Framycetin sulfate

For research use only. Not for therapeutic Use.

  • CAT Number: I008174
  • CAS Number: 4146-30-9
  • Molecular Formula: C23H52N6O25S3
  • Molecular Weight: 908.88
  • Purity: ≥95%
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Framycetin sulfate (Neomycin B sulfate), an aminoglycoside antibiotic, is a potent RNase P cleavage activity inhibitor with a Ki of 35 μM. Framycetin sulfate competes for specific divalent metal ion binding sites in RNase P RNA. Framycetin sulfate inhibits hammerhead ribozyme with a Ki of 13.5 μM. Framycetin sulfate, a 5″-azido neomycin B precursor, binds the Drosha site in miR-525 and is used for hepatic encephalopathy and enteropathogenic E. coli infections[1][2].
The inhibition of RNase P RNA cleavage by Framycetin sulfate (Neomycin Bsulfate; Fradiomycin Bsulfate) is sensitive to pH and an increase in pH suppresses the inhibition in other systems[1]. ?
Framycetin sulfate targets the bacterial and human ribosome and affect translation. 5″-azido neomycin B and Framycetin sulfate selectively inhibit production of the mature miRNA, boosts a downstream protein, and inhibits invasion in HCC cell line[2]. ?
Framycetin sulfate binds to a structural rather than a sequence motif of the RNA. Its primary cognate target is the decoding site of the 16S rRNA, but it also binds to the Rev-responsive element in HIV-1, group I introns, and the hammerhead ribozyme, and thus inhibits their biological function[3]. ?
Framycetin sulfate induces misreading of the genetic code during translation and inhibits several ribozymes. The ribosomal target site is the 16 S rRNA 1400 to 1500 region[4].


Catalog Number I008174
CAS Number 4146-30-9
Synonyms

(2R,3S,4R,5R,6R)-5-amino-2-(aminomethyl)-6-[(1R,2R,3S,4R,6S)-4,6-diamino-2-[(2S,3R,4S,5R)-4-[(2R,3R,4R,5S,6S)-3-amino-6-(aminomethyl)-4,5-dihydroxyoxan-2-yl]oxy-3-hydroxy-5-(hydroxymethyl)oxolan-2-yl]oxy-3-hydroxycyclohexyl]oxyoxane-3,4-diol;sulfuric acid

Molecular Formula C23H52N6O25S3
Purity ≥95%
InChI InChI=1S/C23H46N6O13.3H2O4S/c24-2-7-13(32)15(34)10(28)21(37-7)40-18-6(27)1-5(26)12(31)20(18)42-23-17(36)19(9(4-30)39-23)41-22-11(29)16(35)14(33)8(3-25)38-22;3*1-5(2,3)4/h5-23,30-36H,1-4,24-29H2;3*(H2,1,2,3,4)/t5-,6+,7-,8+,9-,10-,11-,12+,13-,14-,15-,16-,17-,18-,19-,20-,21-,22-,23+;;;/m1.../s1
InChIKey KWBUARAINLGYMG-JGMIRXPNSA-N
SMILES C1C(C(C(C(C1N)OC2C(C(C(C(O2)CN)O)O)N)OC3C(C(C(O3)CO)OC4C(C(C(C(O4)CN)O)O)N)O)O)N.OS(=O)(=O)O.OS(=O)(=O)O.OS(=O)(=O)O
Reference

[1]. N E Mikkelsen, et al. Inhibition of RNase P RNA Cleavage by Aminoglycosides. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 May 25;96(11):6155-60.
 [Content Brief]

[2]. Childs-Disney JL, et al. Small Molecule Targeting of a MicroRNA Associated with Hepatocellular Carcinoma. ACS Chem Biol. 2016 Feb 19;11(2):375-80.
 [Content Brief]

[3]. Stampfl S, et al. Monovalent ion dependence of neomycin B binding to an RNA aptamer characterized by spectroscopic methods. Chembiochem. 2007 Jul 9;8(10):1137-45.
 [Content Brief]

[4]. Hoch I, et al. Antibiotic inhibition of RNA catalysis: neomycin B binds to the catalytic core of the td group I intron displacing essential metal ions. J Mol Biol. 1998 Sep 25;282(3):557-69.
 [Content Brief]

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