Literature DB >> 25331549

Efficient and stereocontrolled synthesis of 1,2,4-trioxolanes useful for ferrous iron-dependent drug delivery.

Shaun D Fontaine1, Antonio G DiPasquale, Adam R Renslo.   

Abstract

Ferrous iron-promoted reduction of a hindered peroxide bond underlies the antimalarial action of the 1,2,4-trioxane artemisinin and the 1,2,4-trioxolane arterolane. In appropriately designed systems, a 1,2,4-trioxolane ring can serve as a trigger to realize ferrous iron-dependent and parasite-selective drug delivery, both in vitro and in vivo. A stereocontrolled, expeditious (three steps), and efficient (67-71% overall yield) synthesis of 1,2,4-trioxolanes possessing the requisite 3″ substitution pattern that enables ferrous iron-dependent drug delivery is reported. The key synthetic step involves a diastereoselective Griesbaum co-ozonolysis reaction to afford primarily products with a trans relationship between the 3″ substituent and the peroxide bridge, as confirmed by X-ray structural analysis of a 3″-substituted 4-nitrobenzoate analogue.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25331549      PMCID: PMC4227544          DOI: 10.1021/ol5028392

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Org Lett        ISSN: 1523-7052            Impact factor:   6.005


Combination therapy with the sesquiterpene endoperoxide artemisinin is the current standard of care for treating uncomplicated malaria. A variety of synthetic molecules unrelated to artemisinin except for the presence of a hindered peroxide bond have been shown to also exhibit potent antimalarial properties. The 1,2,4-trioxolane arterolane[1−3] (1, Figure 1) was the first such synthetic peroxide to be approved for clinical use (in India), while a related analogue with improved properties (OZ439)[4] is currently progressing through human clinical trials. While their mechanism of antimalarial action is still studied and debated,[5−16] the prevailing view is that Fenton-type reduction by ferrous iron sources within the parasite is an essential, activating chemical event. Various in vitro studies[7,11,13,17] have confirmed the intermediacy of carbon-centered radicals following exposure of arterolane-like model systems to inorganic iron(II) salts or iron(II) heme. The concomitant production of ketone products in these reactions suggested to us the possibility of exploiting trioxolane fragmentation chemistry for ferrous iron-dependent and parasite-selective drug delivery.
Figure 1

Structure of arterolane (1) and arterolane-inspired trioxolane–drug conjugate 2. Free drug is released from 2 in the presence of ferrous iron.

Structure of arterolane (1) and arterolane-inspired trioxolane–drug conjugate 2. Free drug is released from 2 in the presence of ferrous iron. To realize iron(II)-dependent drug delivery, we designed 1,2,4-trioxolanes in which the liberated ketone species is a substrate for subsequent retro-Michael reaction.[18−20] Once revealed, this ketone intermediate undergoes spontaneous β-elimination and decarboxylation to release a drug species attached at the β-position. Thus, iron(II)-dependent drug delivery is achieved by coupling trioxolane fragmentation and β-elimination chemistries. In previous work, we demonstrated a proof-of-concept for this approach in cultured P. falciparum parasites[18,19] and in a mouse model of malaria.[20] We found that trioxolane-mediated delivery of a protease inhibitor led to more sustained inhibition of the desired parasite protease and reduced inhibition of mammalian off-target proteases in vivo. Most recently, we described[21] a new generation of molecules 2 in which drug is released via β-elimination from cyclohexanone intermediate 3 (Scheme 1). This design requires conjugation of drug species at the 3″ position of the cyclohexane ring in 2. As with our previous systems, release of drug is “traceless” and can occur only after initial unveiling of the ketone function in 3 by iron(II)-promoted trioxolane scission in 2. A conjugate bearing the aminonucleoside antibiotic puromycin was used to confirm drug release from 2 in live Plasmodium falciparum parasites. Thus, α-puromycin antibodies were employed to follow the incorporation of released puromycin in the parasite proteome. Significantly, treatment with nonperoxidic dioxolane control 4 did not lead to puromycin incorporation in parasite proteins, confirming the peroxide dependence of drug release from 2.
Scheme 1

Mechanism of Ferrous Iron-Promoted Drug Release from Trioxolane 2

Release of a drug species (e.g., puromycin) was detected in parasites treated with 2 but not in those treated with dioxolane control 4(21).

