Justin E Sears1, Dale L Boger1. 1. Department of Chemistry and the Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, 10550 N. Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, California 92037, United States.
Abstract
Biologically active natural products composed of fascinatingly complex structures are often regarded as not amenable to traditional systematic structure-function studies enlisted in medicinal chemistry for the optimization of their properties beyond what might be accomplished by semisynthetic modification. Herein, we summarize our recent studies on the Vinca alkaloids vinblastine and vincristine, often considered as prototypical members of such natural products, that not only inspired the development of powerful new synthetic methodology designed to expedite their total synthesis but have subsequently led to the discovery of several distinct classes of new, more potent, and previously inaccessible analogues. With use of the newly developed methodology and in addition to ongoing efforts to systematically define the importance of each embedded structural feature of vinblastine, two classes of analogues already have been discovered that enhance the potency of the natural products >10-fold. In one instance, remarkable progress has also been made on the refractory problem of reducing Pgp transport responsible for clinical resistance with a series of derivatives made accessible only using the newly developed synthetic methodology. Unlike the removal of vinblastine structural features or substituents, which typically has a detrimental impact, the additions of new structural features have been found that can enhance target tubulin binding affinity and functional activity while simultaneously disrupting Pgp binding, transport, and functional resistance. Already analogues are in hand that are deserving of full preclinical development, and it is a tribute to the advances in organic synthesis that they are readily accessible even on a natural product of a complexity once thought refractory to such an approach.
Biologically active natural products composed of fascinatingly complex structures are often regarded as not amenable to traditional systematic structure-function studies enlisted in medicinal chemistry for the optimization of their properties beyond what might be accomplished by semisynthetic modification. Herein, we summarize our recent studies on the Vinca alkaloidsvinblastine and vincristine, often considered as prototypical members of such natural products, that not only inspired the development of powerful new synthetic methodology designed to expedite their total synthesis but have subsequently led to the discovery of several distinct classes of new, more potent, and previously inaccessible analogues. With use of the newly developed methodology and in addition to ongoing efforts to systematically define the importance of each embedded structural feature of vinblastine, two classes of analogues already have been discovered that enhance the potency of the natural products >10-fold. In one instance, remarkable progress has also been made on the refractory problem of reducing Pgp transport responsible for clinical resistance with a series of derivatives made accessible only using the newly developed synthetic methodology. Unlike the removal of vinblastine structural features or substituents, which typically has a detrimental impact, the additions of new structural features have been found that can enhance target tubulin binding affinity and functional activity while simultaneously disrupting Pgp binding, transport, and functional resistance. Already analogues are in hand that are deserving of full preclinical development, and it is a tribute to the advances in organic synthesis that they are readily accessible even on a natural product of a complexity once thought refractory to such an approach.
Originally isolated from Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don,[1−3] vinblastine
(1) and vincristine (2) not only represent
the most widely recognized members of the Vinca alkaloids
but also one of the most important contributions that plant-derived
natural products have made to cancer chemotherapy (Figure 1).[4−6] First introduced into the clinic over 50 years ago,
their biological properties were among the first to be shown to arise
from perturbations in microtubule dynamics that lead to inhibition
of mitosis. Even by today’s standards, both vinblastine and
vincristine are efficacious clinical drugs and are used in combination
therapies for treatment of Hodgkin’s disease, testicular cancer,
ovarian cancer, breast cancer, head and neck cancer, and non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma (vinblastine) or in the curative treatment regimens for childhood
lymphocytic leukemia and Hodgkin’s disease (vincristine). They,
as well as their biological target tubulin, remain the subject of
extensive and continuing biological and synthetic investigations because
of their clinical importance in modern medicine, low natural abundance,
and fascinatingly complex dimeric alkaloid structure.[7−16]
Figure 1
Natural
product structures.
