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Dive into the research topics where Lenka Poštová Slavětínská is active.

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Featured researches published by Lenka Poštová Slavětínská.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2014

Synthesis, Cytostatic, Antimicrobial, and Anti-HCV Activity of 6-Substituted 7-(Het)aryl-7-deazapurine Ribonucleosides

Petr Nauš; Olga Caletková; Petr Konečný; Petr Džubák; Kateřina Bogdanová; Milan Kolář; Jana Vrbkova; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Eva Tloušt’ová; Pavla Perlíková; Marian Hajduch; Michal Hocek

A series of 80 7-(het)aryl- and 7-ethynyl-7-deazapurine ribonucleosides bearing a methoxy, methylsulfanyl, methylamino, dimethylamino, methyl, or oxo group at position 6, or 2,6-disubstituted derivatives bearing a methyl or amino group at position 2, were prepared, and the biological activity of the compounds was studied and compared with that of the parent 7-(het)aryl-7-deazaadenosine series. Several of the compounds, in particular 6-substituted 7-deazapurine derivatives bearing a furyl or ethynyl group at position 7, were significantly cytotoxic at low nanomolar concentrations whereas most were much less potent or inactive. Promising activity was observed with some compounds against Mycobacterium bovis and also against hepatitis C virus in a replicon assay.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011

General and modular synthesis of isomeric 5-substituted pyridin-2-yl and 6-substituted pyridin-3-yl C-ribonucleosides bearing diverse alkyl, aryl, hetaryl, amino, carbamoyl, and hydroxy groups.

Martin Štefko; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Blanka Klepetářová; Michal Hocek

A general modular and practical methodology for preparation of diverse 5-substituted pyridin-2-yl and 6-substituted pyridin-3-yl C-ribonucleosides was developed. Regioselective lithiation of 2,5-dibromopyridine proceeded at position 5 or 2 depending on the solvent, and the resulting bromopyridyl lithium species underwent additions to TBS-protected ribonolactone and follow-up transformations to corresponding acetylated hemiketal intermediates 7 and 10 that were diastereoselectively reduced to give either 5-bromopyridin-2-yl or 6-bromopyridin-3-yl silyl-protected C-ribonucleosides 8 or 11 in 68% and 77% overall yields as pure β-anomers. These bromopyridyl C-nucleoside intermediates were then subjected to a series of palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions, aminations, aminocarbonylations, and hydroxylations to give a series of protected 1β-(5-alkyl-, 5-aryl-, 5-amino-, 5-carbamoyl-, and 5-hydroxypyridin-2-yl)-C-ribonucleosides 13a-i and β-(6-alkyl-, 6-aryl-, 6-amino-, 6-carbamoyl-, and 6-hydroxypyridin-3-yl)-C-ribonucleosides 15a-i. Deprotection of silylated nucleosides by Et(3)N·3HF, TBAF, or TFA gave a series of free C-nucleosides 14a-i and 16a-i.


ChemBioChem | 2015

Polymerase Synthesis and Restriction Enzyme Cleavage of DNA Containing 7-Substituted 7-Deazaguanine Nucleobases

Michaela Mačková; Soňa Boháčová; Pavla Perlíková; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Michal Hocek

Previous studies of polymerase synthesis of base‐modified DNAs and their cleavage by restriction enzymes have mostly related only to 5‐substituted pyrimidine and 7‐substituted 7‐deazaadenine nucleotides. Here we report the synthesis of a series of 7‐substituted 7‐deazaguanine 2′‐deoxyribonucleoside 5′‐O‐triphosphates (dGRTPs), their use as substrates for polymerase synthesis of modified DNA and the influence of the modification on their cleavage by type II restriction endonucleases (REs). The dGRTPs were generally good substrates for polymerases but the PCR products could not be visualised on agarose gels by intercalator staining, due to fluorescence quenching. The presence of 7‐substituted 7‐deazaguanine residues in recognition sequences of REs in most cases completely blocked the cleavage.


ChemMedChem | 2013

Synthesis and cytostatic and antiviral activities of 2'-deoxy-2',2'-difluororibo- and 2'-deoxy-2'-fluororibonucleosides derived from 7-(Het)aryl-7-deazaadenines.