Mechanism of Ferrous Iron-Promoted Drug Release from Trioxolane 2

Release of a drug species (e.g., puromycin) was detected in parasites treated with 2 but not in those treated with dioxolane control 4(21). To further explore the therapeutic potential of trioxolane conjugates 2, we sought to identify an efficient and stereocontrolled synthetic approach to these systems. A second objective was to prepare analogues of 2 with 3″-vinyl substitution, which we expected should exhibit enhanced rates of retro-Michael reaction. Ready access to drug substance is of particular importance in the case of antimalarial therapies, which must be produced at low cost for use in malaria-endemic countries. As noted above, realizing drug delivery from trioxolane 2 requires conjugation of drug at the 3″ position of the cyclohexane ring since this position represents the β position in the corresponding retro-Michael intermediate 3 (Scheme 1). However, a key synthetic challenge presented by 3″ substitution is the consequent desymmetrization of the molecule, resulting in four possible stereoisomers. By contrast, symmetrical 4″-substituted trioxolanes like 1 are achiral, existing as cis or trans diastereomers. Increased stereochemical complexity may explain why 3″-substituted trioxolanes have been scarcely reported[22,23] in the literature, an exception being the ester 5(23) (Scheme 2).
Scheme 2

Reduction and Addition Reactions of Ketone 6

Our initial synthetic efforts focused on nucleophilic additions to the racemic ketone 6,[21] which we hoped would allow access to the desired 3″-vinylic alcohol intermediate (Scheme 2). While this proved a viable approach, we found that the intrinsic diastereofacial selectivity of ketone 6 was modest. Thus, reduction of 6 with sodium borohydride proceeded with little selectivity, and 1H NMR analysis of the corresponding methyl ether 7 revealed a 40:60 diastereomeric ratio (dr). Addition of vinylmagnesium bromide to 6 was more selective but complicated by competing enolization of the substrate, leading to poor yields. In an attempt to circumvent this issue, we examined additions of the less basic vinyl organocerium species. This approach afforded modest yields of 8 as a separable mixture of diastereomers (45:55 dr). While intermediate 8 proved useful for studies of retro-Michael release, we found that conjugation of drug species at this sterically encumbered tertiary alcohol was often challenging. Thus, we returned to focus on unsubstituted systems (secondary alcohols) with the goal of achieving improved stereocontrol. One attractive strategy involved setting relative stereochemistry in the Griesbaum co-ozonolysis[24] reaction used to install the trioxolane ring. This remarkable reaction proceeds through multiple steps, the final one involving a [3 + 2] cycloaddition between a carbonyl oxide and ketone. In their studies of 4″-substituted trioxolanes, Vennerstrom and co-workers concluded that the stereochemistry-defining [3 + 2] cycloaddition step occurs with a preference for axial addition to 4-substituted cyclohexanone substrates.[25] Axial addition to 4-cyclohexanone substrates affords trioxolane product with an equatorial 4″ substituent and a cis relationship to the axial peroxide function (as in 1). By analogy, axial attack of the carbonyl oxide intermediate on a 3-substituted cyclohexanone should produce products with an equatorial 3″ substituent and a trans relationship with the axial peroxide (Scheme 3, top).
Scheme 3

