146 research outputs found

    Biogenetically-Inspired Total Synthesis of Epidithiodiketopiperazines and Related Alkaloids

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    Natural products chemistry has historically been the prime arena for the discovery of new chemical transformations and the fountain of insights into key biological processes. It remains a fervent incubator of progress in the fields of chemistry and biology and an exchange mediating the flow of ideas between these allied fields of science. It is with this ethos that our group has taken an interest in and pursued the synthesis of a complex family of natural products termed the dimeric epipolythiodiketopiperazine (ETP) alkaloids. We present here an Account of the highly complex target molecules to which we pegged our ambitions, our systematic and relentless efforts toward those goals, the chemistry we developed in their pursuit, and the insight we have gained for their translational potential as potent anticancer molecules.National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (Grant GM089732)Amgen Inc

    Isostructural second-order phase transition of b-Bi2O3 at high pressures: an experimental and theoretical study

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    This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Journal of Physical Chemistry C, copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp507826jWe report a joint experimental and theoretical study of the structural and vibrational properties of synthetic sphaerobismoite (beta-Bi2O3) at high pressures in which room-temperature angle-dispersive X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Raman scattering measurements have been complemented with ab initio total energy and lattice dynamics calculations. Striking changes in Raman spectra were observed around 2 GPa, whereas X-ray diffraction measurements evidence no change in the tetragonal symmetry of the compound up to 20 GPa; however, a significant change exists in the compressibility when increasing pressure above 2 GPa. These features have been understood by means of theoretical calculations, which show that beta-Bi2O3 undergoes a pressure-induced isostructural phase transition near 2 GPa. In the new isostructural beta' phase, the Bi3+ and O2- environments become more regular than those in the original beta phase because of the strong decrease in the activity of the lone electron pair of Bi above 2 GPa. Raman measurements and theoretical calculations provide evidence of the second-order nature of the pressure-induced isostructural transition. Above 20 GPa, XRD measurements suggest a partial amorphization of the sample despite Raman measurements still show weak peaks, probably related to a new unknown phase which remains up to 27 GPa. On pressure release, XRD patterns and Raman spectra below 2 GPa correspond to elemental Bi-I, thus evidencing a pressure-induced decomposition of the sample during downstroke.Financial support from the Spanish Consolider Ingenio 2010 Program (MALTA Project CSD2007-00045) is acknowledged. This work was also supported by Brazilian Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico (CNPq) under Project 201050/2012-9, Spanish MICINN under Projects MAT2010-21270-004-01/03/04 and MAT2013-46649-C4-2/3/4-P, Spanish MINECO under Project CTQ2012-36253-C03-02, and from Vicerrectorado de Investigacion de la Universitat Politecnica de Valencia under Projects UPV2011-0914 PAID-05-11 and UPV2011-0966 PAID-06-11. Supercomputer time has been provided by the Red Espanola de Supercomputacion (RES) and the MALTA cluster. JAS. acknowledges Juan de la Cierva fellowship program for financial support.Pereira, ALJ.; Sans Tresserras, JÁ.; Vilaplana Cerda, RI.; Gomis, O.; Manjón Herrera, FJ.; Rodriguez-Hernandez, P.; Muñoz, A.... (2014). Isostructural second-order phase transition of b-Bi2O3 at high pressures: an experimental and theoretical study. Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 118(40):23189-23201. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp507826jS23189232011184

    Comparison of the C—H...O bonding in two crystalline phases of 1,4-dithiane 1,1,4,4-tetraoxide

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    The crystal structures of two crystalline phases of 1,4-dithiane 1,1,4,4-tetraoxide, C4H8O4S2, have been determined in order to examine the nature of possible intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Phase 1 is monoclinic, space group C2/m, with unit-cell dimensions of a = 9.073 (8), b = 7.077 (6), c = 5.597 (5) Å and β = 105.89 (1)°. The molecule adopts 2/m symmetry and all of the molecules are related by translation and thus have the same orientation. Phase 2 is also monoclinic but in space group P21/n with unit-cell dimensions of a = 7.1305 (5), b = 5.7245 (4), c = 8.3760 (6) Å and β = 91.138 (2)°. In this phase, the molecule sits on an inversion center and the molecules within the unit cell adopt quite different orientations. In both phases, examination of the potential C—H...O hydrogen bonds around each of the independent oxygen atoms (one axial and the other equatorial) shows the general O...H patterns to be quite similar with each oxygen atom in contact with four neighboring H atoms, and each H atom contacting two neighboring O atoms. While none of the H...O contacts is particularly short (all are greater than 2.5 Å), each molecule has 32 such contacts that form an extensive intermolecular network. A 1H NMR spectrum of the compound dissolved in DMSO shows a singlet of 8H at δ 3.677 which indicates that the C—H bonds are only moderately polarized by the single adjacent –SO2– moiety: strongly polarized C—H bonds have δ values in the 5–6 range [Li & Sammes (1983). J. Chem. Soc. Perkin Trans. 1, pp. 1303–1309]. The phase 1 crystal studied was non-merohedrally twinned
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