An improved synthesis of the oxepinochromone ptaeroxylin is reported, together with the syntheses of the related natural products ptaeroxylinol and eranthin. Ptaeroxylin and ptaeroxylinol were obtained from the chromenone noreugenin by selective reaction of the 7-hydroxyl group, allylation of the 5-hydroxyl, followed by Claisen rearrangement under microwave conditions with concomitant deprotection of the 7-hydroxyl. Alkylation of the 7-hydroxyl with the appropriate allyl bromide provides a precursor for ring-closing metathesis to deliver the oxepinochromone ring system. Eranthin was obtained by a similar strategy involving Claisen rearrangement to transfer an allyl group from the C-7 hydroxyl of noreugenin to C-8 regioselectively.
Natural allosteric modulators reported over the last decade are reviewed on a chemical and mechanistic basis, emphasising the importance of natural products as probes for future allosteric drugs.
The nucleocapsid (N) protein plays critical roles in coronavirus genome transcription and packaging, representing a key target for the development of novel antivirals, and for which structural information on ligand binding is scarce. We used a novel fluorescence polarization assay to identify small molecules that disrupt the binding of the N protein to a target RNA derived from the SARS-CoV-2 genome packaging signal. Several phenolic compounds, including L-chicoric acid (CA), were identified as high-affinity N-protein ligands. The binding of CA to the N protein was confirmed by isothermal titration calorimetry, 1H-STD and 15N-HSQC NMR, and by the crystal structure of CA bound to the N protein C-terminal domain (CTD), further revealing a new modulatory site in the SARS-CoV-2 N protein. Moreover, CA reduced SARS-CoV-2 replication in cell cultures. These data thus open venues for the development of new antivirals targeting the N protein, an essential and yet underexplored coronavirus target.
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