Stereocontrolled Synthesis of Key Alcohol Intermediate 13

To explore this possibility, we prepared the tert-butyldiphenylsilyl ether 10 as a substrate for Griesbaum co-ozonolysis with oxime 11 (Scheme 3). In the event, 10 reacted smoothly with 2.5 equiv of 11 and ozone in CCl4 to afford the desired product 12 in high yield. Silyl ether 12 was immediately subjected to reaction with TBAF in THF to afford alcohol 13 in three steps and 67–71% overall yield from 9. The 1H NMR spectrum of 12 and 13 suggested that the Griesbaum reaction had proceeded with good diastereocontrol. This was confirmed following efficient conversion by an established method[26] to the methyl ether 7, in which diastereomeric ratios could be readily determined (Scheme 3). Integration of the −OMe resonances in the 1H NMR of 7 indicated a 90:10 dr. This compares to a 40:60 dr for 7 prepared via the reduction of ketone 6 (Scheme 2). To further explore the diastereoselectivity of this reaction, we explored additional cyclohexanone substrates bearing 3-substituents with varying steric bulk (e.g., −OAc, −OSiMe3, −OSi(i-Pr)3). Following Griesbaum reaction with 11, protecting groups were removed and the resulting alcohols 13 converted to methyl ethers 7 for determination of diastereomeric ratios. Interestingly, we observed a similar ∼90:10 dr in each of these reactions, regardless of the ketone substrate employed. The only previously described Griesbaum co-ozonolysis involving a similar 3-substituted substrate was that leading to 5, which was reported[23] to proceed with “high” diastereoselectivity, consistent with our results. The trans stereochemistry assigned to 5 was based on the predicted mode of axial addition, however, and was not rigorously established. We found that the high proportion of overlapping aliphatic resonances in the 1H NMR spectra of 13 and its analogues made an unambiguous stereochemical assignment challenging. We therefore prepared a number of analogues that we expected might yield diffraction quality crystals. Ultimately, a suitable crystal of the 4-nitrobenzoate analogue 14 was obtained from a saturated toluene/ethanol/methanol solution by vapor diffusion of hexane. A complete, high-quality X-ray diffraction data set was collected on a single crystal of 14, and the resulting structure confirms the expected axial disposition of the peroxide bridge with a trans relationship to the equatorially positioned 3″-substituent (Figure 2). A 1H NMR spectrum of the recovered crystal used for the X-ray diffraction experiment showed the material to be solely the major diastereomeric product (Supporting Information). Thus, the X-ray structure of 14 establishes unambiguously for the first time the stereochemical preference of Griesbaum co-ozonolysis reactions involving 3-substituted cyclohexanones.
Figure 2

ORTEP of trans-14 derived from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data (ellipsoids at 50% probability). Note the axial position of the peroxide moiety and the equatorially disposed 3″-substituent.

Synthesis of 4-Nitrobenzoate Analogue 14

Upon re-crystallization of 14, the pure trans diastereomer was obtained. ORTEP of trans-14 derived from single-crystal X-ray diffraction data (ellipsoids at 50% probability). Note the axial position of the peroxide moiety and the equatorially disposed 3″-substituent. The conjugation of amine-bearing drugs to alcohol 13 can be achieved in high yield via the corresponding nitrophenyl carbonate intermediate 15. To illustrate this, we introduced the diamino side chain of arterolane via a carbamate linkage at the 3″ position, yielding 16 (Scheme 5). Note that the trans stereochemistry of this “pseudoarterolane” analogue (16) is conformationally analogous to the cis stereochemistry of arterolane in that the side chain in both 1 and 16 is equatorially disposed (Scheme 5). Thus, the trans stereochemistry afforded by the chemistry described herein is also the “correct” stereochemistry for drug delivery conjugates 2, in that it is most similar to clinical compounds like arterolane and OZ439. Indeed, we have found that 16 exhibits in vitro antiplasmodial activity indistinguishable from that of 1 (Gut, J., personal communication). We are currently exploring the in vitro and in vivo properties of various drug conjugates of 13, which will be reported in due course.
Scheme 5

