scholarly journals Aminomethylation/hydrogenolysis as an alternative to direct methylation of metalated isoquinolines – a novel total synthesis of the alkaloid 7-hydroxy-6-methoxy-1-methylisoquinoline

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 130-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benedikt C Melzer ◽  
Jan G Felber ◽  
Franz Bracher

Highly-substituted isoquinolines are important scaffolds in syntheses of natural products and in drug development and hence, effective synthetic approaches are required. Here we present a novel method for the introduction of a methyl group at C1 of isoquinolines. This is exemplified by a new total synthesis of the alkaloid 7-hydroxy-6-methoxy-1-methylisoquinoline. Direct metalation of 7-benzyloxy-6-methoxyisoquinoline with Knochel–Hauser base, followed by cuprate-mediated methylation gives the target alkaloid directly, but separation from the educt is cumbersome. Quenching the metalated intermediate with Eschenmoser’s reagent gives an easy to clean tertiary benzylamine, which, after quaternization with iodomethane, is easily converted into the desired 1-methylisoquinoline by hydrogenolysis of both the benzylamine and benzyl ether groups.

2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 1934578X1300800 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takuya Imaoka ◽  
Makoto Iwata ◽  
Takafumi Akimoto ◽  
Kazuo Nagasawa

Oroidin derived pyrrole imidazole marine alkaloids (PIAs) are attractive targets for synthetic organic chemists because of their structural complexity and diversity as well as their interesting biological activities. A number of efforts have been carried out to develop strategies for the synthesis of these natural products. Members of PIAs ( eg., 2-7) which contain tetracyclic ring systems possessing characteristic cyclic guanidine or urea moieties show significant biological activities including anticancer activity and agonistic activity against the adrenoceptor. In this review investigations of the total synthesis of the representative tetracyclic PIAs dibromophakellin (2) and dibromophakellstatin (3) are described.


2011 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 1379-1390 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael C. McLeod ◽  
Margaret A. Brimble ◽  
Dominea C. K. Rathwell ◽  
Zoe E. Wilson ◽  
Tsz-Ying Yuen

Studies toward the synthesis of three biologically active [5,6]-benzannulated spiroketal natural products are described. The first total synthesis of paecilospirone is reported, employing a late-stage, pH-neutral spiroketalization. A formal synthesis of γ-rubromycin is described, where the spiroketal moiety is formed by delicate manipulation of the electronic properties of the spirocyclization precursor. Finally, model work toward the total synthesis of berkelic acid is summarized, introducing a novel Horner–Wadsworth–Emmons/oxa-Michael (HWE/oxa-M) cascade to access the spiroketal precursor.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
R.M. Kalpani K. Somarathne

<p>Carbohydrate-derived cyclopropanes combine both the stereochemical wealth of carbohydrates and the reactivity of cyclopropanes. A diverse variety of reaction modes for these cyclopropyl carbohydrates can be harnessed for the synthesis of natural products and other targets.  The natural products (−)-TAN-2483A and (−)-TAN-2483B are fungal secondary metabolites displaying a variety of bioactivities such as inhibition of c-src kinase action and parathyroid hormone-induced bone resorption. This thesis described several synthetic approaches to the natural product (−)-TAN-2483B and analogues of (−)-TAN-2483B employing cyclopropane ring expansion.  The synthetic route to (−)-TAN-2483B began with the readily available substrate D-mannose. The pyran ring unsaturation of the natural product was established by a cyclopropanation-ring expansion sequence. A synthetic strategy via dichlorocyclopropane-based intermediates is described in chapter 2. This being unsuccessful, an alternative approach via 2-fomyl-glycal was developed in chapter 3. The chapter 2 and 3 provided a solid background for the achievement of the analogues synthesis illustrated in chapter 4 via dibromocyclopropane. Lewis acid-mediated alkynylation followed by Pdcatalysed carbonylative lactonisation was successfully utilised in the revelation of the furo[3,4-b]pyran ring skeleton. This route afforded analogues of TAN-2483B; the Z-and E-unsaturated ethyl esters 140 and 141 and hydroxy(−)-TAN-2483B 145. The total synthesis of (−)-TAN-2483B was not achieved due to unforeseen obstacles encountered in the deoxygenation of the side arm of 335 (Chapter 4) into the E-propenyl side arm of (−)-TAN-2483B.</p>


Molecules ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 463
Author(s):  
Luca Pozzetti ◽  
Roberta Ibba ◽  
Sara Rossi ◽  
Orazio Taglialatela-Scafati ◽  
Donatella Taramelli ◽  
...  

