New coumarin-chalcone-triazole hybrids as promising anti-diabetic agents: from molecular design to in vivo validation

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Royal Soc Chemistry

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info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Abstract

A series of coumarin-chalcone-1,2,3-triazoles were designed and synthesized as potential antidiabetic agents targeting alpha-glucosidase. Among them, compound 20q exhibited exceptional inhibitory potency (IC50 = 0.50 +/- 0.04 mu M), significantly outperforming acarbose (IC50 = 750.08 +/- 1.52 mu M). Kinetic analyses confirmed a competitive inhibition mechanism, and computational studies-including deep-learning prediction, molecular docking, and molecular dynamics simulations-revealed strong and stable interactions of 20q with the enzyme active site, supporting its efficacy. This compound showed no cytotoxicity and alpha-amylase inhibition even at high concentrations, indicating its favorable safety profile with high selectivity. CD and fluorescence studies demonstrated that its binding induced a more ordered enzyme conformation (increased alpha-helix, reduced beta-sheet/coil) through static, electrostatic interactions. In vivo assessments with compound 20q showed no acute toxicity at doses up to 1000 mg kg-1 and a dose-dependent antihyperglycemic effect, restoring fasting blood glucose and HbA1c levels to near-normal values, and improving liver and pancreas histopathology at 8 mg kg-1 BW, outperforming acarbose at a comparable dose. These comprehensive findings identify compound 20q as a highly potent, selective, and safe alpha-glucosidase inhibitor with significant potential for further development as an antidiabetic agent.

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Keywords

Alpha-Glucosidase Inhibition, Biological Evaluation, Efficient Synthesis, Docking, Azidochalcones, Derivatives, Silico, Vitro, Reactivity, Urease

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Rsc Advances

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15

Issue

59

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