Synthesis of Pseudoarterolane Analogue 16

In this report, we have described a short, efficient, and stereocontrolled synthesis of antimalarial 1,2,4-trioxolanes with a hitherto underexplored 3″-substitution pattern. Carbamate-conjugated, 3″-substituted trioxolanes of this type are uniquely capable of realizing ferrous iron-dependent drug delivery to the malaria parasite.[21] The Griesbaum reaction between ketone 10 and oxime 11 proceeds in a stereocontrolled fashion to provide primarily products with a trans relationship between the peroxide bridge and the 3″-substituent. In our hands, this chemistry has provided ready access to gram quantities of 13, and no obvious barriers should bar the preparation of much larger quantities of this key intermediate. Finally, the use of nonracemic ketone substrates in this process should enable access to single enantiomers of 3″-substituted 1,2,4-trioxolanes and their corresponding ferrous iron-reactive drug conjugates.
  24 in total

Review 1.  A medicinal chemistry perspective on artemisinin and related endoperoxides.

Authors:  Paul M O'Neill; Gary H Posner
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2004-06-03       Impact factor: 7.446

2.  Structure-activity relationship of an ozonide carboxylic acid (OZ78) against Fasciola hepatica.

Authors:  Qingjie Zhao; Mireille Vargas; Yuxiang Dong; Lin Zhou; Xiaofang Wang; Kamaraj Sriraghavan; Jennifer Keiser; Jonathan L Vennerstrom
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2010-05-27       Impact factor: 7.446

3.  The antimalarial drug artemisinin alkylates heme in infected mice.

Authors:  Anne Robert; Françoise Benoit-Vical; Catherine Claparols; Bernard Meunier
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-09-09       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Evidence for a common non-heme chelatable-iron-dependent activation mechanism for semisynthetic and synthetic endoperoxide antimalarial drugs.

Authors:  Paul A Stocks; Patrick G Bray; Victoria E Barton; Mohammed Al-Helal; Michael Jones; Nuna C Araujo; Peter Gibbons; Stephen A Ward; Ruth H Hughes; Giancarlo A Biagini; Jill Davies; Richard Amewu; Amy E Mercer; Gemma Ellis; Paul M O'Neill
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5.  Docking studies of structurally diverse antimalarial drugs targeting PfATP6: no correlation between in silico binding affinity and in vitro antimalarial activity.

Authors:  Fatima Bousejra-El Garah; Jean-Luc Stigliani; Frédéric Coslédan; Bernard Meunier; Anne Robert
Journal:  ChemMedChem       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 3.466

6.  Arterolane, a new synthetic trioxolane for treatment of uncomplicated Plasmodium falciparum malaria: a phase II, multicenter, randomized, dose-finding clinical trial.

Authors:  Neena Valecha; Sornchai Looareesuwan; Andreas Martensson; Salim Mohammed Abdulla; Srivicha Krudsood; Noppadon Tangpukdee; Sanjib Mohanty; Saroj K Mishra; P K Tyagi; S K Sharma; Joerg Moehrle; Anirudh Gautam; Arjun Roy; Jyoti K Paliwal; Monica Kothari; Nilanjan Saha; Aditya P Dash; Anders Björkman
Journal:  Clin Infect Dis       Date:  2010-09-15       Impact factor: 9.079

7.  Spiro and dispiro-1,2,4-trioxolanes as antimalarial peroxides: charting a workable structure-activity relationship using simple prototypes.

Authors:  Yuxiang Dong; Jacques Chollet; Hugues Matile; Susan A Charman; Francis C K Chiu; William N Charman; Bernard Scorneaux; Heinrich Urwyler; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christian Scheurer; Christopher Snyder; Arnulf Dorn; Xiaofang Wang; Jean M Karle; Yuanqing Tang; Sergio Wittlin; Reto Brun; Jonathan L Vennerstrom
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2005-07-28       Impact factor: 7.446

8.  Identification of an antimalarial synthetic trioxolane drug development candidate.

Authors:  Jonathan L Vennerstrom; Sarah Arbe-Barnes; Reto Brun; Susan A Charman; Francis C K Chiu; Jacques Chollet; Yuxiang Dong; Arnulf Dorn; Daniel Hunziker; Hugues Matile; Kylie McIntosh; Maniyan Padmanilayam; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christian Scheurer; Bernard Scorneaux; Yuanqing Tang; Heinrich Urwyler; Sergio Wittlin; William N Charman
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2004-08-19       Impact factor: 49.962

