Unusual Pharmacophores and New Tools for Cross-Coupling

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R35 · $642,405 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary/ Abstract Bioassay-guided fractionation of cells often uncovers small molecules that bind macromolecular targets in new and unexpected ways. Exploration of the chemical reactivity and target selectivity of these metabolites has laid the chemical foundation for the development of new biological tools and therapeutics. The molecular architecture of secondary metabolites is challenging and different than the chemical space explored by most medicinal chemistry campaigns: there is recognized `natural product-like' space and we lack the tools to explore it with the same depth as `drug-like' space. Our lab has developed new tools to more easily access natural products, and has focused our efforts on secondary metabolite families that appear to covalently modify their targets as the basis for their phenotypic effects. Our chemical syntheses are deliberately concise and easily-scaled to enable subsequent investigation into reactivity and biological activity. The current application significantly advances these efforts, provides compelling preliminary data as a foundation for the proposed work, and delves into new areas of chemistry. In this proposal, two areas of research are described: 1. the identification and investigation of covalently-reactive pharmacophores associated with the asmarine alkaloids, Nuphar dimers and isocyanoterpenes; and 2. the development of cross-coupling technology to access `natural product-space' more generally. In the first area, we disclose a preliminary cellular target of the unusual N-hydroxydiazepine purine (HAP) pharmacophore of the asmarine alkaloids and address unsolved problems posed by this motif. As part of a theme that runs throughout our work, we show how the aims of chemistry and biology intersect in the study of covalently reactive secondary metabolites. We also investigate the sulfur-electrophilicity of the Nuphar dimers, a property recently demonstrated by our lab to operate in organic solvent and cellular environments. We propose solutions to the challenging stereochemical problems posed by the monohydroxy dimers and show how chemistry developed in our lab can generate a combinatorial library of sulfur electrophiles. In a third area, we investigate the challenging architecture and reactivity of the isocyanoterpenes, which we recently demonstrated can kill Plasmodia by an alternative mechanism to the heme detoxification pathway often suggested. We also propose a novel caging strategy to render the isonitriles systemically-viable. In part two, we investigate a bimetallic catalytic cycle capable of solving long-standing problems in chemical synthesis. The proposed methodology is supported by proof-of-principle examples and provides chemists the reaction vehicles necessary to `escape from flatland.'

Key facts

NIH application ID
9891859
Project number
5R35GM122606-04
Recipient
SCRIPPS RESEARCH INSTITUTE, THE
Principal Investigator
Ryan Ashok Shenvi
Activity code
R35
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$642,405
Award type
5
Project period
2017-04-01 → 2022-03-31