posted on 2017-12-13, 00:00authored byJeremy
J. Roach, Yusuke Sasano, Cullen L. Schmid, Saheem Zaidi, Vsevolod Katritch, Raymond C. Stevens, Laura M. Bohn, Ryan A. Shenvi
Salvinorin
A (SalA) is a plant metabolite that agonizes the human kappa-opioid receptor (κ-OR) with high affinity and
high selectivity over mu- and delta-opioid receptors. Its therapeutic potential has stimulated extensive
semisynthetic studies and total synthesis campaigns. However, structural
modification of SalA has been complicated by its instability, and
efficient total synthesis has been frustrated by its dense, complex
architecture. Treatment of strategic bonds in SalA as dynamic and
dependent on structural perturbation enabled the identification of
an efficient retrosynthetic pathway. Here we show that deletion of
C20 simultaneously stabilizes the SalA skeleton, simplifies its synthesis,
and retains its high affinity and selectivity for the κ-OR.
The resulting 10-step synthesis now opens the SalA scaffold to deep-seated
property modification. Finally, we describe a workflow to identify
structural changes that retain molecular complexity, but reduce synthetic
complexitytwo related, but independent ways of looking at
complexity.