The absolute configurations of 2-cyclohexenone cis-diol metabolites resulting from the biotransformation of the corresponding phenols have been determined by comparison of their experimental and calculated circular dichroism spectra (TDDFT at the PCM/B2LYP/Aug-cc-pVTZ level), optical rotations (calculated at the PCM/B3LYP/Aug-cc-pVTZ level) and by stereochemical correlation. It is found that circular dichroism spectra and optical rotations of 2-cyclohexenone derivatives are strongly dependent on the ring conformation (M or P sofa S(5) or half-chair), enone non-planarity and the nature and positions of the hydroxy and alkyl substituents. The effect of non-planarity of the enone chromophore, including the distortion of the C=C bond, is determined for the model structures by TDDFT calculations at the PCM/B2LYP/6-311++G(2d,2p) level. Non-planarity of the C=C bond in the enone chromophore is commonly encountered in 2-cyclohexenone derivatives and it is a source of significant rotatory strength contribution to the electronic circular dichroism spectra. It is shown that the two lowest-energy transitions in acrolein and 2-cyclohexenone and its derivatives are n(C=O)-π(C=O)* and π(C=C)-π(C=O)*, as expected, while the shorter-wavelength (below 200 nm) transitions are of more complex nature. In 2-cyclohexenone and its alkyl derivatives it is predominantly a mixture of π(C=C)-π(C=C)* and π(C=C)-σ* transitions, whereas the presence of hydroxy substituent results in a dominant contribution due to the n(OH)-π(C=O)* transition. A generalized model for correlation of the CD spectra of 2-cyclohexenones with their structures is presented.
cis-Dihydrodiol metabolites have been isolated from naphthalene and six 2-substituted naphthalene substrates. Their structures and absolute configurations have been determined by a combination of calculated (TDDFT) and experimentally based circular dichroism (CD) and optical rotation (OR) methods. The "inverse" styrene helicity rule is shown to be incorrect for the interpretation of the CD spectra of cis-dihydrodiols. A striking conclusion is that CD spectra correlate directly with the helicity of the styrene chromophore: that is, the sign of the long-wavelength Cotton effect is identical with the sign of styrene torsion angle, whereas the OR sign is dependent on the absolute configuration of the allylic carbon atom. The results demonstrate that a predictive model previously used for the determination of preferred regio- and stereoselectivity associated with TDO-catalyzed cis-dihydroxylation of substituted benzene substrates can now be successfully extended to substituted naphthalene substrates.
Specific modifications of colchicine followed by synthesis of its analogues have been tested in vitro with the objective of lowering colchicine toxicity. Our previous studies have clearly shown the anticancer potential of double-modified colchicine derivatives in C-7 and C-10 positions. Here, a series of novel triple-modified colchicine derivatives is reported. They have been obtained following a four-step strategy. In vitro cytotoxicity of these compounds has been evaluated against four human tumor cell lines (A549, MCF-7, LoVo, and LoVo/DX). Additionally, the mode of binding of the synthesized compounds was evaluated in silico using molecular docking to a 3D structure of β-tubulin based on crystallographic data from the Protein Data Bank and homology methodology. Binding free energy estimates, binding poses, and MlogP values of the compounds were obtained. All triple-modified colchicine derivatives were shown to be active at nanomolar concentrations against three of the investigated cancer cell lines (A549, MCF-7, LoVo). Four of them also showed higher potency against tumor cells over normal cells as confirmed by their high selectivity index values. A vast majority of the synthesized derivatives exhibited several times higher cytotoxicity than colchicine, doxorubicin, and cisplatin.
[reaction: see text] Stereoselective formation of large macrocycles in "click-type" reactions is a current challenge. Chiral macrocycles of differing size and shape (e.g., rectanglimine or loopimine) were selectively obtained by cyclocondensation of terephthalaldehyde or isophthalaldehyde with conformationally bistable chiral diamines derived from trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane and aromatic dianhydrides. This opens new opportunities for the programmed synthesis of large-ring molecular assemblies.
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