Novel Skeletal Rearrangements of the Tigliane Diterpenoid Core

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Abstract

To investigate the role of the secondary 5-hydroxy group in the activity of the anticancer drug tigilanol tiglate (2b) (Stelfonta), oxidation of this epoxytigliane diterpenoid from the Australian rainforest plant Fontainea picrosperma was attempted. Eventually, 5-dehydrotigilanol tiglate (3a) proved too unstable to be characterized in terms of biological activity and, therefore, was not a suitable tool compound for bioactivity studies. On the other hand, a series of remarkable skeletal rearrangements associated with the presence of a 5-keto group were discovered during its synthesis, including a dismutative ring expansion of ring A and a mechanistically unprecedented dyotropic substituent swap around the C-4/C-10 bond. Taken together, these observations highlight the propensity of the α-hydroxy-β-diketone system to trigger complex skeletal rearrangements and pave the way to new areas of the natural products chemical space.

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Maioli, C., Amin, H. I. M., Chianese, G., Minassi, A., Reddell, P. W., Gaeta, S., … Appendino, G. (2023). Novel Skeletal Rearrangements of the Tigliane Diterpenoid Core. Journal of Natural Products, 86(12), 2685–2690. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jnatprod.3c00834

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