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CAS No:805239-56-9
Chemical Name: 4-[2-Phenyl-5,7-bis(trifluoromethyl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-3-yl]phenol
498 Items
| Quantity | 10 mg | Unit Price ($/mg or $/Unit) | Final Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 5 | $29.75 | Total: $148.75 |
| 1 | 10 | $25.20 | Total: $252.00 |
| 1 | 25 | $21.35 | Total: $533.75 |
| 1 | 50 | $18.20 | Total: $910.00 |
| 1 | 100 | $15.75 | Total: $1,575.00 |
| Molecular Formula | C20H11F6N3O |
| Molecular Weight | 423.3 |
| CAS Numbers | 805239-56-9 |
| Storage Condition | 0°C (short term), -20°C (long term), desiccated |
| Solubility | DMSO |
| Purity | 98% by HPLC |
| IUPAC/Chemical Name | 4-[2-phenyl-5,7-bis(trifluoromethyl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-3-yl]-phenol |
| InChl Key | AEZPAUSGTAHLOQ-UHFFFAOYSA-N |
| InChl Code | InChI=1S/C20H11F6N3O/c21-19(22,23)14-10-15(20(24,25)26)29-18(27-14)16(11-6-8-13(30)9-7-11)17(28-29)12-4-2-1-3-5-12/h1-10,30H |
| SMILES Code | OC(C=C1)=CC=C1C(C(C2=CC=CC=C2)=N3)=C4N3C(C(F)(F)F)=CC(C(F)(F)F)=N4 |
| References | 1) Compton, D.R., Sheng, S., Carlson, K.E., et al. Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidines: Estrogen receptor ligands possessing estrogen receptor β antagonist activity. J. Med. Chem. 47(24), 5872-5893 (2004). 2) Chan, K.K.L., Leung, T.H.Y., Chan, D.W., et al. Targeting estrogen receptor subtypes (ERα and ERβ) with selective ER modulators in ovarian cancer. J. Endocrinol. 221(2), 325-336 (2014). |
Selective estrogen ERß receptor antagonist
PHTPP (IUPAC: 4-[2-Phenyl-5,7-bis(trifluoromethyl)pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-3-yl]phenol) is a synthetic small molecule. Wikipedia
It is non-steroidal. Wikipedia+1
It is used for research purposes only, not for therapeutic use in humans.
PHTPP is a selective antagonist of the estrogen receptor beta (ER β, also written ERβ). Wikipedia+2
It shows around 36-fold greater selectivity for ERβ over estrogen receptor alpha (ER α/ERα).
In functional assays (cotranfection assays in certain cell lines) it exhibits full antagonism of ERβ.
In other words: when ERβ is activated by its ligand (e.g., estrogens), PHTPP can bind (or in effect block) so that ERβ cannot carry out its usual transcriptional/regulatory functions.
Because ERβ and ERα often have different (sometimes opposing) roles in cells, a compound like PHTPP helps researchers dissect out the functions specifically mediated by ERβ. For example:
In cancer biology: to understand how ERβ influences proliferation, apoptosis, gene regulation.
In neuroscience / endocrine signalling: to study how estrogen receptor subtypes impact brain, cardiovascular, immune systems. PMC
For example: in a cell model, PHTPP has been used to block ERβ’s inhibitory effect on tumour cells, thereby causing increased proliferation in that specific context.
In animal studies: PHTPP has been used to block the beneficial (anti-fibrotic, anti-inflammatory) effects of ERβ activation in e.g. liver or intestinal models.
Molecular weight: ~ 423.31 g/mol.
Formula: C₍₂₀₎H₍₁₁₎F₆N₃O.
CAS Number: 805239-56-9.
Solubility: example, soluble up to ~33 mM in DMSO, ~100 mM in ethanol (depending on preparation).
Storage / usage: It's a reagent for in-vitro (cell culture) or in-vivo (animal) research. Not approved as a drug. Not for human therapeutic use.
Just because it is selective (~36-fold) doesn’t mean it is absolutely specific: off-target effects can still occur, particularly at high concentrations or in complex biological systems.
Antagonising ERβ may produce very different outcomes depending on tissue context, species, ligand environment, etc. i.e., blocking ERβ might have unintended consequences.
Use in research should rely on proper controls (e.g., ERβ knockdown/knockout, ERα antagonists, other receptor assays) to validate conclusions.
As with many receptor modulators, dosing, timing, context (cell type, ligand presence, receptor expression levels) matter a lot.
Because it is a research chemical only, results from PHTPP experiments should be interpreted with caution when extrapolating toward therapeutic or clinical relevance.