Natural
product structures.Vinblastine and vincristine
share an identical upper velbanamine
subunit and contain nearly identical vindoline-derived lower subunits
that differ only in the nature of the indoline N-substituent, bearing
either a methyl (vinblastine) or formyl (vincristine) group (Figure 1). We reported the development of concise total
syntheses of (−)- and ent-(+)-vindoline[17,18] enlisting a tandem intramolecular [4 + 2]/[3 + 2] cycloaddition
cascade of 1,3,4-oxadiazoles[19−25] in which the fully functionalized pentacyclic ring system is constructed
in a single step. This occurs with formation of three rings and four
C–C bonds and sets all six stereocenters within the central
ring of vindoline, including its three quaternary centers (Figure 2). Moreover, the cycloaddition cascade introduces
each substituent, each functional group, each embedded heteroatom,
and all the necessary stereochemistry for direct conversion of the
cycloadduct to vindoline. The reaction cascade is initiated by a [4
+ 2] cycloaddition reaction of a 1,3,4-oxadiazole with a tethered
dienophile, which entailed the use of an electron-rich enol ether
whose reactivity and regioselectivity were matched to react with the
electron-deficient 1,3,4-oxadiazole in an inverse electron demand
Diels–Alder reaction. Loss of N2 from the initial
cycloadduct provides a carbonyl ylide, which undergoes a subsequent
1,3-dipolar cycloaddition with a tethered indole.[16] For 3, the diene and dienophile substituents
complement and reinforce the [4 + 2] cycloaddition regioselectivity
dictated by the linking tether, the intermediate 1,3-dipole is stabilized
by the complementary substitution at the dipole termini, and the tethered
dipolarophile (indole) complements the [3 + 2] cycloaddition regioselectivity
that is set by the linking tether. The relative stereochemistry of
the cascade cycloadduct is controlled by a combination of the dienophile
geometry and an exclusive indole endo [3 + 2] cycloaddition dictated
by the dipolarophile tether and sterically directed to the face opposite
the newly formed fused lactam. This methodology provided the basis
for an 11-step total synthesis of (−)- and ent-(+)-vindoline.[18]
Figure 2
Key cycloaddition cascade.
Key cycloaddition cascade.Central to the further advancement
of this work was the use of
a biomimetic[9] Fe(III)-promoted coupling
of vindoline with catharanthine[26,27] and the additional
development of a subsequent in situ Fe(III)-mediated hydrogen-atom
initiated free radical alkene oxidation for C20′-alcohol introduction[27] that allows for their single-step incorporation
into total syntheses of vinblastine, related natural products including
vincristine, and key analogues (Figure 3).[16]
Figure 3
First generation total synthesis of vinblastine.
First generation total synthesis of vinblastine.A subsequent asymmetric variant
of this approach was developed
in which the tether linking the initiating dienophile and 1,3,4-oxadiazole
bears a chiral substituent that sets the absolute stereochemistry
of the remaining six stereocenters in the cascade cycloadducts, providing
two distinct and concise asymmetric total syntheses of vindoline (Figure 4).[28,29] Since the approach enlisted a
shortened dienophile tether that resulted in both good facial control
and milder reaction conditions for the cascade cycloaddition, its
implementation for the synthesis of vindoline required the development
of a ring expansion reaction to provide a six-membered ring suitably
functionalized for introduction of the Δ6,7-double
bond found in the core structure of the natural product. Two unique
approaches were developed that defined our use of a protected hydroxymethyl
group as the substituent that controls the stereochemical course of
the cycloaddition cascade. The first entailed a facile tautomerization
of a reactive α-amino aldehyde generated from the primary alcohol,
which is trapped as a remarkable N,O-ketal that undergoes a subsequent hydrolytic ring expansion upon
further activation of the primary alcohol.[28,29] The second approach relied upon a thermodynamically controlled reversible
ring opening reaction of an intermediate aziridinium ion for which
the stereochemical features of the reactions are under stereoelectronic
control.[29] In the course of these studies,
several analogues of vindoline were prepared containing deep-seated
structural changes presently accessible only by total synthesis.[19−21]
Figure 4
Key
elements of the asymmetric total synthesis approaches.
