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Tripodal molecular propellers perturb microtubule dynamics: indole acts as a blade and plays a crucial role in anticancer activity

Author(s)
Barman, SurajitDas, GauravMondal, PrasenjitPradhan, KrishnangsuJana, BatakrishnaBhunia, DebmalyaSaha, AbhijitKar, ChirantanGhosh, Surajit
Issued Date
2019-02
DOI
10.1039/c9cc00074g
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/26171
Fulltext
https://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2019/CC/C9CC00074G#!divAbstract
Citation
CHEMICAL COMMUNICATIONS, v.55, no.16, pp.2356 - 2359
Abstract
An indole-rich tripodal microtubule inhibitor is designed, which binds at the DCVJ site of tubulin and inhibits its polymerization. It causes apoptotic death of cancer cells without affecting normal cells and inhibits the growth of tumors. Finally, STD-NMR and TR-NOESY experiments reveal that the indole appendages play a crucial role in interacting with tubulin.
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
ISSN
1359-7345
Keyword
TRIAZINE LIBRARYINSIGHTSVINBLASTINEDISCOVERYTUBULINAGENTSTARGET

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