Zofenopril-d5

Names

[ CAS No. ]:
81872-10-8

[ Name ]:
Zofenopril-d5

[Synonym ]:
L-Proline, 1-[(2S)-3-(benzoylthio)-2-methyl-1-oxopropyl]-4-(phenylthio)-, (4S)-
UNII-290ZY759PI
(4S)-N-((S)-3-Mercapto-2-methylpropionyl)-4-(phenylthio)-L-proline Benzoate (Ester)
Zoprace
(1(R*),2a,4a)-1-(3-(Benzoylthio)-2-methyl-1-oxopropyl)-4-(phenylthio)-L-proline
Zofenopril
(4S)-1-[(2S)-3-(Benzoylsulfanyl)-2-methylpropanoyl]-4-(phenylsulfanyl)-L-proline
Zofenoprilum
(2S,4S)-1-[(2S)-3-benzoylsulfanyl-2-methylpropanoyl]-4-phenylsulfanylpyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid
MFCD00004046
EINECS 201-705-8

Biological Activity

[Description]:

Zofenopril is an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor with an IC50 of 81 μM.

[Related Catalog]:

Signaling Pathways >> Metabolic Enzyme/Protease >> Angiotensin-converting Enzyme (ACE)
Research Areas >> Neurological Disease

[Target]

IC50: 81 μM (ACE)[1]


[In Vitro]

Kinetic analyses demonstrate that enalapril inhibits the uptake of GlySar in a competitive manner (Ki approximately 6 mM). Fosinopril and Zofenopril have the greatest inhibitory potency (IC50 values of 55 and 81μM, respectively) while the other ACE inhibitors exhibit low-affinity interactions with the renal peptide transporter[1].

[In Vivo]

Zofenopril, a sulphydrylic compound, at doses higher than 70 mg/kg i.p. produces significant protection (i.e. at 70 mg/kg, P=0.044, F=2.17, d.f.=18; at higher concentration P<0.05) against the tonic phase of the audiogenic seizure response. Pretreatment with Zofenopril (15 mg/kg, i.p.) is able to produce a consistent shift to the left of the dose-response curves and a significant reduction of ED50 values against clonus of some AEDs with the exceptions of diazepam, felbamate, phenobarbital and phenytoin compare with concurrent groups, suggesting an increase in anticonvulsant activity[2].

[Cell Assay]

Studies are performed in rabbit renal brush border membrane vesicles in which the uptake of radiolabeled GlySar is examined in the absence and presence of captopril, enalapril, enalaprilat, fosinopril, lisinopril, quinapril, quinaprilat, ramipril and Zofenopril[1].

[Animal admin]

Male and female mice weighing 8 to12 g (22 to 26 days old) or 20 to 28 g (48 to 56 days old) are used. Mice are exposed to auditory stimulation, 45, 60 or 120 min following intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of ACE inhibitors (including Zofenopril) (10 to 100 mg/kg) or vehicle and 45 min following i.p. injection of the AEDs studied. All ACE inhibitors are suspended in a 1% solution of Tween 80 before administration[2].

[References]

[1]. Lin CJ, et al. Competitive inhibition of glycylsarcosine transport by enalapril in rabbit renal brush border membrane vesicles: interaction of ACE inhibitors with high-affinity H+/peptide symporter. Pharm Res. 1999 May;16(5):609-15.

[2]. Sarro GD, et al. Fosinopril and zofenopril, two angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, potentiate the anticonvulsant activity of antiepileptic drugs against audiogenic seizures in DBA/2 mice. Pharmacol Res. 2012 Mar;65(3):285-96.


[Related Small Molecules]

Angiotensin I/II (1-7) trifluoroacetate salt | Captopril | Enalapril maleate | Perindopril erbumine | Lisinopril diydrate | Phosphoramidon disodium salt | Trandolapril | Fosinopril sodium | Quinapril hydrochloride | Ramipril | Cilazapril Monohydrate | Enalaprilat Dihydrate | omapatrilat | Temocapril (hydrochloride) | Hemorphin-7

Chemical & Physical Properties

[ Density]:
1.3±0.1 g/cm3

[ Boiling Point ]:
646.3±55.0 °C at 760 mmHg

[ Melting Point ]:
129-131.5ºC(lit.)

[ Molecular Formula ]:
C22H23NO4S2

[ Molecular Weight ]:
429.552

[ Flash Point ]:
344.7±31.5 °C

[ Exact Mass ]:
429.106842

[ PSA ]:
125.28000

[ LogP ]:
3.78

[ Appearance of Characters ]:
crystalline | light yellow

[ Vapour Pressure ]:
0.0±2.0 mmHg at 25°C

[ Index of Refraction ]:
1.659

[ Storage condition ]:
2-8°C

Safety Information

[ Hazard Codes ]:
Xn: Harmful;Xi: Irritant;

[ Risk Phrases ]:
R22

[ Safety Phrases ]:
23-24/25

[ WGK Germany ]:
3

[ RTECS ]:
QJ0875000

Synthetic Route

Precursor & DownStream


Related Compounds