9.  The structure-activity relationship of the antimalarial ozonide arterolane (OZ277).

Authors:  Yuxiang Dong; Sergio Wittlin; Kamaraj Sriraghavan; Jacques Chollet; Susan A Charman; William N Charman; Christian Scheurer; Heinrich Urwyler; Josefina Santo Tomas; Christopher Snyder; Darren J Creek; Julia Morizzi; Maria Koltun; Hugues Matile; Xiaofang Wang; Maniyan Padmanilayam; Yuanqing Tang; Arnulf Dorn; Reto Brun; Jonathan L Vennerstrom
Journal:  J Med Chem       Date:  2010-01-14       Impact factor: 7.446

10.  A fragmenting hybrid approach for targeted delivery of multiple therapeutic agents to the malaria parasite.

Authors:  Sumit S Mahajan; Edgar Deu; Erica M W Lauterwasser; Melissa J Leyva; Jonathan A Ellman; Matthew Bogyo; Adam R Renslo
Journal:  ChemMedChem       Date:  2011-01-24       Impact factor: 3.466

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1.  Antimalarial Trioxolanes with Superior Drug-Like Properties and In Vivo Efficacy.

Authors:  Brian R Blank; Ryan L Gonciarz; Poulami Talukder; Jiri Gut; Jennifer Legac; Philip J Rosenthal; Adam R Renslo
Journal:  ACS Infect Dis       Date:  2020-05-18       Impact factor: 5.084

2.  In vivo bioluminescence imaging of labile iron accumulation in a murine model of Acinetobacter baumannii infection.

Authors:  Allegra T Aron; Marie C Heffern; Zachery R Lonergan; Mark N Vander Wal; Brian R Blank; Benjamin Spangler; Yaofang Zhang; Hyo Min Park; Andreas Stahl; Adam R Renslo; Eric P Skaar; Christopher J Chang
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-11-14       Impact factor: 11.205

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Journal:  Curr Opin Chem Biol       Date:  2018-01-05       Impact factor: 8.822

4.  Targeting Mobilization of Ferrous Iron in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Infection with an Iron(II)-Caged LpxC Inhibitor.

Authors:  Brian R Blank; Poulami Talukder; Ryan K Muir; Erin R Green; Eric P Skaar; Adam R Renslo
Journal:  ACS Infect Dis       Date:  2019-06-11       Impact factor: 5.084

5.  Experimental study of doxorubicin interventional chemotherapy in the treatment of rabbit VX2 renal transplantation carcinoma.

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Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Med       Date:  2015-07-15

6.  Trioxolane-Mediated Delivery of Mefloquine Limits Brain Exposure in a Mouse Model of Malaria.

Authors:  Erica M W Lauterwasser; Shaun D Fontaine; Hao Li; Jiri Gut; Kasiram Katneni; Susan A Charman; Philip J Rosenthal; Matthew Bogyo; Adam R Renslo
Journal:  ACS Med Chem Lett       Date:  2015-10-02       Impact factor: 4.345

Review 7.  Emerging role of ferrous iron in bacterial growth and host-pathogen interaction: New tools for chemical (micro)biology and antibacterial therapy.

Authors:  Ryan L Gonciarz; Adam R Renslo
Journal:  Curr Opin Chem Biol       Date:  2021-03-11       Impact factor: 8.822

Review 8.  Ferrous Iron-Dependent Pharmacology.

Authors:  Ryan L Gonciarz; Eric A Collisson; Adam R Renslo
Journal:  Trends Pharmacol Sci       Date:  2020-11-28       Impact factor: 14.819

9.  Versatile Histochemical Approach to Detection of Hydrogen Peroxide in Cells and Tissues Based on Puromycin Staining.

Authors:  Clive Yik-Sham Chung; Greg A Timblin; Kaoru Saijo; Christopher J Chang
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10.  A reactivity-based probe of the intracellular labile ferrous iron pool.

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