scholarly journals Synthetic organic chemistry in China: building on an ancient tradition—an interview with Qi-Lin Zhou and Xiaoming Feng

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-440
Author(s):  
Philip Ball

Abstract If the core of chemistry is making molecules, then the construction of those found in nature—natural products—has long been regarded as one of the highest forms of the art in synthesis. These molecules, produced by living organisms for a variety of purposes, are a key source of pharmaceuticals such as antibiotics and anticancer agents. The medicinal value of natural products has been known for centuries via herbal treatments, and such compounds are still collected, refined and screened for potential drugs today, sometimes being identified from local ‘folk medicine’ practices. By identifying the active ingredients of natural extracts used in traditional medicine, chemists can then synthesize modified forms that may be even more active: this was how the analgesic aspirin was first identified as a derivative of the plant hormone salicylic acid from willow bark. As well as offering such derivatives, natural-product synthesis in organic chemistry can potentially provide a more plentiful alternative source of natural products that are available in only tiny amounts from their natural sources. Efforts to devise cheap and efficient synthetic strategies for molecules such as paclitaxel (Taxol, an anticancer agent present in the Pacific yew) and artemisinin (an anti-malarial extracted from the herb sweet wormwood, qinghao (青蒿), and recognized by the 2015 Nobel Prize for Medicine) are still on-going to satisfy global demand. Organic synthesis is about much more than making natural products: it contributes, for example, to catalysis, polymer chemistry, food science and the development of wholly synthetic drugs. Yet efforts to make complex natural products may supply a motivational testing ground for developing new synthetic techniques with broader applications. Indeed, many chemists prize the discovery of a new synthetic method above the recreation of some complex natural molecule: it is the means, not the end, that matters. The field of organic and natural-product synthesis has a strong history in China, where there is a long tradition of herbal medicine. The use of the qinghao extract for treating malaria is first recorded in AD 340, in a manual that the 2015 Nobel laureate Tu Youyou says she consulted for clues about isolating the compound in the beginning of 1970s. Some say that, in the past decade, Chinese natural-product chemistry has entered a ‘golden era’ (Zheng Q-Y and Li A. Sci China Chem 2016;59: 1059–60). Qi-Lin Zhou of Nankai University and Xiaoming Feng of Sichuan University have been at the forefront of this upsurge. Both of them have developed methods for making so-called chiral molecules: arrangements of atoms that have a handedness, so that they can exist in two mirror-image versions. Natural products typically are chiral molecules, and their biological activity may depend on having the correct handedness. The selective synthesis of chiral molecules (asymmetric synthesis) is therefore vital to natural-product chemistry, and typically involves the use of catalysts that are chiral themselves. National Science Review spoke to Zhou and Feng about their work and their perspectives on organic synthesis in China. Qi-Lin Zhou of College of Chemistry at Nankai University, China. (Courtesy of Q Zhou)

1999 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 587-643 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. M. Giles

The nomenclature of natural products has suffered from much confusion, mostly for historical reasons. The isolation of a new substance, in the early days of the science, generally preceded its characterization by a lengthy period. Thus, these compounds were often assigned trivial names that gave no indication of the structure of the molecule and were often found afterwards to be misleading. Even when the original names were later revised (for example: glycerin to glycerol) the new names often expressed the structure imperfectly and were thus unsuitable for the nomenclatural manipulation that is required to name derivatives or stereoisomers. The result was a proliferation of trivial names that taxed the memory of chemists and obscured important structural relationships.The resultant disorder in the literature led to the creation of committees of specialists with the task of codifying the naming of compounds in various connected areas of natural-product chemistry, such as steroids, lipids, and carbohydrates. As far as their recommendations have been followed, their efforts have been successful in eliminating confusing or duplicate nomenclature.It is the aim of the lUPAC Commission on Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry to unite as far as possible all the specialist reports into a single set of recommendations that can be applied in most areas of natural-product chemistry. Accordingly, provisional recommendations were prepared and published as Section F of the lUPAC Organic Nomenclature Rules, first in 1976, and then in the 1979 edition of the Rules.


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (31) ◽  
pp. 7270-7292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sagar S. Thorat ◽  
Ravindar Kontham

Oxaspirolactones are ubiquitous structural motifs found in natural products and synthetic molecules with a diverse biochemical and physicochemical profile, and represent a valuable target in natural product chemistry and medicinal chemistry.


2009 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 1934578X0900400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federica Maltese ◽  
Frank van der Kooy ◽  
Robert Verpoorte

Solvents play an important and critical role in natural product chemistry. They are mainly used during the extraction and purification of metabolites from a biological matrix. To a lesser extent, solvents are also used as reagents or catalysts to perform chemical reactions. This review focuses on the most important classes of solvents, including alcohols, halogen-containing solvents, esters, ethers, acids and bases. The chemical reactions associated with the use of these solvents to form the so-called “artifacts” are discussed and the most common contaminants found in these solvents are also reviewed. The formation of artifacts and the use of contaminated solvents mainly leads to the formation of new compounds, loss of activity of active compounds, formation of active compounds from inactive ones (false positives), loss in total yield of important compounds during isolation, formation of toxic compounds and difficulty in reproducing an extraction or purification method. Finally, the need for stability studies of purified natural products is emphasized, as this is a common overlooked aspect in natural product chemistry.


