초청강사 | Dr. Jung-Nyoung Heo |
---|---|
소속 | Center for Medicinal Chemistry Research, Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology, Daejeon, Korea |
일시 | 2017년 10월 26일(목) 오후5시 |
장소 | 이학관 331 |
“Journey to the
Discovery of Anticancer Drugs and
Synthetic Studies on Polycyclic Heterocycles”
In an area of organic synthesis and medicinal
chemistry, exploration of practical and efficient synthetic methods provides great
interests to the search of bioactive compounds, natural products, and
pharmaceutical agents. In recent years, our laboratory have been particularly
interested in the development of new one-pot synthetic approaches for rapid,
facile, and economic construction of a number of biologically interesting
natural products. During this process, research efforts from our group have
focused on the discovery of new anticancer agents with specific molecular
targets. In particular, we have discovered STP06-1002 as a potent,
first-in-class tankyrase inhibitor that expresses anticancer activity against
colon cancer.
Polycyclic compounds possessing an oxindole moiety are important in the
search for novel, biologically active agents for the pharmaceutical and
agrochemical industries. As part of our ongoing efforts to develop structurally
unique motifs for potential use in pharmaceuticals, we focused on the
natural products derived from 2-oxoindoles (Figure 1). Naturally occurring oxindoles include
aristolactams (1),
anhydrohapaloxindole A (2), and
prioline (3). The large family of
aristolactams (1) exhibits various
bioactivities, including antitumor effects against human cancer cell lines.
Anhydrohapaloxindole A (2) was
isolated from a cultured strain of a terrestrial blue-green alga. Prioline (3) was isolated from the roots of a
species of Salvia, a genus whose
plants are used in Chinese folk medicine for the treatment of tonsillitis,
pharyngitis, pulmonary tuberculosis, and bacillary dysentery. Of particular
interest is sunitinib (4), which is
a highly active receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor used in the treatment of
advanced renal cell carcinoma and gastrointestinal stromal tumours. In this
seminar, our efforts towards the syntheses of naphthoxindoles (5)1 and naphthostyrils
including natural prioline (3)2
will be presented.
Figure 1. Natural and medicinal compounds
possessing an oxindole moiety.
In
addition, dibenzo[b,f]oxepin is an
important motif in natural and medicinal compounds (Figure 2). Recently,
pacharin (6) and bauhiniastatins 1-4
(7) were isolated from the plant Bauhinia
purpurea, and these compounds were shown to significantly inhibit cancer cell
growth. These compounds are similar to the natural products bauhinoxepin B (8) and artocarpol A (9), which have been shown to exhibit
antimycobacterial and anti-inflammatory activities, respectively. Additionally,
aristoyagonine (10) occupies a
special interest since it is the only example to date of a natural cularine
alkaloid incorporating a five-membered lactam. Due to their low natural
occurrence in conjunction with their biological activity against various cancer
cell lines, several synthetic tactics have been disclosed for the synthesis of
these structurally unusual alkaloids. Notably, molecules containing the
dibenzo[b,f]oxepin moiety have
received considerable interest from the medicinal community due to these
compounds’ potent biological properties, such as antipsychotic, antidepressant,
antihypertensive, antiestrogenic, anti-inflammatory, and insecticidal
activities. For example, compound 11
is a nonpeptide angiotensin II receptor antagonist that can regulate blood
pressure and electrolyte homeostasis. Additionally, CGP 3466 (12) exhibits strong neuroprotective
activity as the result of its ability to prevent neuronal apoptosis in the
adult brain.3
Figure 2. Dibenzo[b,f]oxepins in
natural and medicinal compounds.
Previously,
we developed a strategy for the direct one-pot synthesis of phenanthrenes that
employs a Suzuki-Miyaura coupling/aldol condensation cascade sequence.4
Then, we reported the application of this procedure to the total synthesis of
aristolactams, including aristolactam BII, aristolactam BIII, aristolactam FI, N-methyl
piperolactam A, and sauristolactam.5 As part of a research program
to develop a one-pot metal-catalyzed reaction/aldol condensation reaction, we
sought to develop an efficient synthesis of dibenzo[b,f]oxepin via a one-pot Cu-catalyzed aryl ether formation/aldol
condensation reaction.6 Herein, we will discuss the synthetic
methodologies for the construction of diverse polycyclic heterocyclic scaffolds
via an efficient one-pot procedure.
References
1. Park, K.-Y.; Kim, B. T.; Heo, J.-N. Eur. J. Org. Chem. 2014, 164.
2. Park,
K.-Y.; Song, H.-J.; Heo, J.-N. Adv. Synth. Catal. 2015, 357, 3197.
3. (a) Zimmermann, K.; Waldmeier, P. C.; Tatton, W. G. Pure Appl. Chem. 1999, 71, 2039–2046. (b)
Zimmermann, K.; Roggo, S.; Kragten, E.; F€urst, P.; Waldmeier, P. Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 1998,
8, 1195–1200. (c) Sagot, Y.; Toni,
N.; Perrelet, D.; Lurot, S.; King, B; Rixner, H.; Mattenberger, L.; Waldmeier,
P. C.; Kato, A. C. Br. J. Pharmacol. 2000, 131, 721–728.
4. Kim, Y. H.; Lee, H.; Kim, Y, J.; Kim, B. T.; Heo,
J.-N. J. Org. Chem. 2008, 73, 495–501.
5. Kim, J. K.; Kim, Y. H.; Nam, H, T.; Kim, B. T.; Heo,
J.-N. Org. Lett. 2008, 10, 3543–3546.
6. (a) Choi, Y. L.; Lim, H. S.; Heo, J.-N. Org. Lett. 2012, 14, 5102. (b) Lim, H. S.; Choi, Y. L.; Heo, J.-N. Org. Lett. 2013, 15, 4718.