Key
elements of the asymmetric total synthesis approaches.Prior to these efforts, the majority of vinblastine
analogues were
prepared by semisynthetic modification of peripheral substituents
(tailoring effects), with the disclosure of a limited number of analogues
that contain deep-seated structural changes.[30−33] As detailed herein, the powerful
intramolecular [4 + 2]/[3 + 2] cycloaddition cascade has provided
access not only to a series of analogues bearing systematic changes
to the C5 ethyl substituent[34] but to a
series of analogues bearing deep-seated structural modifications to
the vindoline core ring system.[35] These
latter efforts represent one of few examples of productive core structure
redesign of a natural product.Similarly, detailed herein are
efforts to address the major limitation
to the continued clinical use of vinblastine and vincristine, which
is the emergence of resistance mediated by overexpression of the drug
efflux pump phosphoglycoprotein (Pgp). The identification of structural
analogues that might address such resistance has remained a major
focus of the field and would represent a major advance for oncology
therapeutics. With this objective in mind and by virtue of the unique
methodology developed, we disclosed a series of C20′ urea derivatives[36−38] that not only possess extraordinary potency but also exhibit further
improved activity against a Pgp overexpressing vinblastine-resistant
humantumor cell line, displaying improved potency (10–30-fold)
and a reduced difference in activity against a matched sensitive and
resistant humantumor cell line (HCT116 vs HCT116/VM46, 10–20-fold
vs 100-fold difference for vinblastine).[38] Although this site is known to be critical to the biological properties
of vinblastine and is found to be deeply embedded in the tubulin bound
complex, this study represented the first systematic examination of
analogues bearing alternative C20′ functionality.As
highlighted earlier, a powerful Fe(III)-promoted coupling of
catharanthine with vindoline generating anhydrovinblastine[26] was enlisted and combined with a newly developed
in situ Fe(III)/NaBH4-promoted oxidation to provide vinblastine
in a single operation (Figure 5).[27] This development not only converted the synthetic
efforts into one capable of use for the systematic exploration of
the vinblastine structure but also assured that supplies of any analogue
needed for preclinical studies or clinical introduction could be accessed
by total synthesis. Consequently, in addition to its use in the completion
of the total syntheses of vinblastine (12 steps), vincristine, and
a series of additional naturally occurring Vinca alkaloids,[16] the approach also permits the incorporation
of vindoline analogues containing single site peripheral changes to
the structure as well as more deep-seated changes to the vindoline
core accessible only by total synthesis.
Figure 5
Single-step coupling
and in situ oxidation and representative vinblastine
analogues prepared by total synthesis.
Single-step coupling
and in situ oxidation and representative vinblastine
analogues prepared by total synthesis.An early example of the power of the approach entailed systematic
replacements of the vindoline C5 ethyl group, which were introduced
as alternative substituents on the oxadiazole tethered dienophile
in the cascade cycloaddition substrate.[34] Their examination revealed the surprising importance of the C5 ethyl
substituent where even conservative methyl (10-fold), hydrogen (100-fold),
or propyl replacements (10-fold) led to significant reductions in
activity (Figure 6).[34]
Figure 6
Probing
the importance of the C5 ethyl group.
Probing
the importance of the C5 ethyl group.Further representative of the opportunities the work has
provided
and complementary to the vindoline 6,5-DE ring system, 5,5-, 6,6-,
and the reversed 5,6-membered DE ring system analogues that contain
deep-seated changes to the core structure were prepared (Figure 5).[35] Preparation of these
analogues, not accessible from natural product sources, further demonstrates
the versatility of the intramolecular [4 + 2]/[3 + 2] cycloaddition
cascade. Both the natural cis and unnatural trans 6,6-membered DE ring systems proved accessible, with
the latter unnatural stereochemistry representing a surprisingly effective
class for analogue design. After Fe(III)-promoted coupling with catharanthine
and in situ oxidation to provide the corresponding vinblastine analogues,
their evaluation provided unanticipated insights into how the structure
of the vindoline subunit contributes to activity. Two potent analogues
possessing two different unprecedented modifications to the vindoline
subunit core architecture were discovered that matched the potency
of the comparison natural products. Remarkably, both lack the 6,7-double
bond whose removal in vinblastine leads to a 100-fold loss in activity,
and both represent the most dramatic departures from the structure
of vindoline of those examined to date. Thus, although single functional
group removals from the vinblastine lower subunit typically result