Pavla Perlíková; Ludovic Eberlin; Petra Ménová; Veronika Raindlová; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Eva Tloušťová; Gina Bahador; Yu-Jen Lee; Michal Hocek

A series of sugar‐modified derivatives of cytostatic 7‐heteroaryl‐7‐deazaadenosines (2′‐deoxy‐2′‐fluororibo‐ and 2′‐deoxy‐2′,2′‐difluororibonucleosides) bearing an aryl or heteroaryl group at position 7 was prepared and screened for biological activity. The difluororibonucleosides were prepared by non‐ stereoselective glycosidation of 6‐chloro‐7‐deazapurine with benzoyl‐protected 2‐deoxy‐2,2‐difluoro‐D‐erythro‐pentofuranosyl‐1‐mesylate, followed by amination and aqueous Suzuki cross‐couplings with (het)arylboronic acids. The fluororibo derivatives were prepared by aqueous palladium‐catalyzed cross‐coupling reactions of the corresponding 7‐iodo‐7‐deazaadenine 2′‐deoxy‐2′‐fluororibonucleoside 20 with (het)arylboronic acids. The key intermediate 20 was prepared by a six‐step sequence from the corresponding arabinonucleoside by selective protection of 3′‐ and 5′‐hydroxy groups with acid‐labile groups, followed by stereoselective SN2 fluorination and deprotection. Some of the title nucleosides and 7‐iodo‐7‐deazaadenine intermediates showed micromolar cytostatic or anti‐HCV activity. The most active were 7‐iodo and 7‐ethynyl derivatives. The corresponding 2′‐deoxy‐2′,2′‐difluororibonucleoside 5′‐O‐triphosphates were found to be good substrates for bacterial DNA polymerases, but are inhibitors of human polymerase α.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2016

7-(2-Thienyl)-7-Deazaadenosine (AB61), a New Potent Nucleoside Cytostatic with a Complex Mode of Action

Pavla Perlíková; Gabriela Rylova; Petr Nauš; Tomáš Elbert; Eva Tloušťová; Aurelie Bourderioux; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Kamil Motyka; Dalibor Doležal; Pawel Znojek; Alice Nová; Monika Harvanova; Petr Džubák; Michal Šiller; Jan Hlaváč; Marian Hajduch; Michal Hocek

7-(2-Thienyl)-7-deazaadenosine (AB61) showed nanomolar cytotoxic activities against various cancer cell lines but only mild (micromolar) activities against normal fibroblasts. The selectivity of AB61 was found to be due to inefficient phosphorylation of AB61 in normal fibroblasts. The phosphorylation of AB61 in the leukemic CCRF-CEM cell line proceeds well and it was shown that AB61 is incorporated into both DNA and RNA, preferentially as a ribonucleotide. It was further confirmed that a triphosphate of AB61 is a substrate for both RNA and DNA polymerases in enzymatic assays. Gene expression analysis suggests that AB61 affects DNA damage pathways and protein translation/folding machinery. Indeed, formation of large 53BP1 foci was observed in nuclei of AB61-treated U2OS-GFP-53BP1 cells indicating DNA damage. Random incorporation of AB61 into RNA blocked its translation in an in vitro assay and reduction of reporter protein expression was also observed in mice after 4-hour treatment with AB61. AB61 also significantly reduced tumor volume in mice bearing SK-OV-3, BT-549, and HT-29 xenografts. The results indicate that AB61 is a promising compound with unique mechanism of action and deserves further development as an anticancer agent. Mol Cancer Ther; 15(5); 922–37. ©2016 AACR.


RSC Advances | 2014

Direct C–H amination and C–H chloroamination of 7-deazapurines

Nazarii Sabat; Martin Klečka; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Blanka Klepetářová; Michal Hocek

Protocols for selective Pd–Cu-catalyzed direct C–H amination or C–H chloroamination of 7-deazapurines with N-chloro-N-alkyl-arylsulfonamides have been developed leading either to 8-(arylsulfonyl)methylamino-7-deazapurines or to 7-chloro-8-(arylsulfonyl)methylamino-7-deazapurines. The scope and limitations of the methods, as well as synthesis of a small series of 6,8,9-tri- and 6,7,8,9-tetrasubstituted 7-deazapurines and deprotection of the sulfonamide are presented.


