Part 1. Modular Approach to Obtaining Diverse Tetrahydroquinoline-Derived Polycyclic Skeletons for Use in High-Throughput Generation of Natural-Product-like Chemical Probes
Author(s) -
Michaël Prakesch,
Utpal Sharma,
Maya Sharma,
Shahriar Khadem,
Donald M. Leek,
Prabhat Arya
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of combinatorial chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1520-4774
pISSN - 1520-4766
DOI - 10.1021/cc060055i
Subject(s) - olefin fiber , olefin metathesis , modular design , chemistry , ring (chemistry) , combinatorial chemistry , solid phase synthesis , natural product , metathesis , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , computer science , polymer , peptide , biochemistry , polymerization , operating system
A practical synthesis of a tetrahydroaminoquinoline scaffold (12) was developed that used a stereocontrolled aza Michael as the key reaction. Three tetrahydroquinoline alkaloid-like, tricyclic derivatives 16, 18, and 19 with different medium to macrocyclic ring skeletons were obtained, using this scaffold as the starting material, in a modular manner. The macrocyclic compounds with an isolated olefin and an electron-deficient olefin were obtained by ring-closing metathesis approaches. Compounds 16 and 18 are unique and contain bridged 10- and 12-membered functionalized rings. The NMR studies of these compounds revealed interesting information on the conformation of the bicyclic scaffolds that was dependent on the nature and the size of the macrocyclic rings. Finally, this modular methodology, using compound 21 anchored onto the solid support, successfully led to the generation of different macrocyclic derivatives, 23, 25, and 27 in solid-phase synthesis. The solid-phase synthesis approach outlined in this article has the potential to generate tetrahydroquinoline-based tricyclic compounds containing different medium to macrocyclic architectures.
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