Home

aminosteroids

Aminosteroids are a class of steroid-derived organic compounds in which one or more amino groups are introduced into the hydrocarbon skeleton of the steroid structure. The amino functionality may be primary, secondary, or tertiary and may appear as neutral amines or as ammonium salts, depending on pH and substituents.

Common points of substitution include the C-3 position on the A ring, the 17β side chain, or

In terms of properties, the presence of amino groups increases polarity and can alter ligand binding to

Today aminosteroids are mainly of interest as research tools and scaffolds in drug discovery, and as chemical

appended
amino-containing
side
chains
linked
to
the
nucleus.
They
can
be
mono-
or
polyfunctional.
Synthesis
often
involves
modification
of
preexisting
steroids
by
introducing
amino
groups
through
reductive
amination,
nucleophilic
substitution,
or
installation
of
amino-containing
side
chains;
later
steps
may
include
salt
formation
to
improve
solubility.
biological
targets,
membrane
permeability,
and
metabolic
stability.
Aminosteroids
have
been
explored
in
medicinal
chemistry
for
a
range
of
potential
applications,
including
receptor
modulation,
enzyme
inhibition,
and
anticancer
or
antiviral
activity
in
vitro.
The
activity
depends
strongly
on
the
position
and
nature
of
the
amino
substituent
as
well
as
on
the
overall
steroid
framework.
probes
for
studying
steroid
biology.
They
form
a
broad
family
rather
than
a
single
approved
drug
class.