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2012

13C GIAO DFT calculation as a tool for configuration prediction of N–O group in saturated heterocyclic N‐oxides

Radek Pohl; Francisc Potmischil; Martin Dračínský; Václav Vaněk; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Miloš Buděšínský

Tropane, tropinone, pseudopelletierine and cocaine were oxidized in situ in a nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) tube providing mixtures of exo/endo N‐oxides. Observed 13C chemical shifts were correlated with values calculated by gauge‐including atomic orbitals density functional theory (DFT) OPBE/6‐31G* method using DFT B3LYP/6‐31G* optimized geometries. The same method of 13C chemical shift calculation was applied on series of methyl‐substituted 1‐methylpiperidines and their epimeric N‐oxides described in literature. The results show that using this undemanding calculation method enables assignment of configuration of N–O group in N‐epimeric saturated heterocyclic N‐oxides. The approach enables assigning of the configuration with high degree of certainty even if NMR data of only one isomer are available. An improved method of in situ oxidation of starting amines in an NMR tube is also described. Copyright


Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2010

Observed and calculated 1H and 13C chemical shifts induced by the in situ oxidation of model sulfides to sulfoxides and sulfones.

Martin Dračínský; Radek Pohl; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Miloš Buděšínský

A series of model sulfides was oxidized in the NMR sample tube to sulfoxides and sulfones by the stepwise addition of meta‐chloroperbenzoic acid in deuterochloroform. Various methods of quantum chemical calculations have been tested to reproduce the observed 1H and 13C chemical shifts of the starting sulfides and their oxidation products. It has been shown that the determination of the energy‐minimized conformation is a very important condition for obtaining realistic data in the subsequent calculation of the NMR chemical shifts. The correlation between calculated and observed chemical shifts is very good for carbon atoms (even for the ‘cheap’ DFT B3LYP/6‐31G* method) and somewhat less satisfactory for hydrogen atoms. The calculated chemical shifts induced by oxidation (the Δδ values) agree even better with the experimental values and can also be used to determine the oxidation state of the sulfur atom (S, SO, SO2). Copyright


ChemMedChem | 2015

2-Substituted 6-(Het)aryl-7-deazapurine Ribonucleosides: Synthesis, Inhibition of Adenosine Kinases, and Antimycobacterial Activity

Vincent Malnuit; Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Petr Nauš; Petr Džubák; Marian Hajduch; Jiřina Stolaříková; Jan Snášel; Iva Pichová; Michal Hocek

A series of 6‐(hetero)aryl‐ or 6‐methyl‐7‐deazapurine ribonucleosides bearing a substituent at position 2 (Cl, F, NH2, or CH3) were prepared by cross‐coupling reactions at position 6 and functional group transformations at position 2. Cytostatic, antiviral, and antimicrobial activity assays were performed. The title compounds were observed to be potent and selective inhibitors of Mycobacterium tuberculosis adenosine kinase (ADK), but not human ADK; moreover, they were found to be non‐cytotoxic. The antimycobacterial activities against M. tuberculosis, however, were only moderate. The reason for this could be due to either poor uptake through the cell wall or to parallel biosynthesis of adenosine monophosphate by the salvage pathway.


Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014

Pyrrolidine nucleotide analogs with a tunable conformation

Lenka Poštová Slavětínská; Dominik Rejman; Radek Pohl

Summary Conformational preferences of the pyrrolidine ring in nucleotide analogs 7–14 were investigated by means of NMR and molecular modeling. The effect of the relative configuration of hydroxy and nucleobase substituents as well as the effect of the alkylation or acylation of the pyrrolidine nitrogen atom on the conformation of the pyrrolidine ring were studied. The results of a conformational analysis show that the alkylation/acylation can be effectively used for tuning the pyrrolidine conformation over the whole pseudorotation cycle.

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Michal Hocek

Charles University in Prague

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Radek Pohl

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Blanka Klepetářová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Pavla Perlíková

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Petr Nauš

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Nazarii Sabat

Charles University in Prague

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Dominik Rejman

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Tomáš Kubelka

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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