Authors
Rahul Singh, Jayant Sindhu, Parvin Kumar, Mona Hooda, Ranjana Aggarwal, Sohan Lal, Shahin Ahmadi, Shahram Lotfi, Devender Singh, Harish Kumar
Publication date
2023/12/22
Source
ChemistrySelect
Volume
8
Issue
48
Pages
e202303852
Description
Thiazolidinone scaffold has become a promising scaffold when it comes to therapeutic importance, and researchers are quite interested in it because of its wide range of applications in the different fields of chemistry. The capacity of this nucleus to interact with a variety of biological targets, including the peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor (PPAR), protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B, aldose reductase, α‐glucosidase, and α‐amylase, has led to the observation of its antidiabetic effect. α‐Amylase (α‐1,4‐glucan‐4‐glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.1) is one of the most important industrial endoamylases capable of hydrolyzing the internal α‐1,4‐glycosidic bonds in polysaccharides with net retention of α‐anomeric configuration in low molecular weight products, such as glucose, maltose, and maltotriose units. The inhibitors of α‐amylase have the ability to lower endogenous activity, which is crucial for the management of …
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