1. Anti-infection Cell Cycle/DNA Damage
  2. Antibiotic Bacterial DNA/RNA Synthesis
  3. Rifamycin

Rifamycin (Rifamycin SV) is an orally active ansamycin antibiotic. Rifamycin inhibits DNA-dependent RNA synthesis. Rifamycin has antibacterial activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Rifamycin interferes with hepatic bile acid metabolism. Rifamycin has anti-inflammatory effects. Rifamycin can be used in the study of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Bacteroides fragilis infection, and Lipopolysaccharide (HY-D1056B3)-induced inflammation.

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Rifamycin Chemical Structure

Rifamycin Chemical Structure

CAS No. : 6998-60-3

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Description

Rifamycin (Rifamycin SV) is an orally active ansamycin antibiotic. Rifamycin inhibits DNA-dependent RNA synthesis. Rifamycin has antibacterial activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Rifamycin interferes with hepatic bile acid metabolism. Rifamycin has anti-inflammatory effects. Rifamycin can be used in the study of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Bacteroides fragilis infection, and Lipopolysaccharide (HY-D1056B3)-induced inflammation[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11].

Cellular Effect
Cell Line Type Value Description References
Vero CC50
62.46 μg/mL
Compound: RFM
Cytotoxicity against african green monkey Vero cells after 72 hrs by resazurin assay
Cytotoxicity against african green monkey Vero cells after 72 hrs by resazurin assay
[PMID: 23474387]
In Vitro

Rifamycin (10 μM; 30 s) mainly inhibits -independent Taurocholate (HY-N0545) uptake in short-term cultured rat hepatocytes[2].
Rifamycin (10-100 μM; 15 min) effectively inhibits Oatp2-mediated Taurocholate uptake in Xenopus oocytes expressing Na+/Ntcp[2].
Rifamycin (1-100 μM; 24 h) inhibits the synthesis of cytokines and chemokines from lipopolysaccharide-activated monocytes and macrophages[3].
Rifamycin (0.16 μg/ml; 2 weeks of culture) inhibits the growth of M. tuberculosis and its drug-resistant mutants in TB broth containing 10% serum albumin[4].

MedChemExpress (MCE) has not independently confirmed the accuracy of these methods. They are for reference only.

In Vivo

Rifamycin (5 mg/day; s.c.; 3 days a week) is effective in mice infected with M. tuberculosis, significantly reducing the number of viable bacteria in the body[4].
Rifamycin (12.5-25 mg/kg; peritoneal lavage) can improve the survival rate of rats with experimental intraperitoneal infection and significantly reduce the number of intraperitoneal bacteria and adhesion formation[6].
Rifamycin (5-40 mg/kg; esophageal gavage; once a day, 5 days a week; 4 weeks) shortens oral treatment duration in a mouse model of Mycobacterium ulcerans disease[8].
Rifamycin (0.1 mL; intraaural administration; twice daily; 10 days) does not cause hearing loss in adult or weanling rats[9].
Rifamycin (1 mg i.v. bolus followed by 4 mg i.v. infusion; 70 min) interferes with three major steps of Bile acid metabolism in rats with intravenous Sodium cholate (HY-N0324A) infusion, resulting in a significant decrease in bile acid uptake and excretion[10].
Rifamycin (10-160 mg/kg; s.c.; single dose) is approximately 11 times less effective than Metronidazole (HY-B0318) in a mouse Bacteroides fragilis thigh infection model[11].

MedChemExpress (MCE) has not independently confirmed the accuracy of these methods. They are for reference only.

Animal Model: Male Wistar rats (weight 200-250 g), cecal ligation puncture (CLP)-induced intra-abdominal infection model[6]
Dosage: 25 mg/kg, 12.5 mg/kg
Administration: Peritoneal lavage
Result: Improved survival from 50% in the control group to 91.7% in the 25 mg/kg group and 100% in the 12.5 mg/kg group.
Significantly reduced adhesion formation.
Showed a greater reduction in bacterial counts in peritoneal fluid (25 mg/kg).
Molecular Weight

697.77

Formula

C37H47NO12

CAS No.
SMILES

C[C@H]1/C=C/C=C(C)\C(NC2=CC(O)=C3C(C(O)=C(C)C4=C3C([C@](O/C=C/[C@H](OC)[C@@H](C)[C@@H](OC(C)=O)[C@H](C)[C@H](O)[C@H](C)[C@H]1O)(C)O4)=O)=C2O)=O

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Please store the product under the recommended conditions in the Certificate of Analysis.

Purity & Documentation
References
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Help & FAQs
  • Do most proteins show cross-species activity?

    Species cross-reactivity must be investigated individually for each product. Many human cytokines will produce a nice response in mouse cell lines, and many mouse proteins will show activity on human cells. Other proteins may have a lower specific activity when used in the opposite species.

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