in pronounced and additive losses in activity,[28] two unprecedented deep-seated structural changes to the
core structure were found that maintain potent activity. Significantly
and unlike modifications of peripheral substituents (tailoring effects),
core structure redesign in such complex natural products is rarely
explored, and the results in this series indicate this may offer far
more opportunities than most might anticipate.[35]Ongoing efforts have also begun to define catharanthine
substituents
that are required for the Fe(III)-promoted biomimetic coupling with
vindoline, and these include (1) a probe of the importance of the
C16′ methyl ester and requirement for a C16′ electron-withdrawing
group for coupling,[39] and (2) a Hammett
series of C10′ indole substituents where electron-donating
substituents were found to maintain and electron-withdrawing substituents
to progressively slow the rate and efficiency of coupling.[40] The former unexpectedly revealed that even conservative
replacements of the vinblastine C16′ methyl ester with an ethyl
ester (10-fold), a cyano group (100-fold), an aldehyde (100-fold),
a hydroxymethyl group (1000-fold), or a primary carboxamide (>1000-fold)
led to surprisingly large reductions in biological activity, indicating
that the C16′ methyl ester is not only required for the biosynthetic
coupling but uniquely integral to the expression of vinblastine’s
biological properties (Scheme 1).[39]
Scheme 1
The latter study, which included
an examination of the impact of
catharanthineC10′ and C12′ indole substituents on the
Fe(III)-mediated coupling with vindoline, led to the discovery and
characterization of two new exciting derivatives, 10′-fluorovinblastine
and 10′-fluorovincristine (Figure 7).[40] In addition to defining a pronounced unanticipated
substituent effect on the biomimetic coupling that helped refine its
mechanism,[41] fluorine substitution at C10′
was found to uniquely enhance the activity 8-fold against both a sensitive
(IC50 = 800 pM, HCT116) and a vinblastine-resistant tumor
cell line (IC50 = 80 nM, HCT116/VM46). As depicted in the
X-ray structure of vinblastine bound to tubulin, this site resides
at one end of the upper portion of the T-shaped conformation of the
tubulin-bound molecule, suggesting that the 10′-fluorine substituent
makes critical contacts with the protein at a hydrophobic site uniquely
sensitive to steric interactions. With the development of an effective
single-step coupling and in situ oxidation protocol for convergent
analogue assemblage, the synthesis and evaluation of a systematic
series of C10′ and C12′ analogues were possible. Although
C12′ substituents were not well tolerated, C10′ substituents
were. Moreover and with the provision that C10′ polar substituents
are not well tolerated, the activity of the vinblastineC10′
derivatives in cell-based assays exhibited no apparent relationship
to the electronic character of the substituents but rather exhibited
activity that correlates with their size and shape [activity for analogue
R = H < F > Cl > Me, Br ≫ I, SMe (10-fold) ≫
CN (100-fold)].
Thus, small hydrophobic C10′ substituents are tolerated with
one derivative exceeding (R = F) and several matching the potency
of vinblastine (R = Cl, Me, Br vs H), whereas those bearing the larger
(R = I, SMe) or rigidly extended (R = CN) substituents proved to be
10–100-fold less potent. With a recognition that the 10′-fluoro
substitution conveys uniquely potent activity to such Vinca alkaloids, 10′-fluorovincristine was also prepared. Thus,
Fe(III)-promoted coupling (70%) of synthetic 10-fluorocatharantine
with synthetic N-desmethylvindoline[16] and subsequent in situ Fe(III)-mediated oxidation provided
10′-fluoro-N1-desmethylvinblastine,
which was formylated to provide synthetic 10′-fluorovincristine.
Like 10′-fluorovinblastine, 10′-fluorovincristine exhibited
exceptional activity in the cell-based functional assays, inhibiting
tumor cell growth 8-fold more potently than vincristine itself (Figure 7).[40]
Figure 7
10′-Fluorovinblastine
and 10′-fluorovincristine.
10′-Fluorovinblastine
and 10′-fluorovincristine.Although the enhanced oxidative metabolic stability of the
10′-fluoro
derivatives may contribute to the increased potency, the lack of similar
effects with closely related substituents indicate that an effect
unique to the fluorine substitution is responsible. We have suggested
that this is derived from the interaction of a perfectly sized hydrophobic
substituent further stabilizing the compound binding with tubulin
at a site exquisitely sensitive to steric interactions. Comparison
models of the 10′ substituent analogues built from the X-ray
structure of tubulin-bound vinblastine[39] illustrated a unique fit for 10′-fluorovinblastine (Figure 8).[40]
Figure 8
Space filling model of
the 10′-fluoro binding site of 10′-fluorovinblastine
(R = F, top) generated by adding the fluorine substituent to the X-ray
structure of tubulin-bound vinblastine[43] (R = H, bottom).[40] Comparison models
where R = Cl, Br, and I illustrated the unique fit for F, and the
complexes exhibited increasingly larger destabilizing steric interactions
as the substituent size progressively increased.
