20–21 Jan 2022
Birla Institute of Technology
Asia/Kolkata timezone

Benzohydrazide schiff base derivatives: Design, synthesis, spectroscopic study and antimicrobial screening

Not scheduled
10m
Birla Institute of Technology

Birla Institute of Technology

Mesra, Ranchi 835 215, Jharkhand, India
Poster Presentation Pharmaceutical Chemistry Poster Presentations

Speaker

Ms Afrin Ansari (St John Institute of Pharmacy and Research, Palghar)

Description

This research project aimed to design and synthesize hydrazide schiff base derivatives as an antimicrobial agent. Thus the objective was to perform in-silico studies of the designed compounds, synthesize, accomplish spectral analyses, and assess in-vitro antimicrobial activity. In-silico physicochemical properties using Molinspiration Cheminformatics software and computational toxicity studies with software, ProTox II was gaged for anticipated compounds. A four-step synthetic pathway was executed by both traditional condensation and microwave-assisted synthesis. Structural elucidation was conducted using Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), Nuclear Magnetic Resonance ($^{1}$H & $^{13}$C-NMR), and mass spectroscopic studies of synthesized samples. Eventually, these derivatives were tested in-vitro against six bacterial strains (gram-positive: Bacillus subtilis, Staphylococcus aureus and gram-negative: Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhi, Klebsiella pneumonia, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa) with agar disc diffusion assay method and determined the area inhibited by these organisms (Zone of inhibition values). A total of fifteen of the twenty proposed compounds were synthesized, with ten derivatives moving forward for further research. Spectroscopic analyses such as IR, NMR, and mass spectroscopy aided in the structural elucidation of ten synthesized compounds, with their results reported in tabular form. Antimicrobial tests revealed that the compounds were highly effective against MTCC E. coli and S. typhi strains. Both of these microbes exposed substantial activity against IVb and IVj. E. coli and S. typhi were significantly inhibited by IVe and IVf, respectively. Conclusion: Consequently, substituted benzohydrazide Schiff bases were fruitfully designed, synthesized, and analyzed. In-vitro antimicrobial activity of the compounds indicated the potential of hydrazide Schiff bases.

Bibliography:

  1. Raparti V, Chitre T, Bothara K, Kumar V, Dangre S, Khachane C, Gore S, Deshmane B. (2009) Novel 4-(morpholine-4-yl)-N′-(arylidene) benzohydrazides: synthesis, antimycobacterial activity, and QSAR investigations. EurJ Med Chem 44(10), 3954-3960. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmech.2009.04.023

  2. Manikandan V, Balaji S, Senbagam R, Vijayakumar R, Rajarajan M, Vanangamudi G, Arulkumaran R, Sundararajan R, Thirunarayanan G. (2017) Synthesis and antimicrobial activities of some (E)-N′-1-(substituted benzylidene) benzohydrazides. Int J Adv Chem 5(1), 17-24. DOI: https://doi.org/10.14419/ijac.v5i1.7155

Primary author

Ms Afrin Ansari (St John Institute of Pharmacy and Research, Palghar)

Co-authors

Dr Savita Tauro (St John Institute of Pharmacy and Research, Palghar) Mrs Sahaya Nadar (St John Institute of Pharmacy and Research, Palghar) Ms Pradnya Patil (St John Institute of Pharmacy and Research, Palghar)

Presentation materials