pair extraction is
commonly adopted for isolating quaternary ammonium cations; however,
predictions of extraction efficiency are often based on researchers’ intuition.
In this study, the authors derived an equation to predict the extraction
efficiency of ammonium–tetracyanocyclopentadienide ion pairs. The prediction
equation involves the CLOGP values of ammonium and lipophilic constants of
anions and is also applicable to ion-pair extraction with many common anions. These
findings will aid the development of future studies using ammonium cations as
synthetic substrates and products.
This study compares needleless and needle-based electrospinning methods for producing polyamide 6 (PA6) nanofibers, emphasizing fiber diameter and solvent effects. The needleless method produced thicker fibers, with the largest diameters obtained using a 2:1 acetic acid: formic acid solvent system. While the needle-based method provides better control over fiber morphology, the needleless technique enables higher production rates, making it more viable for industrial applications. The findings highlight the need for further optimization to enhance PA6 nanofibers’ suitability for pharmaceutical and biomedical uses, including drug delivery and wound dressing applications.
[Highlighted Paper selected by Editor-in-Chief]
The
authors synthesized a novel series of 3,5-disubstituted benzofuran derivatives with
osteoblastogenic activities and investigated their structure–activity
relationships. Compound 23d, which contained a substituent with a tetrahydropyranyl
group used in previously reported diphenylether derivatives, exhibited lower
activity, but higher oral absorbability, resulting in similar osteogenic
effects to diphenylether derivatives in ovariectomized female rats. These
effects were mediated by the inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase 8. Therefore,
3,5-disubstituted benzofuran is a useful scaffold for orally active osteogenic
agents, and 23d is a potential candidate for a novel anti-osteoporotic drug.