Space filling model of
the 10′-fluoro binding site of 10′-fluorovinblastine
(R = F, top) generated by adding the fluorine substituent to the X-ray
structure of tubulin-bound vinblastine[43] (R = H, bottom).[40] Comparison models
where R = Cl, Br, and I illustrated the unique fit for F, and the
complexes exhibited increasingly larger destabilizing steric interactions
as the substituent size progressively increased.In order to confirm that the exceptional activity observed
in our
lab would be observed elsewhere, we had vinblastine and 10′-fluorovinblastine
examined in a more comprehensive humantumor cell line panel including
cell lines of clinical interest from breast, lung, colon, prostate,
and ovary tissue (Figure 9) graciously conducted
at Bristol-Myers Squibb.[42] 10′-Fluorovinblastine
exhibited remarkable potency (avg IC50 = 300 pM), being
on average 30-fold more potent than vinblastine (avg IC50 = 10 nM) and exceeding our more conservative initial observations.
Figure 9
10′-Fluorovinblastine
human tumor cell growth inhibition.
10′-Fluorovinblastine
humantumor cell growth inhibition.A further delineation of the scope of aromatic substrates
that
participate with catharanthine in the Fe(III)-mediated coupling reaction,
the definition of its key structural features required for participation
in the reaction, and its extension to a generalized indole functionalization
reaction that bears little structural relationship to catharanthine
were defined.[41] In addition to revealing
that the exclusive diastereoselectivity of the coupling reaction that
installs the key C16′ center is controlled by the catharanthine-derived
coupling intermediate, the studies provided key insights into the
mechanism of the Fe(III)-mediated coupling reaction of catharanthine,
suggesting that the reaction conducted in acidic aqueous buffer may
result from a single-electron indole oxidation and may be radical
mediated. Just as importantly, the studies provide new opportunities
for the synthesis of previously inaccessible Vinca alkaloid analogues (Scheme 2) and defined
powerful new methodology for the synthesis of indole-containing natural
products.[41]
Scheme 2
Similarly, detailed
investigations of the second stage of the coupling
process, the Fe(III)-mediated free radical oxidation of the anhydrovinblastine
trisubstituted alkene to introduce the vinblastine C20′ tertiary
alcohol, revealed insights into not only its mechanism but also the
synthesis of previously inaccessible vinblastine analogues. Initial
studies revealed that it is a free radical mediated oxidation reaction,
that the reaction is initiated by the addition of NaBH4 to the Fe(III) salt, and that reactions in the absence of air (O2) led to reduction of the double bond (Figure 10).[16] Subsequent studies provided
additional details of the mechanism of the reaction, entailing a hydrogen
atom transfer (HAT) initiated free radical reaction,[44] and defined a new method for the direct functionalization
of unactivated alkenes.[36] Included in these
studies was a definition of the alkene substrate broad scope, the
reaction’s extensive functional group tolerance, the establishment
of exclusive Markovnikov addition regioselectivity, the use of a wide
range of alternative free radical traps for O, N, S, C, and halide
substitution, an examination of the Fe(III) salt and the hydride source
best suited to initiate the reaction, the introduction of alternative
reaction solvents beyond the water and aqueous buffer[27] originally disclosed, and the exploration of catalytic
variants of the reactions.[36] The reaction
was extended to a powerful Fe(III)/NaBH4-mediated free
radical hydrofluorination of unactivated alkenes using Selectfluor
as the fluorine atom source.[45] Unlike the
traditional and unmanageable free radical hydrofluorination of alkenes,
the Fe(III)/NaBH4-mediated reaction is conducted under
exceptionally mild conditions (0 °C, 5 min, CH3CN/H2O), uses a technically nondemanding reaction protocol, is
conducted open to the air with water as a cosolvent, demonstrates
an outstanding substrate scope and functional group tolerance, and
is suitable for 18F introduction (t1/2 =110 min) used in PET imaging.[45]
Figure 10
Hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) free radical oxidation of anhydrovinblastine
and generalization of the methodology for unactivated alkene functionalization.
Hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) free radical oxidation of anhydrovinblastine
and generalization of the methodology for unactivated alkene functionalization.Our interest in this Fe(III)/NaBH4-mediated reaction
emerged not only from its use in accessing vinblastine but from the
opportunity it presented for the late-stage, divergent[46] preparation of otherwise inaccessible vinblastine
analogues incorporating alternative C20′ functionality. Although
this site is known to be critical to the properties of vinblastine
and is found deeply embedded in the tubulin bound complex (Figure 11),[43] prior exploration
of C20′ substituent effects was limited to semisynthetic O-acylation
of the C20′ alcohol, its elimination and subsequent alkene
reduction, or superacid-catalyzed additions.[47] These invariably led to substantial reductions in biological potency
of the resulting derivative, albeit with examination of only a limited
number of analogues. Consequently and in the course of the development
of the Fe(III)/NaBH4-mediated alkene functionalization
reaction, its use was extended to the preparation of a series of key
vinblastine analogues bearing alternative C20′ functionality
(e.g., N3, NH2, and SCN vs OH).[36] Those of initial interest included the C20′ azide
and amine, both of which proved to be approximately 100-fold less
potent than vinblastine and 10-fold less potent than 20′-deoxyvinblastine.
However, acylation of the C20′ amine improved activity 10-fold[36] and installation of the unsubstituted C20′
urea or thiourea provided compounds that nearly matched the potency
of vinblastine itself (Figure 11).[36,37] The requisite NH of the internal nitrogen of the latter series presumably
best recapitulates the H-bond donor property of the vinblastine C20′
alcohol.
Figure 11
(top) Initial C20′ vinblastine analogues. (bottom) X-ray
structure[43] of vinblastine bound to tubulin
highlighting the region surrounding vinblastine C20′ site.
(top) Initial C20′ vinblastine analogues. (bottom) X-ray
structure[43] of vinblastine bound to tubulin
highlighting the region surrounding vinblastine C20′ site.On the basis of these results
and with the further observation
that the site had an apparent pronounced impact on Pgp transport,
we conducted a systematic exploration of C20′ amine, urea,
and thiourea derivatives, which provided C20′ urea-based analogues
that not only substantially exceed the potency of vinblastine but
also exhibited good activity against a Pgp overexpressing, vinblastine-resistant
tumor cell line. Thus, members in this group not only exceed the potency
of vinblastine (10-fold) but exhibit even further improved activity
against vinblastine-resistant cell lines (100-fold) in some cases,
partially overcoming overexpressed Pgp transport.[37,38]Just as remarkably and in contrast to expectations based on
the
steric constraints of the tubulin binding site surrounding the vinblastine
C20′ center depicted in the X-ray cocrystal structure of a
tubulin bound complex,[43] large C20′
urea derivatives are accommodated (e.g., biphenyl), exhibiting potent
functional activity in cell-based proliferation assays and effectively
binding tubulin.[37]Continued and
ongoing studies have provided even more potent analogues
as superb candidate drugs, especially for vinblastine-resistant relapse
tumors (Figure 12). Thus, a series of disubstituted
C20′-urea derivatives of vinblastine were prepared from 20′-aminovinblastine,
accessible through the unique Fe(III)/NaBH4-mediated alkene
functionalization reaction of anhydrovinblastine. They were found
to not only possess extraordinary potency (IC50 = 40–450
pM) but also exhibit further improved activity against a Pgp overexpressing
vinblastine-resistant cell line.[38] Three
such analogs were examined across a panel of 15 tumor cell lines graciously
conducted at Bristol-Myers Squibb,[38,42] and each displayed
remarkably potent cell growth inhibition activity (avg IC50 = 200–300 pM vs avg vinblastine IC50 = 6.1 nM)
against a broad spectrum of clinically relevant humancancer cell
lines, being on average 20–30-fold more potent than vinblastine
(range of 10–200-fold more potent). Significantly, the analogues
also display further improved activity against the vinblastine-resistant
HCT116/VM46 cell line that bears the clinically relevant overexpression
of Pgp, exhibiting IC50 values on par with that of vinblastine
against the sensitive HCT116 cell line, 100–200-fold greater
than the activity of vinblastine against the resistant HCT116/VM46
cell line, and display a reduced 10–20-fold activity differential
between the matched sensitive and resistant cell lines (vs 100-fold
for vinblastine).[38] Clearly, the C20′
position within vinblastine represents a key site amenable to functionalization
capable of improving tubulin binding affinity, substantially enhancing
biological potency, and simultaneously decreasing binding and relative
Pgp transport central to clinical resistance. Compound 5 was found to bind tubulin with a higher affinity than vinblastine,
confirming that its enhanced potency observed in the cell growth functional
assays correlates with its target tubulin binding affinity.[38] Remarkable in these developments is the observation
that the activity against the vinblastine-resistant, Pgp overexpressing
cell line uniquely and progressively improves as the terminal nitrogen
of the urea is substituted (R = H, H < R = H, Me < R = Me, Me),
diminishes smoothly with introduction of polarity, and smoothly increases
with introduction of increasing π-hydrophobic substitution reflecting
tunable and now predictable structural features that enhance tubulin
binding and simultaneously diminish Pgp binding and transport.
