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Browsing by Subject "dehydroabietic acid"

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  • Hassan, Ghada (2016)
    The aim of this study was to synthesize antimicrobial and anti-biofilm agents using abietic (AA) and dehydroabietic acids (DHAA). Bacterial biofilms are formed when bacteria cells cluster together within a self-produced extracellular matrix. This lifestyle makes bacteria highly resilient to different environmental stresses and conventional antibiotics when compared to single-cell bacteria. Currently, there are no approved anti-biofilm agents as drugs and only a few number of compounds can selectively target biofilms and eradicate them at low concentrations. Potent drugs targeting them are needed. AA and DHAA are abietane-type diterpenoids found in the resin of conifer trees. Antibacterial effects of resin acids have been widely studied, specifically against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strain (MRSA). Through the combination of DHAA with different amino acids, Manner et al. (2015) discovered a new class of hybrid compounds that target both planktonic and biofilm bacteria in Staphylococcus aureus. The study group also discovered two of the most potent abietane-type anti-biofilm agents reported so far in literature. This thesis followed the work of the research group by designing and synthesizing additional AA and DHAA derivatives to target bacterial biofilms. Rings A, B and C of the diterpenoid core were modified and 24 derivatives were successfully synthesized. Amino acids were attached to the compounds either before or after ring modification. Standard structural elucidation techniques were used to confirm the structure of the synthesized compounds.