Oxazolines are five-membered heterocyclic compounds with one double bond. The double bond may be in one of three positions, so there may be three different oxazoline rings. The 2-oxazoline structure is the most common, and 3-oxazoline and 4-oxazoline exist mainly as laboratory research compounds. Oxazolines exist between oxazole and oxazolidine in terms of saturation.
The use of azepane as a scaffold for drug discovery remains of interest. The azepane linker is the key to efficient activity. A number of seven-membered ring derivatives have been prepared or investigated for their potential or actual pharmacological properties. Examples include azaalkane derivatives as PKB (protein kinase B) inhibitors.