The potential of natural and synthetic chalcones as therapeutic leads against different pathological conditions has been investigated for several years, and this class of compounds emerged as a privileged chemotype due to its interesting anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antiviral, and anticancer properties. The objective of our study was to contribute to the investigation of this class of natural products as anti-leishmanial agents. We aimed at investigating the structure–activity relationships of the natural chalcone lophirone E, characterized by the presence of benzofuran B-ring, and analogues on anti-leishmania activity. Here we describe an effective synthetic strategy for the preparation of the natural chalcone lophirone E and its application to the synthesis of a small set of chalcones bearing different substitution patterns at both the A and heterocyclic B rings. The resulting compounds were investigated for their activity against Leishmania infantum promastigotes disclosing derivatives 1 and 28a,b as those endowed with the most interesting activities (IC50 = 15.3, 27.2, 15.9 μM, respectively). The synthetic approaches here described and the early SAR investigations highlighted the potential of this class of compounds as antiparasitic hits, making this study worthy of further investigation.


Synthesis ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 49 (22) ◽  
pp. 4899-4916 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rongbiao Tong ◽  
Zhihong Zhang

Being different from 2,6-cis-tetrahydropyrans (2,6-cis-THPs), the corresponding 2,6-trans-THPs are thermodynamically less stable and more challenging to construct. The fact that there are many natural products and/or bioactive molecules containing this 2,6-trans-THP subunit has led to the development of many efficient synthetic approaches to access 2,6-trans-THPs. This review summarizes various synthetic methods reported for this structural motif and/or related applications in the total synthesis of natural products.1 Introduction2 Nucleophilic Addition to an Oxocarbenium Ion (Strategy A)3 Intramolecular Oxa-Michael Addition (Strategy B)4 Intermolecular Michael Addition to Dihydropyranones (Strategy A)5 The Heck–Matsuda (Strategy A) Reaction and Oxa-Heck Cyclization (Strategy B)6 Intramolecular SN2 Substitution and Epoxide Opening (Strategy B)7 Miscellaneous Methods8 Conclusion and Outlook


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kristiana Tika Santoso

<p>Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death from a single infectious agent, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), worldwide. Currently, the efficacy of TB treatment regimens has declined due to the rise in antibacterial resistance and the shortage of new TB drugs. Thus, much effort has been spent in anti-tuberculosis drug development and in identifying new therapeutic targets against Mtb. One such target is NADH dehydrogenase-II (NDH-II), an essential enzyme in the mycobacterial electron transport chain that is not present in mammalian cells. In this thesis, four classes of heterocyclic compounds that have the potential to target NDH-II and their evaluation as anti-tubercular agents, are described. An overview of TB drug development and NDH-II as a promising target for TB drugs are described in Chapter 1.  In Chapters 2 and 3, the potential of anti-tubercular drugs based on the quinolinequinone (QQ) scaffold is described. QQs have previously shown promise as TB drugs by activating NDH-II to overproduce harmful reactive oxygen species leading to bacterial cell death. Chapter 2 describes the total synthesis of the QQ natural products ascidiathiazone A and ascidiathiazone B, and derivatives thereof, using a synthetic route that allows for high divergency and the efficient synthesis of the natural products and their intermediates. To this end, the first total synthesis of ascidiathiazone B is reported, as is the identification of ascidiathiazone A as a promising anti-tuberculosis drug with an MIC of 1.6 μM against Mtb. Insight into the ability of a representative quinone, 7-chloro-6-chloroethylamino-2-methyl-QQ, to increase NDH-II activity is also described. In Chapter 3, the syntheses of thirty-two simplified QQs with different functional groups at the 6- and 7-positions of the QQ scaffold are described. These compounds were screened against Mtb, with the lead compound from this library, 7-chloro-6-propargylamino-QQ, exhibiting an MIC of 8 μM against Mtb. Structure-activity data revealed diminished biological activity for QQs bearing tertiary amines, as compared to those with secondary amines, suggesting that the presence of a hydrogen bond donor at the 6- and 7-positions of QQs may play a critical role in antimycobacterial activity.  In Chapter 4, the synthesis and anti-mycobacterial activity of chromonyl-pyrimidines is presented. Chromonyl-pyrimidines have a structural resemblance to quinolinyl pyrimidines, a class of known NDH-II inhibitors and anti-TB agents. Chromones have shown promise as TB drugs, though they have not yet been reported to bind NDH-II. Despite this, chromonyl-pyrimidines contain a ketone functionality that may be able to bind the quinone binding site. For the first eleven-member library of chromonyl pyrimidines synthesised, all but two of the compounds exhibited inhibitory activity against Mtb, however, the growth inhibition was modest (MIC = 36-684 M). Accordingly, a second generation of chromonyl pyrimidines was synthesised, which included six compounds with improved potency against Mtb – all with an MIC value of 12.5 μM. The activity of these chromonyl pyrimidines was attributed to the presence of aromatic rings both on the pyrimidine and the chromone scaffolds, though changes to the electronic properties of the aryl groups, i.e. the incorporations of electron-withdrawing and electron-donating groups, did not affect inhibitory activity.  Finally, in Chapter 5, a library of phthalazinones and pyrimidinyl-phthalazinones with anti-tubercular activity is described. While phthalazinones have not yet been extensively explored as anti-mycobacterial agents, the phthalazinone scaffold has the potential to act as an uncoupler. Uncouplers are typically weak acids or bases that act on the electron transport chain by dissipating the proton motive force and ultimately preventing the generation of ATP. In Mtb, this uncoupling process is detrimental and leads to cell death. Phthalazinones are weakly basic and, due to their bicyclic ketone-bearing motif, has the potential to bind NDH-II at the proposed Q-site. Accordingly, a series of phthalazinones was synthesised to investigate their anti-tubercular activity and uncoupling activity. From the library of phthalazinones, N-tert-butyl- and nitro-substituted phthalazinones elicited high inhibitory activity, both with an MIC value of 3 μM. Of particular note among the pyrimidinyl-phthalazinones was the 4-fluorophenyl-pyrimidinyl-N-heptyl phthalazinone, which showed high potency against Mtb with an MIC of 1.6 μM. Further biological studies showed that some phthalazinones increased the rate of NADH oxidation in mycobacteria, which could be a result of uncoupling activity, while a number of pyrimidinyl-phthalazinones decreased NADH oxidation rates. These mechanistic results indicated that the two classes of compounds may have different modes of inhibition.</p>


