“…To take advantage of the distinctive features of natural products while leveraging the power of synthetic organic chemistry, we have reported a strategy termed complexity-to-diversity (CtD), which uses ring system distortion and rearrangement reactions of natural products to rapidly generate collections of diverse compounds while maintaining desirable characteristics including a high fraction of sp 3 -hybridized carbons (Fsp3), ring fusion density, number of stereogenic centers, and rigidity of ring systems. Using this approach, compound collections have been reported from gibberellic acid, adrenosterone, quinine, abietic acid, sinomenine, pleuromutilin, yohimbine, hemeanthamine, ilimaquinone, and others . Structurally diverse, natural-product-like libraries have proven to be valuable tools in studying various biological processes. , For example, we recently reported the use of CtD compounds to assess the propensity of small molecules to accumulate in Gram-negative bacteria; for this purpose, compounds with a low number of rotatable bonds, a high ring-fusion density, and the presence of ionizable nitrogens were crucial, thus leading us to choose lycorine ( 1 ) as a starting point for further CtD synthetic efforts ( 2 – 14 , Scheme ).…”