Hongoquercin B

Hongoquercin B

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Category Antibiotics
Catalog number BBF-00974
CAS
Molecular Weight 430.53
Molecular Formula C25H34O6

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Description

Hongoquercin B is a sesquiterpene antibiotic produced by an unidentified fungus. It is only resistant to vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium at high concentrations.

Specification

IUPAC Name (3S,4aR,6aR,12aR,12bS)-3-acetyloxy-11-hydroxy-4,4,6a,9,12b-pentamethyl-1,2,3,4a,5,6,12,12a-octahydrobenzo[a]xanthene-10-carboxylic acid
Canonical SMILES CC1=CC2=C(CC3C4(CCC(C(C4CCC3(O2)C)(C)C)OC(=O)C)C)C(=C1C(=O)O)O
InChI InChI=1S/C25H34O6/c1-13-11-16-15(21(27)20(13)22(28)29)12-18-24(5)9-8-19(30-14(2)26)23(3,4)17(24)7-10-25(18,6)31-16/h11,17-19,27H,7-10,12H2,1-6H3,(H,28,29)/t17-,18+,19-,24-,25+/m0/s1
InChI Key JJEZUNHVLOCFHS-KSDLHCFASA-N

Properties

Appearance White Powder
Antibiotic Activity Spectrum Gram-positive bacteria
Boiling Point 535.3±50.0 °C at 760 mmHg
Melting Point 153-156°C
Density 1.2±0.1 g/cm3

Reference Reading

1. Cascade polyketide and polyene cyclizations: biomimetic total synthesis of hongoquercin B
Tim N Barrett, Anthony G M Barrett J Am Chem Soc. 2014 Dec 10;136(49):17013-5. doi: 10.1021/ja511534x. Epub 2014 Dec 1.
The total synthesis of hongoquercin B was carried out in 9 steps from trans,trans-farnesyl acetate using a palladium catalyzed decarboxylative π-farnesyl rearrangement of a diketo-dioxinone ester, aromatization and cationic diene-epoxide cyclization as key steps. This cascade tetracyclization simplifies the synthesis of terpenoid resorcylate natural products.
2. Synthesis and absolute configuration of hongoquercin B, a sesquiterpene-substituted orsellinic acid isolated as a fungal metabolite
H Tsujimori, K Mori Biosci Biotechnol Biochem. 2000 Jul;64(7):1410-5. doi: 10.1271/bbb.64.1410.
(+)-Hongoquercin B (1), a weakly antibacterial fungal metabolite, was synthesized by starting from (S)-3-hydroxy-2,2-dimethylcyclohexanone, and its absolute configuration was determined as depicted by structure 1.
3. β-Keto-dioxinones and β,δ-diketo-dioxinones in biomimetic resorcylate total synthesis
Rosa Cookson, Tim N Barrett, Anthony G M Barrett Acc Chem Res. 2015 Mar 17;48(3):628-42. doi: 10.1021/ar5004169. Epub 2015 Feb 17.
Resorcylates are a large group of bioactive natural products that are biosynthesized from acetate and malonate units via the intermediacy of polyketides. These polyketides undergo cyclization reactions to introduce the aromatic core. The bioactivities of the resorcylates including resorcylate macrocyclic lactones include anticancer, antimalarial, mycotoxicity, antifungal, and antibiotic properties, and several compounds in the series are already in use in medicine. Examples are prodrugs derived from mycophenolic acid as immunosuppressants and the Hsp-90 inhibitor, AT13387, which is in phase-II clinical trials for the treatment of small cell lung cancer and melanoma. In consequence of these biological activities, methods for the concise synthesis of diverse resorcylates are of considerable importance. In natural product chemistry, biomimetic total synthesis can have significant advantages including functional group tolerance in key steps, the minimization of the use of protection and deprotection reactions and the shortening of the total number of synthetic steps. This Account provides a description of our adaption of the dioxinone chemistry of Hyatt, Clemens, and Feldman for the synthesis and retro-Diels-Alder reactions of diketo-dioxinones. Such dioxinones, which were synthesized by a range of C-acylation reactions, were found to undergo retro-Diels-Alder reactions on heating to provide the corresponding triketo-ketenes with the loss of acetone. The ketene reactive intermediates were rapidly trapped both inter- and intramolecularly with alcohols to provide the corresponding β,δ,ζ-triketo-esters. These compounds, which consist of keto-enol mixtures, readily undergo cycloaromatization to produce resorcylate esters and macrocyclic lactones. We have established the use of diketo-dioxinones as key general intermediates for the synthesis of diverse resorcylate natural products and for the synthesis of new classes of compounds for the generation of medicinal chemistry lead structures. Many of the methods used were found to be tolerant of multiple sensitive functional groups. These include enolate C-acylations with acyl chlorides, 1-acyl-benzotriazoles, acyl imidazolides, or Weinreb amides to prepare diketo-dioxinones and their subsequent use to prepare β,δ,ζ-triketo-esters and lactones and hence resorcylates. In addition, in most cases, phenol protection was avoided. As an alternative to the synthesis of β,δ,ζ-triketo-esters, diketo-dioxinones were also found to undergo cycloaromatization with retention of the ketal entity via a nonketene pathway. Finally, diketo-dioxinones with an allyl, prenyl, geranyl, or other 2-alkenyl carboxylate esters at the γ-carbon underwent decarboxylative rearrangement with tetrakis(triphenylphosphine)palladium catalysis to produce α-substituted diketo-dioxinones and resorcylates with 3-allyl, prenyl, geranyl, or other 2-alkenyl groups. Such diketo-dioxinone chemistry was used in the total synthesis of natural products including aigialomycin, cruentaren A, and the oligomeric resorcylate antibiotics ent-W1278 A, B, and C. Additionally, tandem use of the decarboxylative rearrangement process and cycloaromatization was used in the total synthesis of natural products including the methyl ester of cristatic acid, mycophenolic acid, and hongoquercin B. The methodology was also applied to the synthesis of 9,10-anthraquinones, o-aminoalkyl resorcylates, dihydroxyisoindolinones, oligomers, and resorcinamides. The development of this methodology is described in this Account, showcasing its applicability and versatility for the synthesis of complex resorcylate products.

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