1 research outputs found
Streamlined Total Synthesis of Uncialamycin and Its Application to the Synthesis of Designed Analogues for Biological Investigations
From the enediyne class of antitumor
antibiotics, uncialamycin
is among the rarest and most potent, yet one of the structurally simpler,
making it attractive for chemical synthesis and potential applications
in biology and medicine. In this article we describe a streamlined
and practical enantioselective total synthesis of uncialamycin that
is amenable to the synthesis of novel analogues and renders the natural
product readily available for biological and drug development studies.
Starting from hydroxy- or methoxyisatin, the synthesis features a
Noyori enantioselective reduction, a Yamaguchi acetylide-pyridinium
coupling, a stereoselective acetylide-aldehyde cyclization, and a
newly developed annulation reaction that allows efficient coupling
of a cyanophthalide and a <i>p</i>-methoxy semiquinone aminal
to forge the anthraquinone moiety of the molecule. Overall, the developed
streamlined synthesis proceeds in 22 linear steps (14 chromatographic
separations) and 11% overall yield. The developed synthetic strategies
and technologies were applied to the synthesis of a series of designed
uncialamycin analogues equipped with suitable functional groups for
conjugation to antibodies and other delivery systems. Biological evaluation
of a select number of these analogues led to the identification of
compounds with low picomolar potencies against certain cancer cell
lines. These compounds and others like them may serve as powerful
payloads for the development of antibody drug conjugates (ADCs) intended
for personalized targeted cancer therapy