Modular Total Synthesis and Antimycobacterial Activity of Rufomycins
Max J. Bedding, Bryton C. Forster, Andrew M. Giltrap, Maxwell T. Stevens, Leo Corcilius, Warwick J. Britton, Richard J. Payne
Organic Letters · 2024-12
Abstract
The rufomycins are a family of nonribosomal cyclic peptides isolated from the deep sea-dwelling Streptomyces atratus. Herein, we describe the total synthesis of six congeners in the rufomycin family. Synthesis was achieved through a modular solid-phase strategy, incorporating synthetic nonproteinogenic amino acids: l-2-amino-4-hexenoic acid, tert-prenyl-l-tryptophan (and related (S)-epoxide), and N-methyl-δ-hydroxy-l-leucine. Following macrolactamization, these peptides were further diversified through late-stage oxidation and secondary cyclization to furnish a library of six synthetic natural products. Rufomycins 4 and 22, bearing an unusual 6-hydroxypiperidin-2-one structural motif, exhibited impressive activity against the virulent H37Rv strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MIC50 = 350–670 nM).
MeSH terms
- Antimycobacterial
- Chemistry
- Modular design
- Total synthesis
- Combinatorial chemistry
- Stereochemistry