Browsing by Author "Amnerkar, Nikhil D."
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- ItemHetero-substituted sulfonamido-benzamide hybrids as glucokinase activators: Design, synthesis, molecular docking and in-silico ADME evaluation(2020) Khadse, Saurabh C.; Amnerkar, Nikhil D.; Dighole, Krushna S.; Dhote, Ashish M.; Patil, Vikas R.; Lokwani, Deepak K.; Ugale, Vinod G.; Charbe, Nitin B.; Chatpalliwar, Vivekanand A.A series of hetero-substituted sulphonamido-benzamide derivatives which can activate glucokinase (GK) were synthesized and screened in-vitro using Human GK activation assay and in-vivo following oral glucose tolerance test (OGIT) assays. All the molecules were docked into the active site of 1V4S receptor grid by XP docking method utilizing Schrodinger software to assess the binding interactions. Compounds 12 (EC50 = 495 nM) and 15 (EC50 = 522 nM), revealed maximum in-vitro GK activation. Selected compounds were subjected for in-vivo OGIT assay. The data revealed that same compounds 12 (135 mg/dL) showed maximum reduction in blood glucose level followed by compound 15 (142 mg/dL) at 120 min. The docking results as glide score, binding energy and interactions were reported and compounds with maximum pharmacological activity were studied precisely. In-silico ADME parameters, pharmacokinetic properties and toxicity studies were carried out and all compounds were found to have good bioavailability and nontoxic. Overall, the series of hetero-substituted sulphonamido-benzamide hybrids are safe and could be explored further for better therapeutic efficacy as GK activators. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- ItemQuinazolin-4-one derivatives lacking toxicity-producing attributes as glucokinase activators: design, synthesis, molecular docking, and in-silico ADMET prediction(2019) Khadse, Saurabh C.; Amnerkar, Nikhil D.; Dave, Manasi U.; Lokwani, Deepak K.; Patil, Ravindra R.; Ugale, Vinod G.; Charbe, Nitin B.; Chatpalliwar, Vivekanand A.Background A small library of quinazolin-4-one clubbed thiazole acetates/acetamides lacking toxicity-producing functionalities was designed, synthesized, and evaluated for antidiabetic potential as glucokinase activators (GKA). Molecular docking studies were done in the allosteric site of the human glucokinase (PDB ID: 1V4S) enzyme to assess the binding mode and interactions of synthesized hits for best-fit conformations. All the compounds were evaluated by in vitro enzymatic assay for GK activation. Results Data showed that compounds 3 (EC50 = 632 nM) and 4 (EC50 = 516 nM) showed maximum GK activation compared to the standards RO-281675 and piragliatin. Based on the results of the in vitro enzyme assay, docking studies, and substitution pattern, selected compounds were tested for their glucose-lowering effect in vivo by oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) in normal rats. Compounds 3 (133 mg/dL) and 4 (135 mg/dL) exhibited prominent activity by lowering the glucose level to almost normal, eliciting the results in parallel to enzyme assay and docking studies. Binding free energy, hydrogen bonding, and pi-pi interactions of most active quinazolin-4-one derivatives 3 and 4 with key amino acid residues of the 1V4S enzyme were studied precisely. Preliminary in-silico absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and toxicity (ADMET) prediction was carried out using SwissADME and PreADMET online software which revealed that all the compounds have the potential to become orally active antidiabetic agents as they obeyed Lipinski's rule of five. Conclusion The results revealed that the designed lead could be significant for the strategic design of safe, effective, and orally bioavailable quinazolinone derivatives as glucokinase activators.
- ItemSmall interfering RNA for cancer treatment: overcoming hurdles in delivery(2020) Zacconi, Flavia C. M.; Aljabali, Alaa A.A.; Chellappan, D.K.; Shrivastava, Garima; Gupta, Gaurav; Bakshi, Hamid A.; Dua, Kamal; Metha, Meenu; Tambuwala, Murtaza M.; Amnerkar, Nikhil D.; Charbe, Nitin Bharat; Negi, Poonam; Satheeshkumar, Rajendran; Khadse, Saurabh C.; Satija, SaurabhIn many ways, cancer cells are different from healthy cells. A lot of tactical nano-based drug delivery systems are based on the difference between cancer and healthy cells. Currently, nanotechnology-based delivery systems are the most promising tool to deliver DNA-based products to cancer cells. This review aims to highlight the latest development in the lipids and polymeric nanocarrier for siRNA delivery to the cancer cells. It also provides the necessary information about siRNA development and its mechanism of action. Overall, this review gives us a clear picture of lipid and polymer-based drug delivery systems, which in the future could form the base to translate the basic siRNA biology into siRNA-based cancer therapies. (C) 2020 Chinese Pharmaceutical Association and Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V.