Fluoxetine and sertraline based multitarget inhibitors of cholinesterases and monoamine oxidase-A/B for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease: Synthesis, pharmacology and molecular modeling studies.

2021 
Abstract For the potential therapy of Alzheimer's disease (AD), cholinesterases (ChE) and monoamine oxidase (MAO) are key enzymes that regulate the level of acetylcholinesterase (AChE)/butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) and monoamines. The aim of current research is the synthesis of multi-target compounds that can concomitantly inhibit ChEs and MAO. A series of fluoxetine and sertraline hybrids was designed and evaluated as multi-target inhibitors of ChEs and hMAO. In-vitro enzyme inhibition studies demonstrated that a number of compounds displayed excellent inhibition in submicromolar to nanomolar range. However, compounds 17, 22, 38–40 possess excellent concomitant inhibitory activity against ChEs and hMAO-A/B enzymes and thus emerged as optimal multi-target hybrids. In-vivo acute toxicity study showed the safety of synthesized compounds up to 2000 mg/kg dose. The examinations of brain tissue in Swiss albino mice suggested that selected most active MAO-B inhibitors 17 and 22 have a propensity to block the MAO-B activity that could be responsible for their neurodegenerative effect in mice. The in-vitro inhibitory manner of interaction of these multipotent compounds on all four targets were confirmed by molecular docking investigations.
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