| Literature DB >> 30155035 |
Yasuhide Inokuma1,2, Tomoya Ukegawa1, Manabu Hoshino1,3, Makoto Fujita1,3.
Abstract
The structures of metabolites produced in microgram quantities by enzymatic reductions with baker's yeast were analyzed using the crystalline sponge method. The X-ray data provided reliable structures for trace metabolites including their relative and absolute stereochemistries that are not fully addressed by conventional NMR and LC-MS analyses. Technically, combining two or more chromatographic purification techniques is essential because, unlike abundant synthetic compounds, extracted metabolites contain many low level UV-silent impurities. The crystalline sponge method coupled with HPLC purification (LC-SCD) would thus be a useful method for metabolic analysis and drug discovery.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 30155035 PMCID: PMC6013795 DOI: 10.1039/c6sc00594b
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1(a) HPLC chromatogram of the organic extract from the baker's yeast reaction. (b) The electron density map F0 (contoured at the 0.8σ level) around the binding site of metabolite 3 (guest A) in the pores of crystalline sponge 1.
Fig. 2(a) Reduction of tetralone 5 by baker's yeast. (b) Crystal structure of metabolite 6-incorporated crystalline sponge 1 viewing along the b-axis (metabolite 6: CPK model, others: stick model, disordered guests/solvents were omitted for clarity). (c) ORTEP drawings of G1–G3 at the 50% probability level.
Fig. 3(a) Guest binding sites for metabolite 8 (H1–H3) in the network of 1 (viewing along the b-axis). (b) Electron density map F0 (blue mesh) contoured at the 1.0σ level overlaid on the structure of guest H1.