1. The molecule features a bicyclic structure with two fused rings. The first ring is a thiophene, a five-membered ring composed of one sulfur and four carbons, with the sulfur located at position 1.
2. The second ring is a six-membered ring that shares the carbon atoms at positions C2 and C3 with the thiophene. It contains one nitrogen atom (located opposite the C2 carbon), while all other atoms are carbons, and all bonds are single, except between C2 and C3.
3. The nitrogen atom on the six-membered ring bears a four-carbon side chain with the following features:
   - The first carbon, directly bonded to the ring nitrogen, is double-bonded to oxygen (forming a carbonyl group).
   - Following two intervening methylene groups, the fourth carbon is double-bonded to an oxygen atom and is also bonded to an amine fragment. Within this fragment, the amine nitrogen is substituted with a benzyl group (-CH2-C6H5) and a -CH2-C(=O)OH chain (glycine-like unit).