We
characterized the bis-quinolizidine tetracyclic alkaloid (5S, 6S, 7R, 11R)-matrine in a supersonic jet expansion, using chirped-pulsed broadband
microwave spectroscopy. Previous crystal diffraction analyses suggested
16 diastereoisomers associated with matrine’s four carbon stereocenters
but were inconclusive whether the lactamic nitrogen atom would additionally
produce separated trans-/cis- diastereoisomers
or if both species may interconvert through low potential barriers.
Our experiment simultaneously detected trans- and cis-matrine through their rotational spectrum, confirming
the possibility of conformational rearrangement in matrine alkaloids.
The two matrine conformers mainly differ in the envelope or half-chair
lactamic ring, as evidenced by the experimental rotational and nuclear
quadrupole coupling parameters. Molecular orbital calculations with
ab initio (MP2) and density functional methods (B3LYP-D3(BJ) and MN15)
were tested against the experiment, additionally offering an estimation
of the cis-/trans- barrier of 24.9–26.9
kJ mol–1. The experiment illustrates the structural
potential of chirped-pulsed broadband microwave spectroscopy for high-resolution
rotational studies of biomolecules in the range of 20–40 atoms.