Figure 12
Disubstituted
C20′ urea derivatives of vinblastine.
Disubstituted
C20′ urea derivatives of vinblastine.What is most remarkable about these advances and although
it could
not have been imagined at the stage we initiated our efforts, the
C20′ analogues of vinblastine are available in three steps
from commercially available materials (Scheme 3). Although vinblastine is a true trace natural product, representing
0.00025% of the dried leaf weight of the periwinkle, its biosynthetic
precursors catharanthine and vindoline are the major alkaloid components
of the plant. They are readily available, relatively inexpensive starting
materials. As a result, such C20′ analogues are not only readily
accessible using the unique chemistry we introduced but also inexpensive
to prepare on scales needed for preclinical development. Thus, the
innovative chemistry developed in route to the total synthesis of
vinblastine–the Fe(III)-mediated single-step coupling of catharanthine
and vindoline that proceeds with complete control of the pivotal C16′
stereochemistry and the in situ Fe(III)-mediated hydrogen atom transfer
free radical functionalization (Markovnikov hydroazidation)[36] of the key C20′ center–permits
the exploration of exciting analogues previously unimaginable.[48]
Scheme 3
Not only does this methodology
mimic the biosynthetic pathway leading
to vinblastine that has been presumed to be mediated by enzymes, but
it is of special note that the diastereoselectivity of the Fe(III)-mediated
coupling and subsequent oxidation reproduces the relative abundance
of vinblastine and leurosidine (C20′ diastereomer) found in
the plant. Moreover, it is known that catharanthine and vindoline
are stored in plants spatially separated from one another.[49] This provocatively suggests that the low natural
abundance of vinblastine (and leurosidine) may arise not from an orchestrated
enzymatic coupling and subsequent functionalization of catharanthine
and vindoline but rather by a stress-induced mixing of the two precursors
in the presence of Fe(III) and air. Perhaps the chemistry we have
developed is not simply biomimetic but constitutes nonenzymatic chemistry
actually involved in the plant production of vinblastine.
Conclusions and
Outlook
Those reading this Account may think the [4 + 2]/[3
+ 2] cycloaddition
cascade is powerful methodology and that vindoline and vinblastine
represent perfect applications in which to showcase its potential.
Truth is that it was the natural product targets vindoline and vinblastine,
their importance in modern medicine, and the potential for their improvements
that inspired the discovery of the synthetic methodology. Not only
is the full pentacyclic skeleton of vindoline assembled in a single
cycloaddition cascade, but each substituent, each functional group,
each embedded heteroatom, and all the necessary stereochemistry are
incorporated into the substrate and the cycloaddition cascade cycloadduct
tailored for direct conversion to vindoline. It is methodology created
for the intended target. Combined with the development of a powerful
single-step Fe(III)-promoted coupling of catharanthine with vindoline
and a newly developed in situ Fe(III)/NaBH4-promoted C20′
oxidation, the approach provides vinblastine and its analogues in
8–13 steps. With use of the methodology and in addition to
systematically defining the importance of each embedded structural
feature of vinblastine, two classes of analogues have already been
discovered that enhance the potency of the natural products >10-fold.
In one instance, progress has also been made on the refractory problem
of reducing Pgp transport responsible for resistance with a series
of C20′ amine derivatives uniquely accessible using the newly
developed methodology. Unlike the removal of vinblastine structural
features or substituents, which typically has a detrimental impact,
the addition of new features can enhance target tubulin binding affinity
and functional activity and, in selected instances,[50] simultaneously disrupt Pgp binding, transport, and functional
resistance. Already analogues are in hand that are deserving of preclinical
development, and it is a tribute to the advances in organic synthesis
that they are accessible even on a natural product of a complexity
once thought refractory to such an approach.
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