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.
CITATION STYLE
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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