Xanthones from fungi, lichens, and bacteria : the natural products and their synthesis


Autoria(s): Masters, Kye-Simeon; Bräse, Stefan
Data(s)

22/05/2012

Resumo

Many fungi, lichens, and bacteria produce xanthones (derivatives of 9H-xanthen-9-one, “xanthone” from the Greek “xanthos”, for “yellow”) as secondary metabolites. Xanthones are typically polysubstituted and occur as either fully aromatized, dihydro-, tetrahydro-, or, more rarely, hexahydro-derivatives. This family of compounds appeals to medicinal chemists because of their pronounced biological activity within a notably broad spectrum of disease states, a result of their interaction with a correspondingly diverse range of target biomolecules. This has led to the description of xanthones as “privileged structures”.(1) Historically, the total synthesis of the natural products has mostly been limited to fully aromatized targets. Syntheses of the more challenging partially saturated xanthones have less frequently been reported, although the development in recent times of novel and reliable methods for the construction of the (polysubstituted) unsaturated xanthone core holds promise for future endeavors. In particular, the fascinating structural and biological properties of xanthone dimers and heterodimers may excite the synthetic or natural product chemist.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/69689/

Publicador

American Chemical Society

Relação

DOI:10.1021/cr100446h

Masters, Kye-Simeon & Bräse, Stefan (2012) Xanthones from fungi, lichens, and bacteria : the natural products and their synthesis. Chemical Reviews, 112(7), pp. 3717-3776.

Direitos

Copyright 2012 American Chemical Society

This article is freely available from the American Chemical Society website 12 months after the publication date. See links to publisher website in this record

Fonte

School of Chemistry, Physics & Mechanical Engineering; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #030502 Natural Products Chemistry #030503 Organic Chemical Synthesis
Tipo

Journal Article