315 resultados para Enantioselective
Resumo:
Der Suche nach neuen Wirkstoffen für den chemischen Pflanzenschutz kommt insbesondere vor dem Hintergrund der steigenden Weltbevölkerung und weniger zur Verfügung stehenden kulturfähigen Ackerflächen eine stetig wachsende Bedeutung zu. Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Synthese von cyclischen Peptiden und Depsipeptiden, die aufgrund ihrer biologischen Aktivität als potentielle Insektizide für den chemischen Pflanzenschutz in Frage kommen. Darüber hinaus sollten von Kohlenhydraten abgeleitete Katalysatoren zur enantioselektiven Cyanhydrinsynthese entwickelt werden, um einen leichten Zugang zu den Bausteinen der Depsipeptide zu ermöglichen. Als vielversprechender Naturstoff mit insektiziden Eigenschaften gilt das cyclische Pentapeptid Cycloaspeptid E, dessen Totalsynthese in 10 Stufen mit einer Gesamtausbeute von 25% erreicht wurde, sodass die Verbindung für biologische Tests bereitgestellt werden konnte. Zusätzlich gelang die Kristallisation der Verbindung, was eine Röntgenstrukturanalyse ermöglichte. Ein Derivat von Cycloaspeptid E sollte 2-Aminonicotinsäure anstelle von Anthranilsäure enthalten. Die Synthese dieser Verbindung wurde auf drei Wegen versucht. Dabei zeigte sich, dass es bei einer zur Totalsynthese des Naturstoffs analogen Strategie zur quantitativen Bildung eines Diketopiperazins kommt. Auf den anderen Routen ließ sich entweder ein Kupplungsschritt nicht realisieren, oder die Verbindung erwies sich unter den gewählten Bedingungen als instabil. Die Darstellung eines 2-Aminonicotinsäure-Derivats von Cycloaspeptid E bleibt daher weiterhin ein ungelöstes Problem, das weiterer Forschung bedarf. Verticilid A1 ist ein cyclisches Depsipeptid, das aufgrund seiner Bindungsfähigkeit an den Ryanodinrezeptor von Insekten, als Leitstruktur für die Suche nach neuen Insektiziden von Interesse ist. Um zu untersuchen, wie wichtig die Esterbindungen im Molekül für die biologische Aktivität sind, sollte das entsprechende Amid-Derivat und das Cyclodepsipeptid mit nur zwei statt vier Esterbindungen hergestellt werden. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass eine zur Darstellung von Verticilid A1 analoge Syntheseroute zu einer ausgeprägten Epimerisierung führt. Eine lineare Synthese der Derivate endet in der Bildung des Diketopiperazins. Weiterhin wurden zwei neue, zueinander pseudoenantiomere Vanadium(IV)-Katalysatoren auf Basis von D-Glucose einerseits und L-Xylose andererseits dargestellt. Diese lassen sich in fünf bzw. 14 Stufen synthetisieren und liefern in der enantioselektiven Katalyse von Mandelsäurenitril Enantiomerenüberschüsse von 89% bzw. 91% bei hohen Ausbeuten. Zusammenfassend lässt sich feststellen, dass im Rahmen dieser Arbeit die Totalsynthese von Cycloaspeptid E erfolgreich durchgeführt wurde, und die Syntheseversuche von weiteren cyclischen Peptiden wichtige Erkenntnisse für weitere Synthesen lieferten. Mit den beiden hergestellten Vanadium(IV)-Komplexen wurden zwei potente, auf Kohlenhydraten basierende Katalysatoren für die enantioselektive Synthese von Cyanhydrinen entwickelt.
