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  2. Synthetic approaches to the microtubule-stabilizing sponge alkaloid ceratamine A and desbromo analogues

Synthetic approaches to the microtubule-stabilizing sponge alkaloid ceratamine A and desbromo analogues

  • J Org Chem. 2009 Feb 6;74(3):995-1006. doi: 10.1021/jo802322s.
Matt Nodwell 1 Alban Pereira Jenna L Riffell Carla Zimmerman Brian O Patrick Michel Roberge Raymond J Andersen
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Chemistry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z1.
Abstract

Two synthetic approaches to the microtubule-stabilizing ceratamine Alkaloids are described. The first approach involved attempts to graft an aminoimidazole moiety onto an azepine ring to form partially hydrogenated versions of the unprecedented aromatic imidazo[4,5-d]azepine core of the ceratamines. This route ultimately failed because it was not possible to aromatize the partially hydrogenated ceratamine intermediates. A second approach started with tribromoimidazole that was sequentially metalated and functionalized to efficiently generate a key imidazole intermediate containing vinyl bromide and amide functionalities. An intramolecular Buchwald vinyl amidation reaction converted this key intermediate into a bicyclic imidazo[4,5-d]azepine that was at the same oxidation state as the aromatic core of the ceratamines. The 2-amino functionality present on the imidazole ring of the ceratamines was installed using a Buchwald/Hartwig amination reaction on a 2-chloroimidazole precursor. Deprotection and aromatization resulted in the first synthesis of desbromoceratamine A (55) and desmethyldesbromoceratamine A (60). An unanticipated addition of atmospheric oxygen was encountered during deprotection of the imidazole ring in the last step of the synthesis leading to C-11 oxygenated ceratamine analogues as byproducts. Evaluation of the synthetic ceratamines in a TG3 cell-based assay for mitotic arrest revealed that the C-14 and C-16 bromine substituents in ceratamine A (1) play a major role in the antimitotic potency of the natural product. The synthetic route to ceratamine analogues has provided sufficient quantities of desbromoceratamine A (55) for testing in mouse models of Cancer.

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