Andrastin D
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Category | Enzyme inhibitors |
Catalog number | BBF-00466 |
CAS | 184432-08-4 |
Molecular Weight | 429.57 |
Molecular Formula | C26H37O5 |
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Description
It is produced by the strain of Penicillum sp. FO-3929. It can inhibit PFTase. IC50 is 25.7 μmol/L.
Specification
Synonyms | CHEBI:142874; methyl (5beta,8alpha,9beta,10alpha,13alpha)-15-hydroxy-4,4,8,12,16-pentamethyl-3,17-dioxoandrosta-11,15-diene-14-carboxylate; methyl 15-hydroxy-4,4,8alpha,12,16-pentamethyl-3,17-dioxo-5beta,9beta,10alpha,13alpha-androsta-11,15-diene-14-carboxylate |
IUPAC Name | methyl (5S,8S,9S,10R,13R,14R)-17-hydroxy-4,4,8,10,12,13,16-heptamethyl-3,15-dioxo-1,2,5,6,7,9-hexahydrocyclopenta[a]phenanthrene-14-carboxylate |
Canonical SMILES | CC1=CC2C3(CCC(=O)C(C3CCC2(C4(C1(C(=C(C4=O)C)O)C)C(=O)OC)C)(C)C)C |
InChI | InChI=1S/C26H36O5/c1-14-13-17-23(5)11-10-18(27)22(3,4)16(23)9-12-24(17,6)26(21(30)31-8)20(29)15(2)19(28)25(14,26)7/h13,16-17,28H,9-12H2,1-8H3/t16-,17+,23-,24+,25+,26-/m1/s1 |
InChI Key | SMUNNMAWNRFDPB-UWWAQUNASA-N |
Properties
Appearance | White Powder |
Melting Point | 114-120 °C |
Solubility | Soluble in Methanol |
Reference Reading
1. Chemotaxonomic profiling of Penicillium setosum using high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-Q-ToF-MS)
Tijith K George, Dineep Devadasan, M S Jisha Heliyon. 2019 Sep 26;5(9):e02484. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e02484. eCollection 2019 Sep.
In the present study, secondary metabolites produced by an endophytic fungus Penicillium setosum were extracted using colony agar plug and culture broth extraction methods. High resolution LC-MS was used to explore the chemical nature of the secondary metabolites, as well, compare the reliability of the methods. P. setosum was chemotaxonomically distinguished from other members of section Lanata-divaricata, by its ability to produce mycotoxin, patulin and also by the presence of certain phenol-derived compounds, like quercetin, dihydroflavonols (dihydroquercetin and dihydromyricetin), kaempferol, luteolin, while some Penicillium specific compounds such as, citromycetin and andrastin D reveal its similarity towards section Lanata-Divaricata members. For the first time, the presence of dihydroquercetin is remarkably and spectrometrically confirmed from a microbial source. In addition, a few polyketides, anthroquinone compounds, hydrocarbons, and fatty acids were also detected in the culture extract. Being the first report on the production of polyphenolic compounds by an endophytic fungus of Penicillium species, the current research is crucial, and moreover the starin itself is a novel species.
2. Andrastins A-D, Penicillium roqueforti Metabolites consistently produced in blue-mold-ripened cheese
Kristian Fog Nielsen, Petur Weihe Dalsgaard, Jørn Smedsgaard, Thomas Ostenfeld Larsen J Agric Food Chem. 2005 Apr 20;53(8):2908-13. doi: 10.1021/jf047983u.
This is the first finding of andrastins in blue cheese as well as any other sample type. Here, they were produced by the secondary starter culture Penicillium roqueforti. After purification by normal-phase chromatography followed by combined reverse-phase ion-exchange chromatography, the andrastins A-D were detected by liquid chromatography combined with UV and high-resolution mass spectrometry. In 23 representative samples of European blue cheeses, andrastin A was consistently found in quantities between 0.1 and 3.7 microg/g of cheese (median 2.4 microg/g). Assuming the same molar response factors as for andrastin A, the B, C, and D analogues were present in approximately 5-, 3-, and 5-20-fold lower amounts than andrastin A, respectively. The andrastins are protein farnesyltransferase inhibitors and are capable of inhibiting the efflux of anticancer drugs from multidrug-resistant cancer cells. Thus, their presence in common blue cheese suggests a potential for a positive or negative impact on human health.
3. Annulative Methods in the Synthesis of Complex Meroterpene Natural Products
Xingyu Shen, Danny Q Thach, Chi P Ting, Thomas J Maimone Acc Chem Res. 2021 Feb 2;54(3):583-594. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.0c00781. Epub 2021 Jan 15.
From the venerable Robinson annulation to the irreplaceable Diels-Alder cycloaddition, annulation reactions have fueled the progression of the field of natural product synthesis throughout the past century. In broader terms, the ability to form a cyclic molecule directly from two or more simpler fragments has transformed virtually every aspect of the chemical sciences from the synthesis of organic materials to bioconjugation chemistry and drug discovery. In this Account, we describe the evolution of our meroterpene synthetic program over the past five years, enabled largely by the development of a tailored anionic annulation process for the synthesis of hydroxylated 1,3-cyclohexanediones from lithium enolates and the reactive β-lactone-containing feedstock chemical diketene.First, we provide details on short total syntheses of the prototypical polycyclic polyprenylated acylphloroglucinol (PPAP) natural products hyperforin and garsubellin A, which possess complex bicyclo[3.3.1]nonane architectures. Notably, these molecules have served as compelling synthetic targets for several decades and induce a number of biological effects of relevance to neuroscience and medicine. By merging our diketene annulation process with a hypervalent iodine-mediated oxidative ring expansion, bicyclo[3.3.1]nonane architectures can be easily prepared from simple 5,6-fused bicyclic diketones in only two chemical operations. Leveraging these two key chemical reactions in combination with various other stereoselective transformations allowed for these biologically active targets to be prepared in racemic form in only 10 steps.Next, we extend this strategy to the synthesis of complex fungal-derived meroterpenes generated biosynthetically from the coupling of 3,5-dimethylorsellinic acid (DMOA) and farnesyl pyrophosphate. A Ti(III)-mediated radical cyclization of a terminal epoxide was used to rapidly prepare a 6,6,5-fused tricyclic ketone which served as an input for our annulation/rearrangement process, ultimately enabling a total synthesis of protoaustinoid A, an important biosynthetic intermediate in DMOA-derived meroterpene synthesis, and its oxidation product berkeleyone A. Through a radical-based, abiotic rearrangement process, the bicyclo[3.3.1]nonane cores of these natural products could again be isomerized, resulting in the 6,5-fused ring systems of the andrastin family and ultimately delivering a total synthesis of andrastin D and preterrenoid. Notably, these isomerization transformations proved challenging when employing classic, acid-induced conditions for carbocation generation, thus highlighting the power of radical biomimicry in total synthesis. Finally, further oxidation and rearrangement allowed for access to terrenoid and the lactone-containing metabolite terretonin L.Overall, the merger of annulative diketene methodology with an oxidative rearrangement transformation has proven to be a broadly applicable strategy to synthesize bicyclo[3.3.1]nonane-containing natural products, a class of small molecules with over 1000 known members.
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