Synthesis ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 51 (11) ◽  
pp. 2237-2251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhuwei Ruan ◽  
Cheng Li ◽  
Defeng Shen ◽  
Sha-Hua Huang ◽  
Ran Hong

FR901483 is a unique alkaloid bearing an aza-tricyclic structure, a phosphate group, and a congested tertiary nitrogen center. This alkaloid was reported to be a potent immunosuppressant with antimetabolite ability. The unprecedented architecture has captured imagination of synthetic chemists since its isolation in 1996. To date, ten total or formal syntheses and several synthetic approaches to access the tricyclic core skeleton have been reported. In this review, we highlight the novel synthetic methods and strategies and discuss the synthetic challenge for meeting the criteria of drug development.1 Introduction2 Bioinspired Total Synthesis of FR9014833 Non-bioinspired Approaches toward FR9014834 Various Tactics for Accessing the Core Skeleton5 Challenges for Efficiency


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Kristiana Tika Santoso

<p>Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death from a single infectious agent, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), worldwide. Currently, the efficacy of TB treatment regimens has declined due to the rise in antibacterial resistance and the shortage of new TB drugs. Thus, much effort has been spent in anti-tuberculosis drug development and in identifying new therapeutic targets against Mtb. One such target is NADH dehydrogenase-II (NDH-II), an essential enzyme in the mycobacterial electron transport chain that is not present in mammalian cells. In this thesis, four classes of heterocyclic compounds that have the potential to target NDH-II and their evaluation as anti-tubercular agents, are described. An overview of TB drug development and NDH-II as a promising target for TB drugs are described in Chapter 1.  In Chapters 2 and 3, the potential of anti-tubercular drugs based on the quinolinequinone (QQ) scaffold is described. QQs have previously shown promise as TB drugs by activating NDH-II to overproduce harmful reactive oxygen species leading to bacterial cell death. Chapter 2 describes the total synthesis of the QQ natural products ascidiathiazone A and ascidiathiazone B, and derivatives thereof, using a synthetic route that allows for high divergency and the efficient synthesis of the natural products and their intermediates. To this end, the first total synthesis of ascidiathiazone B is reported, as is the identification of ascidiathiazone A as a promising anti-tuberculosis drug with an MIC of 1.6 μM against Mtb. Insight into the ability of a representative quinone, 7-chloro-6-chloroethylamino-2-methyl-QQ, to increase NDH-II activity is also described. In Chapter 3, the syntheses of thirty-two simplified QQs with different functional groups at the 6- and 7-positions of the QQ scaffold are described. These compounds were screened against Mtb, with the lead compound from this library, 7-chloro-6-propargylamino-QQ, exhibiting an MIC of 8 μM against Mtb. Structure-activity data revealed diminished biological activity for QQs bearing tertiary amines, as compared to those with secondary amines, suggesting that the presence of a hydrogen bond donor at the 6- and 7-positions of QQs may play a critical role in antimycobacterial activity.  In Chapter 4, the synthesis and anti-mycobacterial activity of chromonyl-pyrimidines is presented. Chromonyl-pyrimidines have a structural resemblance to quinolinyl pyrimidines, a class of known NDH-II inhibitors and anti-TB agents. Chromones have shown promise as TB drugs, though they have not yet been reported to bind NDH-II. Despite this, chromonyl-pyrimidines contain a ketone functionality that may be able to bind the quinone binding site. For the first eleven-member library of chromonyl pyrimidines synthesised, all but two of the compounds exhibited inhibitory activity against Mtb, however, the growth inhibition was modest (MIC = 36-684 M). Accordingly, a second generation of chromonyl pyrimidines was synthesised, which included six compounds with improved potency against Mtb – all with an MIC value of 12.5 μM. The activity of these chromonyl pyrimidines was attributed to the presence of aromatic rings both on the pyrimidine and the chromone scaffolds, though changes to the electronic properties of the aryl groups, i.e. the incorporations of electron-withdrawing and electron-donating groups, did not affect inhibitory activity.  Finally, in Chapter 5, a library of phthalazinones and pyrimidinyl-phthalazinones with anti-tubercular activity is described. While phthalazinones have not yet been extensively explored as anti-mycobacterial agents, the phthalazinone scaffold has the potential to act as an uncoupler. Uncouplers are typically weak acids or bases that act on the electron transport chain by dissipating the proton motive force and ultimately preventing the generation of ATP. In Mtb, this uncoupling process is detrimental and leads to cell death. Phthalazinones are weakly basic and, due to their bicyclic ketone-bearing motif, has the potential to bind NDH-II at the proposed Q-site. Accordingly, a series of phthalazinones was synthesised to investigate their anti-tubercular activity and uncoupling activity. From the library of phthalazinones, N-tert-butyl- and nitro-substituted phthalazinones elicited high inhibitory activity, both with an MIC value of 3 μM. Of particular note among the pyrimidinyl-phthalazinones was the 4-fluorophenyl-pyrimidinyl-N-heptyl phthalazinone, which showed high potency against Mtb with an MIC of 1.6 μM. Further biological studies showed that some phthalazinones increased the rate of NADH oxidation in mycobacteria, which could be a result of uncoupling activity, while a number of pyrimidinyl-phthalazinones decreased NADH oxidation rates. These mechanistic results indicated that the two classes of compounds may have different modes of inhibition.</p>