Resumo:
Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Totalsynthese von Monilicin. Seine Chlor- und Brom-Derivate wurden aus Monilinia fructicola isoliert und zeigten fungizide Wirkung. Die Schlüsselschritte der Synthese sind der Aufbau des ε-Lakton, die Einführung der exozyklischen Carboxymethyl-Gruppe und der Einbau der Doppelbindung in das Lakton. Es wurden drei Synthesestrategien verfolgt, wobei die Bildung des Laktons über eine Veresterung erfolgen sollte.rnÜber enantioselektive Syntheseschritte sollten die reinen Enantiomere erhalten werden. Ausgehend vom Orcinol erfolgte auf allen Syntheserouten zuerst der Aufbau des 5-Hydroxy-7-methylchromon-Grundgerüstes, und anschließend dessen Funktionalisierung in den Positionen 2 und 3. Der Ringschluss zum ε-Lakton gelang über eine Steglich-Veresterung. Syntheseweg A lieferte nach der Oxidation der primären exozyklischen Alkoholgruppe und anschließender Methylierung das Dihydromonilicin. Auf dem Syntheseweg B gelang die Einführung der späteren exozyklischen Carboxymethyl-Gruppe vor der Laktonisierung. Aus der Dicarbonsäure konnte zum ersten Mal auch der Naturstoff Oxalicumon C totalsynthetisch dargestellt und seine absolute Konfiguration aufgeklärt werden. Nach selektiver Hydrolyse konnte aus Oxalicumon C ebenfalls das Dihydromonilicin synthetisiert werden. Die Darstellung von Monilicin durch Einführung der Doppelbindung in das Dihydromonilicin oder bereits vor der Laktonisierung (Syntheseweg C) konnte nicht erreicht werden. Einige der Chromon-Derivate zeigten fungizide und zytotoxische Aktivitäten. rn
Resumo:
During the thesis period a new class of atropisomeric xanthine derivatives has been studied. We decided to focus our attention on these purine bases because of their various biological activities, that could play an important role in the discovery of new bioactive atropisomers. The synthesized compounds bear an Aryl-N chiral axis in position 1 of the xanthine scaffold, around which the rotation is prevented by the presence of bulky ortho substituents. Through a retro synthetic analysis we synthesized three atropisomeric structures bearing in position 1 of the purine scaffold respectively an o-tolyl, o-nitrophenyl and a 1-naphthyl group. The conformational studies by DFT simulations showed that the interconversion energy barrier between the two available skewed conformations is higher enough to obtain thermally stable atropisomers. After the separation of the atropisomers, the experimental energy of interconversion was investigated by means of kinetic studies following the thermal racemization process using an enantioselective HPLC column. The absolute configuration of each atropisomer was assigned by experimental ECD analysis and TD-DFT simulations of the ECD spectra.
Resumo:
The aim of this master’s research thesis was the employment of an enantiopure 1,3-aminoalcohol, the 1-(α-aminobenzyl)-2-naphthol, known as Betti base, for the synthesis of some novel compounds which show a C2 symmetry. Some of these compounds, after derivatization, were used as ligands in association with transition metals to prepare some catalysts for enantioselective catalytic reactions. Some aminoalcohol (Salan-type) derivatives of these compounds were obtained upon reduction and in some cases it was possible to obtain complexes with transition metals such as Mn, Ni, Co and Cu. Furthermore a novel 6-membered analogue bisoxazoline ligand, 2,6-bis((R)-1-Phenyl-1H-naphtho[1,2-e][1,3]oxazin-3-yl)pyridine, was obtained and from it two Cu-complexes were prepared. The metal complexes were employed in some reactions to test the asymmetric induction, which was in some cases up to discrete values.
Resumo:
In this work, we present the first regio- and enantioselective organocatalytic nucleophilic dearomatization of activated N-alkyl pyridinium salts. In particular, N-benzyl pyridinium bromides bearing electron-withdrawing substituents at the C3 position of the pyridine ring were chosen as substrates. These compounds were easily obtained through an alkylation reaction between benzyl bromides and the corresponding 3-substituted pyridines. Then, a wide range of nucleophiles and organocatalysts was tested, providing the best results when indole, a thiourea derived from quinidine and 1-benzyl-3-nitropyridinum bromide were employed as the nucleophile, the catalyst and the pyridinium salt, respectively. Subsequently, the reaction conditions were optimised evaluating different bases, solvents, N-benzylic protecting groups, molar concentrations and temperatures. With the optimized condition in hand, the scope of the reaction with different substituted indoles was explored, affording the corresponding 1,4-dihydropyridines in good yields, regio- and enantio-selectivities. In addition, several experiments were carried out in order to understand the mechanism of the reaction, showing an unusual pathway involving a covalently bound intermediate formed by addition of the catalyst to the pyridine unit.
