Design and preparation of serine–threonine protein phosphatase inhibitors based upon the nodularin and microcystin toxin structures: Part 2.1 Synthesis of a functionalised nodularin macrocycle and a stripped-down microcystin macrocycle
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) in Journal of the Chemical Society, Perkin Transactions 1
- No. 17,p. 2513-2526
- https://doi.org/10.1039/a702410j
Abstract
Nodularins and microcystins are complex natural isopeptidic hepatotoxins that serve as subnanomolar inhibitors of the eukaryotic serine–threonine protein phosphatases, PP1 and PP2A. In Part 1 (A. P. Mehrotra, K. L. Webster and D. Gani, J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1997, preceding paper) each of the key structural or potentially reactive motifs within each macrocycle type was assessed as a contributor towards phosphatase inhibitory efficacy and a stripped-down nodularin-type macrocycle was identified as a suitable precursor to potentially active synthetic inhibitors. Subsequently, synthetic routes to the 19-membered nodularin macrocyclic system were developed, using solution-phase chemistry, which demonstrated that only certain cyclisation protocols were viable. Here we describe an extension of this chemistry to provide a 19-membered nodularin macrocycle, cyclo-[(3R)-3-hydroxymethyl-β-Ala-( R)-Glu-α-OMe-γ-Sar-(R)-Asp- α-OMe-β-(S)-Phe-], appropriately functionalised with a hydroxymethyl group for the incorporation of lipophilic side-chains. We also demonstrate that the 25-membered microcystin macrocycle, cyclo-[β-Ala-(R)-Glu-α- OMe-γ-Sar-(R)-Ala-(S)-Leu-( R)-Asp-α-OMe-β-(S)- Phe-], can be prepared in good yield using similar protocols in which macrocyclisation is effected through the reaction of the amino group of the (2S)-phenylalanine residue with the β-pentafluorophenyl ester of the (2R)-aspartic acid residue.Keywords
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