New acetylcholinesterase inhibitors were synthetized via a lipase-mediated regioselective amidation using Candida antarctica lipase B as a biocatalyst in the key step. The new compounds have two different structural fragments: a N-benzylpiperidine moiety to anchor the enzyme active site and a dicarboxylic aminoacid to act as a biological carrier. Some analogues of N-benzylpiperazine were also synthesised and studied but they did not display AChE inhibitor activity. A preliminary structure-activity relationship study was performed employing some computational techniques as similarity indices and electrostatic potential maps. (C) 2000 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
Regioselective Lipase-Catalysed Amidation of DicarboxylicN-Blocked Amino Acid Diesters – Effect of the Side-Chain Length
α-aminopimelic acids yield exclusively the ω-monoamide when they are subjected to amidation catalysed by the lipase B of Candida antarctica in anhydrous diisopropyl ether. These results are in contrast to the α-monoamide yielded by the equivalent L-glutamic derivatives under the same experimental conditions. These results show that the length of the side chain plays a crucial role in the regioselectivity of the