Resumo:
3,5-dimethyl-4-nitroisoxazole derivatives are useful synthetic intermediates as the isoxazole nucleus chemically behaves as an ester, but establish better-defined interactions with chiral catalysts and lability of its N-O aromatic bond can unveil other groups such as 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds or carboxylic acids. In the present work, these features are employed in a 3,5-dimethyl-4-nitroisoxazole based synthesis of the γ-amino acid pregabalin, a medication for the treatment of epilepsy and neuropatic pain, in which this moiety is fundamental for the enantioselective formation of a chiral center by interaction with doubly-quaternized cinchona phase-transfer catalysts, whose ability of asymmetric induction will be investigated. Influence of this group in cinchona-derivatives catalysed stereoselective addition and Darzens reaction of a mono-chlorinated 3,5-dimethyl-4-nitroisoxazole and benzaldehyde will also be investigated.
Resumo:
During the past two decades, chiral capillary electrophoresis (CE) emerged as a promising, effective and economic approach for the enantioselective determination of drugs and their metabolites in body fluids, tissues and in vitro preparations. This review discusses the principles and important aspects of CE-based chiral bioassays, provides a survey of the assays developed during the past 10 years and presents an overview of the key achievements encountered in that time period. Applications discussed encompass the pharmacokinetics of drug enantiomers in vivo and in vitro, the elucidation of the stereoselectivity of drug metabolism in vivo and in vitro, and bioanalysis of drug enantiomers of toxicological, forensic and doping interest. Chiral CE was extensively employed for research purposes to investigate the stereoselectivity associated with hydroxylation, dealkylation, carboxylation, sulfoxidation, N-oxidation and ketoreduction of drugs and metabolites. Enantioselective CE played a pivotal role in many biomedical studies, thereby providing new insights into the stereoselective metabolism of drugs in different species which might eventually lead to new strategies for optimization of pharmacotherapy in clinical practice.
Resumo:
Ketamine is widely used as an anesthetic in a variety of drug combinations in human and veterinary medicine. Recently, it gained new interest for use in long-term pain therapy administered in sub-anesthetic doses in humans and animals. The purpose of this study was to develop a physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPk) model for ketamine in ponies and to investigate the effect of low-dose ketamine infusion on the amplitude and the duration of the nociceptive withdrawal reflex (NWR). A target-controlled infusion (TCI) of ketamine with a target plasma level of 1 microg/ml S-ketamine over 120 min under isoflurane anesthesia was performed in Shetland ponies. A quantitative electromyographic assessment of the NWR was done before, during and after the TCI. Plasma levels of R-/S-ketamine and R-/S-norketamine were determined by enantioselective capillary electrophoresis. These data and two additional data sets from bolus studies were used to build a PBPk model for ketamine in ponies. The peak-to-peak amplitude and the duration of the NWR decreased significantly during TCI and returned slowly toward baseline values after the end of TCI. The PBPk model provides reliable prediction of plasma and tissue levels of R- and S-ketamine and R- and S-norketamine. Furthermore, biotransformation of ketamine takes place in the liver and in the lung via first-pass metabolism. Plasma concentrations of S-norketamine were higher compared to R-norketamine during TCI at all time points. Analysis of the data suggested identical biotransformation rates from the parent compounds to the principle metabolites (R- and S-norketamine) but different downstream metabolism to further metabolites. The PBPk model can provide predictions of R- and S-ketamine and norketamine concentrations in other clinical settings (e.g. horses).
Resumo:
A robust CE method for the simultaneous determination of the enantiomers of ketamine and norketamine in equine plasma is described. It is based upon liquid-liquid extraction of ketamine and norketamine at alkaline pH from 1 mL plasma followed by analysis of the reconstituted extract by CE in the presence of a pH 2.5 Tris-phosphate buffer containing 10 mg/mL highly sulfated beta-CD as chiral selector. Enantiomer plasma levels between 0.04 and 2.5 microg/mL are shown to provide linear calibration graphs. Intraday and interday precisions evaluated from peak area ratios (n = 5) at the lowest calibrator concentration are < 8 and < 14%, respectively. The LOD for all enantiomers is 0.01 microg/mL. After i.v. bolus administration of 2.2 mg/kg racemic ketamine, the assay is demonstrated to provide reliable data for plasma samples of ponies under isoflurane anesthesia, of ponies premedicated with xylazine, and of one horse that received romifidine, L-methadone, guaifenisine, and isoflurane. In animals not premedicated with xylazine, the ketamine N-demethylation is demonstrated to be enantioselective. The concentrations of the two ketamine enantiomers in plasma are equal whereas S-norketamine is found in a larger amount than R-norketamine. In the group receiving xylazine, data obtained do not reveal this stereoselectivity.
