Development of a Convergent Enantioselective Synthetic Route to (-)-Myrocin G

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Abstract

Myrocins are a family of antiproliferative antibiotic fungal metabolites possessing a masked electrophilic cyclopropane. Preliminary chemical reactivity studies imputed the bioactivity of these natural products to a DNA cross-linking mechanism, but this hypothesis was not confirmed by studies with native DNA. We recently reported a total synthesis of (-)-myrocin G (4), the putative active form of the metabolite myrocin C (1), that featured a carefully orchestrated tandem fragment coupling-annulation cascade. Herein, we describe the evolution of our synthetic strategy toward 4 and report the series of discoveries that prompted the design of this cascade coupling. Efforts to convert the diosphenol (-)-myrocin G (4) to the corresponding 5-hydroxy-γ-lactone isomer myrocin C (1) are also detailed. We present a preliminary evaluation of the antiproliferative activities of (-)-myrocin G (4) and related structures, as well as DNA cross-linking studies. These studies indicate that myrocins do not cross-link DNA, suggesting an alternative mode of action potentially involving a protein target.

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Tomanik, M., Economou, C., Frischling, M. C., Xue, M., Marks, V. A., Mercado, B. Q., & Herzon, S. B. (2020). Development of a Convergent Enantioselective Synthetic Route to (-)-Myrocin G. Journal of Organic Chemistry, 85(14), 8952–8989. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.0c00891

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