2007 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cesare Gennari ◽  
Damiano Castoldi ◽  
Ofer Sharon

Eleutherobin and dictyostatin are antimitotic compounds which exert their cytotoxic activity by a taxol-like mode of action, i.e., hypernucleating tubulin assembly and interfering with the dynamic instability of the cytoskeleton during mitosis. A formal total synthesis of eleutherobin was accomplished by accessing a key intermediate reported by Danishefsky and coworkers in their 1998 synthesis of the natural product. The key step of our strategy, used for obtaining the [8.4.0] fused bicyclic ring system, is a ring-closing metathesis (RCM) reaction of a densely functionalized diene under forcing conditions, using Grubbs' second-generation catalyst. Synthetic approaches to dictyostatin are also described, and in particular the preparation of the C15-C23 fragment of the macrolide, containing 5 of its 11 stereocenters.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
R.M. Kalpani K. Somarathne

<p>Carbohydrate-derived cyclopropanes combine both the stereochemical wealth of carbohydrates and the reactivity of cyclopropanes. A diverse variety of reaction modes for these cyclopropyl carbohydrates can be harnessed for the synthesis of natural products and other targets.  The natural products (−)-TAN-2483A and (−)-TAN-2483B are fungal secondary metabolites displaying a variety of bioactivities such as inhibition of c-src kinase action and parathyroid hormone-induced bone resorption. This thesis described several synthetic approaches to the natural product (−)-TAN-2483B and analogues of (−)-TAN-2483B employing cyclopropane ring expansion.  The synthetic route to (−)-TAN-2483B began with the readily available substrate D-mannose. The pyran ring unsaturation of the natural product was established by a cyclopropanation-ring expansion sequence. A synthetic strategy via dichlorocyclopropane-based intermediates is described in chapter 2. This being unsuccessful, an alternative approach via 2-fomyl-glycal was developed in chapter 3. The chapter 2 and 3 provided a solid background for the achievement of the analogues synthesis illustrated in chapter 4 via dibromocyclopropane. Lewis acid-mediated alkynylation followed by Pdcatalysed carbonylative lactonisation was successfully utilised in the revelation of the furo[3,4-b]pyran ring skeleton. This route afforded analogues of TAN-2483B; the Z-and E-unsaturated ethyl esters 140 and 141 and hydroxy(−)-TAN-2483B 145. The total synthesis of (−)-TAN-2483B was not achieved due to unforeseen obstacles encountered in the deoxygenation of the side arm of 335 (Chapter 4) into the E-propenyl side arm of (−)-TAN-2483B.</p>


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