The anthracycline antibiotics daunorubicin and doxorubicin have been used widely as anticancer drugs, but their cardiotoxicity limits their clinical use. We describe here the preparation of a small panel of daunorubicin analogues in which the anthraquinone core is replaced with simpler aromatic moieties that lack a quinone functionality. The targets consist of a functionalized 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-naphthalene or 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-anthracene core bound to one of three monosaccharides: daunosamine, acosamine, or 4-amino-2,3,6-trideoxy-l-threo-hexopyranose. Key steps in the synthesis included an enantioselective ring opening of benzo-fused norbornene derivatives for the preparation of the core structures and the use of silver hexafluorophosphate-promoted thioglycoside activation in the glycosylation of these cores. Evaluation of these compounds against the MCF-7 cancer cell line demonstrated that the identity of the carbohydrate moiety appeared to have little influence on the cytotoxicity. Moreover, the analogues with the 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-naphthalene core showed no cytotoxicity, while those possessing the 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-anthracene moiety were more active. The IC50 values for the latter group of compounds were in the range of 94-134 microM, compared to 17 microM for doxorubicin and 5 microM for daunorubicin.
The absolute configurations of three synthesized anthracycline analogues have been determined using vibrational circular dichroism (VCD) spectroscopy and the density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The experimental VCD spectra of the three compounds have been measured for the first time in the film state, prepared from their CDCl(3) solutions. Conformational searches for the monomers and some dimers of the three compounds have been performed at the DFT level using the B3LYP functional and the 6-311G** and 6-311++G** basis sets. The corresponding vibrational absorption and VCD spectra have been calculated. The good agreement between the experimental and the calculated spectra allows one to assign the absolute configurations of the three compounds with high confidence. In addition, the dominant conformers of the three compounds have also been identified.
In the title compound, C29H34O2Si, the isopropenyl group is oriented trans and the OH group is cis to the tert‐butyldiphenylsiloxy (OTBDPS) group. The cyclohexane ring of the tetrahydronaphthalene system adopts a half‐chair conformation in which the stereogenic centre at the ring C3 atom is projected above the plane of the ring (3H2), minimizing steric congestion between the substituents on the ring C3 atom and the bulky OTBDPS group.
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