Resumo:
Biological homochirality on earth and its tremendous consequences for pharmaceutical science and technology has led to an ever increasing interest in the selective production, the resolution and the detection of enantiomers of a chiral compound. Chiral surfaces and interfaces that can distinguish between enantiomers play a key role in this respect as enantioselective catalysts as well as for separation purposes. Despite the impressive progress in these areas in the last decade, molecular-level understanding of the interactions that are at the origin of enantiodiscrimination are lagging behind due to the lack of powerful experimental techniques to spot these interactions selectively with high sensitivity. In this article, techniques based on infrared spectroscopy are highlighted that are able to selectively target the chiral properties of interfaces. In particular, these methods are the combination of Attenuated Total Reflection InfraRed (ATR-IR) with Modulation Excitation Spectroscopy (MES) to probe enantiodiscriminating interactions at chiral solid-liquid interfaces and Vibrational Circular Dichroism (VCD), which is used to probe the structure of chirally-modified metal nanoparticles. The former technique aims at suppressing signals arising from non-selective interactions, which may completely hide the signals of interest due to enantiodiscriminating interactions. Recently, this method was successfully applied to investigate enantiodiscrimination at self-assembled monolayers of chiral thiols on gold surfaces. The nanometer size analogues of the latter--gold nanoparticles protected by a monolayer of a chiral thiol--are amenable to VCD spectroscopy. It is shown that this technique yields detailed structural information on the adsorption mode and the conformation of the adsorbed thiol. This may also turn out to be useful to clarify how chirality can be bestowed onto the metal core itself and the nature of the chirality of the latter, which is manifested in the metal-based circular dichroism activity of these nanoparticles.
Resumo:
A new series of chiral ferrosalen ligands was designed and synthesized. The special feature of the ferrosalen ligands is that the chirality originated from the planar chiral ferrocenyl structure. For most known salen ligands, chirality comes from central and axial chiral centers. The key building block for the construction of these ferrosalen ligands was synthesized stereoselectively by a chiral auxiliary approach. This approach does not consume any chiral material, and does not require chiral HPLC resolution. Using this method, nine ligands were prepared using ferrocene as the starting material. In addition, the steric hindrance was modulated by changing the cyclopentadienyl group to the more bulky pentamethylcyclopentadienyl- and pentaphenylcyclopentadienyl- groups. The structure of these ligands was established by 1H and 13C NMR. The structure of a ferrosalen-Cu (II) complex was determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. All the chiral ferrosalen ligands were tested in catalytic asymmetric reactions including enantioselective carbonyl-ene reaction, enantioselective Strecker-type reaction and enantioselective silylcyanation. For the carbonyl-ene reaction, up to 99% yield and 29% enantiomeric excess (ee) were obtained using ligand-Co (III) as the catalysts; For the Strecker-type reaction, a maximum of 20% ee was obtained using ligand-AlCl as the catalyst; For the silylcyanation reaction, up to 99% yield and 26% ee were obtained using ligand-AlCl as the catalyst.
