eChapter Name: An Overview of Triazole Hybrids as Multitargeting Agents: Lead Medications in Medicinal Chemistry
9789372193862
eBook Name: FRONTIERS IN ORGANIC CHEMISTRY RESEARCH AND ADVANCES
by Rama Kanwar Khangarot, Gangotri Pemawat
Introduction
Five-membered heterocyclic molecules play a unique function in both natural and synthetic organic chemistry. The chemistry of azoles is currently being continually investigated in pharmaceutical chemistry. One of the most important fields of medicinal chemistry is the study of heterocyclic bioactive molecules containing nitrogen atoms. Triazoles have been found as a potential heterocyclic component in a wide range of drug scaffolds. It has a five-membered nitrogen heterocycle core with three nitrogen atoms and two carbon atoms. In 1885, Bladin coined the word “triazole” to describe the five-membered (Singh et al., 2018). 1,2,3-triazole and 1,2,4-triazole are the two isomeric forms of triazole (Matin et al., 2022). The core has a substantial impact on biological activity. The influences of the nitrogen heteroatom on the reactivity of the lead compound target medication pharmacokinetics and metabolism are affected by interactions between the lead chemical and several target inhibitors. Table 1, shows two tautomers of triazole depending on the hydrogen bonded to the nitrogen ring. Antimicrobial (Patil et al., 2023), anticonvulsants (Guan et al., 2007), antimalarial (Gujjar et al., 2009), antitumor (Al-Soud et al., 2004), antiviral (Al-Soud et al., 2004), antiproliferative (Masood-Ur-Rahman et al., 2017), anticancer (Minjian et al., 2017), antioxidants (Karrouchi et al., 2016), analgesics (Lass-Flörl C. 2011), antifungal (Guan et al., 2007, Lass-Flörl C. 2011), antiplasmodial (Balabadra et al., 2017), antibacterial (Guan et al., 2007, Khaligh et al., 2016), immunostimulants (Lee et al., 2007), and antidiabetic (Wang et al., 2017) are just a few of the numerous medications that demonstrate the pharmacological significance of triazole as a core heterocyclic structural component show in Figure 1.