| Literature DB >> 28194270 |
Shouliang Yang1, Kuppusamy Sankar1, Colin K Skepper1, Timothy J Barker1, John C Lukesh1, Daniel M Brody1, Manuela M Brütsch1, Dale L Boger1.
Abstract
The total synthesis and evaluation of a key systematic series of vinblastines that incorporate the first deep-seated changes to the substituent at C4 are detailed. The synthetic approach features an expanded and redefined scope of a 1,3,4-oxadiazole [4 + 2]/[3 + 2] cycloaddition cascade in which electronically mismatched electron-deficient trisubstituted alkenes and unactivated trisubstituted alkenes were found to productively initiate the cycloaddition cascade with tethered electron-deficient 1,3,4-oxadiazoles. Such cycloaddition cascades were used to directly introduce altered C4 substituents, providing the basis for concise total syntheses of a series of C4 modified vindolines and their subsequent single-step incorporation into the corresponding synthetic vinblastines in routes as short as 8-12 steps. Evaluation of the synthetic vinblastines revealed a surprisingly large impact and role of the C4 substituent on activity even though it was previously not thought to intimately interact with the biological target tubulin. Only the introduction of a C4 methyl ester, a constitutional isomer of vinblastine in which the carbonyl carbon and ester oxygen of the C4 acetate are transposed, provided a synthetic vinblastine that matched the potency of the natural product. In contrast, even introduction of a C4 acetamide or N-methyl carboxamide, which incorporate single heavy atom exchanges (amide NH for ester oxygen) in vinblastine or the C4 methyl ester, provided compounds that were ≥10-fold less active than vinblastine. Other C4 acetate replacements, including a C4 amine, carboxylic acid, hydroxymethyl or acetoxymethyl group, led to even greater reductions in potency. Even replacement of the C4 acetoxy group or its equally active C4 methyl ester with an ethyl or isopropyl ester led to 10-fold or more reductions in activity. These remarkable trends in activity, which correlate with relative tubulin binding affinities, retrospectively may be ascribed to the role the substituent serves as a H-bond acceptor for α-tubulin Lys336 and Asn329 side chains at a site less tolerant of a H-bond donor, placing the methyl group of the C4 acetate or C4 methyl ester in a spatially restricted and well-defined hydrophobic half pocket created by a surrounding well-ordered loop. This remarkable impact of the C4 substituent, its stringency, and even the magnitude of its effect are extraordinary, and indicate that its presence was selected in Nature to enhance the effects of vinblastine and related natural products.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28194270 PMCID: PMC5302862 DOI: 10.1039/C6SC04146A
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Top: Natural product structures and cell growth inhibition data. Bottom: X-ray co-crystal structure of tubulin-bound vinblastine[25] (pdb ; 1Z2B) highlighting the solvent exposed C4 acetoxy group at the tubulin head-to-tail dimer–dimer interface where vinblastine binds (left) and site of binding with top of proteins removed to visualize bound vinblastine (right).
Fig. 2Cycloaddition cascade.
Scheme 1
Fig. 3Cell growth inhibition, C4 modifications on 6,7-dihydrovinblastine.
Scheme 2
Fig. 4Relative tubulin binding affinities assessed by measuring competitive % displacement of tubulin-bound BODIPY-vinblastine.
Scheme 3
Scheme 4
Scheme 5
Scheme 6
Fig. 5Recent X-ray co-crystal structure of tubulin-bound vinblastine[25] (pdb ; 5J2T) highlighting the (A) solvent exposed C4 acetoxy group. (B) Key residues interacting with the C4 substituent: Lys336 (H-bond to acetoxy ester oxygen), Ile332 (close contact to methyl group), and Asn329 (H-bond to acetoxy carbonyl oxygen). (C) Space filling model of B showing the fit of the acetoxy methyl group in the hydrophobic pocket defined by Ala333 and Ile332 residues.
Fig. 6Summary of synthetic approach and cell growth inhibition properties of C4 modified vinblastines.