Resumo:
Stereoselectivity has to be considered for pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic features of ketamine. Stereoselective biotransformation of ketamine was investigated in equine microsomes in vitro. Concentration curves were constructed over time, and enzyme activity was determined for different substrate concentrations using equine liver and lung microsomes. The concentrations of R/S-ketamine and R/S-norketamine were determined by enantioselective capillary electrophoresis. A two-phase model based on Hill kinetics was used to analyze the biotransformation of R/S-ketamine into R/S-norketamine and, in a second step, into R/S-downstream metabolites. In liver and lung microsomes, levels of R-ketamine exceeded those of S-ketamine at all time points and S-norketamine exceeded R-norketamine at time points below the maximum concentration. In liver and lung microsomes, significant differences in the enzyme velocity (V(max)) were observed between S- and R-norketamine formation and between V(max) of S-norketamine formation when S-ketamine was compared to S-ketamine of the racemate. Our investigations in microsomal reactions in vitro suggest that stereoselective ketamine biotransformation in horses occurs in the liver and the lung with a slower elimination of S-ketamine in the presence of R-ketamine. Scaling of the in vitro parameters to liver and lung organ clearances provided an excellent fit with previously published in vivo data and confirmed a lung first-pass effect.
Resumo:
This study quantitatively investigated the analgesic action of a low-dose constant-rate-infusion (CRI) of racemic ketamine (as a 0.5 mg kg(-1) bolus and at a dose rate of 10 microg kg(-1) min(-1)) in conscious dogs using a nociceptive withdrawal reflex (NWR) and with enantioselective measurement of plasma levels of ketamine and norketamine. Withdrawal reflexes evoked by transcutaneous single and repeated electrical stimulation (10 pulses, 5 Hz) of the digital plantar nerve were recorded from the biceps femoris muscle using surface electromyography. Ketamine did not affect NWR thresholds or the recruitment curves after a single nociceptive stimulation. Temporal summation (as evaluated by repeated stimuli) and the evoked behavioural response scores were however reduced compared to baseline demonstrating the antinociceptive activity of ketamine correlated with the peak plasma concentrations. Thereafter the plasma levels at pseudo-steady-state did not modulate temporal summation. Based on these experimental findings low-dose ketamine CRI cannot be recommended for use as a sole analgesic in the dog.
Resumo:
Threo-methylphenidate is a chiral psychostimulant drug widely prescribed to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in children and adolescents. An enantioselective CE-based assay with head-column field-amplified sample stacking for analysis of threo-methylphenidate enantiomers in liquid/liquid extracts of oral fluid is described. Analytes are electrokinetically injected across a short water plug placed at the capillary inlet and become stacked at the interface between plug and buffer. Enantiomeric separation occurs within a few minutes in a pH 3.0 phosphate/triethanolamine buffer containing 20 mg/mL (2-hydroxypropyl)-β-CD as chiral selector. The assay with six point multilevel internal calibration provides a linear response for each enantiomer in the 10-200 ng/mL concentration range, is simple, inexpensive, and reproducible, and has an LOQ of 5 ng/mL. It was applied to oral fluid patient samples that were collected up to 12 h after intake of an immediate release tablet and two different extended release formulations with racemic methylphenidate. Drug profiles could thereby be assessed in a stereoselective way. Almost no levorotary threo-methylphenidate enantiomer was detected after intake of the two extended release formulations, whereas this enantiomer was detected during the first 2.5 h after intake of the immediate release preparation. The noninvasive collection of oral fluid is an attractive alternative to plasma for the monitoring of methylphenidate exposure in the pediatric community.
Resumo:
Ketamine and norketamine are being transported across the blood brain barrier and are also entering from blood into cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Enantioselective distributions of these compounds in brain and CSF have never been determined. The enantioselective CE based assay previously developed for equine plasma was adapted to the analysis of these compounds in equine brain via use of an acidic pre-extraction of interferences prior to liquid/liquid extraction at alkaline pH. CSF can be treated as plasma. With 100 mg of brain tissue and 0.5 mL of CSF or plasma, assay conditions for up to 30 nmol/g and 6 μM, respectively, of each enantiomer with LOQs of 0.5 nmol/g and 0.1 μM, respectively, were established and the assays were applied to equine samples. CSF and plasma samples analyzed stemmed from anesthetized patient horses and brain, CSF and plasma were obtained from anesthetized horses that were euthanized with an overdose of pentobarbital. Data obtained indicate that ketamine and norketamine enantiomers are penetrating into brain and CSF with those of ketamine being more favorably transported than norketamine, whereas metabolites of norketamine are hindered. More work is required to properly investigate possible stereoselectivities of the ketamine metabolism and transport of metabolites from blood into brain tissue and CSF.