2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 34-39
Author(s):  
Michael J. Stephenson ◽  
Anne Osbourn

Nature has long served as a rich source of structurally diverse small organic molecules with medicinally relevant biological activities. Despite the historical success of these so-called natural products, the enthusiasm of big pharma to explore these compounds as leads in drug design has waxed and waned. A major contributor to this is their often inherent structural complexity. Such compounds are difficult (often impossible) to access synthetically, a hurdle that can stifle lead development and hinder sustainable large-scale production of promising leads for clinical evaluation. However, in recent years, an emerging synergy between synthetic biology and natural product chemistry offers the potential for a renaissance in our ability to access natural products for drug discovery and development. Advances in genome sequencing, bioinformatics and the maturing of heterologous expression platforms are increasing, enabling the study, and ultimately, the manipulation of plant biosynthetic pathways. The triterpenes are one of the most structurally diverse families of natural products and arguably one of the most underrepresented in the clinic. The plant kingdom is the richest source of triterpene diversity, with >20,000 triterpenes reported so far. Transient expression of genes for candidate enzymes and pathways in amenable plant species is emerging as a powerful and rapid means of investigating and harnessing the plant enzymes involved in generating this diversity. Such platforms also have the potential to serve as production systems in their own right, with the possibility of upscaling these discoveries into commercially useful products using the same overall basic procedure. Ultimately, the carbon source for generation of high-value compounds in plants is photosynthesis. Therefore, we could, with the help of plants, be producing new medicines out of sunlight and ‘thin air’ in green factories in the not too distant future.


2018 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 1778-1805 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fateh V Singh ◽  
Priyanka B Kole ◽  
Saeesh R Mangaonkar ◽  
Samata E Shetgaonkar

Hypervalent iodine reagents have been developed as highly valuable reagents in synthetic organic chemistry during the past few decades. These reagents have been identified as key replacements of various toxic heavy metals in organic synthesis. Various synthetically and biologically important scaffolds have been developed using hypervalent iodine reagents either in stoichiometric or catalytic amounts. In addition, hypervalent iodine reagents have been employed for the synthesis of spirocyclic scaffolds via dearomatization processes. In this review, various approaches for the synthesis of spirocyclic scaffolds using hypervalent iodine reagents are covered including their stereoselective synthesis. Additionally, the applications of these reagents in natural product synthesis are also covered.


Organic chemistry was, in its origin, the study of the chemical compounds found in living matter. These substances, however, are usually of so complex a composition, and so difficult to separate from one another in a pure state, that their study made little headway until attention was concentrated on the much simpler compounds present in coal gas and coal tar. Both of these were available on die industrial scale in many parts of Europe from 1820 onwards. The problems presented by these derivatives of methane and of benzene were capable of progressive solution; by the end of the century, the literature of organic chemistry was largely concerned with ‘unnatural’ compounds (1), and the science itself had to be redefined as ‘the chemistry of carbon compounds’. Of course, natural products were never entirely forgotten, and as methods of separation and structure determination increased in power, they began in the present century to take a more equal place with their unnatural relatives. Henry Edward Schunck (1820-1903), a Manchester chemist and industrialist, was one of the few who devoted their whole career to research in natural-product chemistry during the decades of its partial eclipse.


2001 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 395-413
Author(s):  
G.M. Blackburn ◽  
I.O. Sutherland

David Ollis was one of the most influential and significant members of the group of British chemists who rose to prominence during the 1950s and 1960s. In common with other members of this group, he made important and lasting contributions to both the theory and the practice of his chosen discipline. Although the growth of natural product chemistry was less dramatic during the 1970s and beyond, he transposed his activities increasingly into mechanistic studies and so remained one of the leaders of chemistry in the UK. He occupied the Chair of Organic Chemistry at Sheffield University from 1963 to his retirement in 1990, and thereafter continued to be involved in chemistry through an honorary appointment at Birmingham University until his death in 1999.


Marine Drugs ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (9) ◽  
pp. 339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hsu-Ming Chung ◽  
Yi-Chen Wang ◽  
Chung-Chih Tseng ◽  
Nan-Fu Chen ◽  
Zhi-Hong Wen ◽  
...  

The structures, names, bioactivities, and references of 82 natural products, including 48 new metabolites, purified from the gorgonian corals belonging to the genus Junceella are described in this review. All compounds mentioned in this review were obtained from Junceella fragilis, Junceella gemmacea, Junceella juncea, and Junceella sp., collected from tropical Indo-Pacific Ocean. Some of these compounds exhibited potential biomedical activities.


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