Carpanone
Carpanone is a naturally occurring lignan-type natural product most widely known for the remarkably complex way nature prepares it, and the similarly remarkable success that an early chemistry group, that of Orville L. Chapman, had at mimicking nature's pathway. Carpanone is an organic compound first isolated from the carpano trees of Bougainville Island by Brophy and coworkers, trees from which the natural product derives its name. The hexacyclic lignan is one of a class of related diastereomers isolated from carpano bark as mixtures of equal proportion of the "handedness" of its components, and is notable in its stereochemical complexity, because it contains five contiguous stereogenic centers. The route by which this complex structure is achieved through biosynthesis involves a series of reactions that, almost instantly, take a molecule with little three-dimensionality to the complex final structure. Notably, Brophy and coworkers isolated the simpler carpacin, a phenylpropanoid with a 9-carbon framework, recognized its substructure as being dimerized within the complex carpanone structure, and proposed a hypothesis of how carpacin was converted to carpanone in plant cells:
Image:Carpacin.png|thumb|left|175px|Carpacin, an ortho-methoxystyrene, and a more common type of phenolic plant phenylpropanoid whose structure was recognized as being dimerized in carpanone
- carpacin underwent loss of a methyl group from the ring methoxy group to provide the phenol, desmethylcarpacin,
- this phenol intermediate then underwent a phenolic coupling to generate a dimeric intermediate, which was
- followed immediately by a Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction to create 2 new rings, to give the final carpanone product.
Carpanone itself is limited in its pharmacologic and biologic activities, but related analogs arrived at by variations of the Brophy-Chapman approach have shown activities as tool compounds relevant to mammalian exocytosis and vesicular traffic, and provided therapeutic "hits" in antiinfective, antihypertensive, and hepatoprotective areas.
The original Chapman design and synthesis is considered a classic in total synthesis, and one that highlights the power of biomimetic synthesis.
Total synthesis
The first total synthesis of carpanone was the biomimetic approach published by Chapman et al. in 1971. The required desmethylcarpacin, shown below as the starting molecule in the scheme, is acquired in two high-yield steps involving three transformations:- allylation of the phenolic anion generated after treatment of sesamol with potassium carbonate and allyl bromide,
- followed by a thermal Claisen rearrangement to move the O-allyl group onto the adjacent site on the aromatic ring, and then
- thermal isomerization of the Claisen product, to move the terminal olefin into conjugation with the ring.
Image:Carpanone synthesis.png|thumb|right|450px|Biomimetic transformation of desmethylcarpacin into carpanone in one pot, via a tandem oxidative coupling–Diels Alder reaction sequence. Note, in the second image in the scheme, the two lines crossing at the top are the two molecules overlapping each other. In this scheme, Pd is shown forming a complex between two monomers of carpacin, then mediating oxidative 8-8' phenolic coupling of their alkene tails to generate a dimer, a trans-ortho-quinone methide intermediate, followed immediately by an endo''-selective inverse electron-demand hetero-Diels-Alder reaction, to close the rings and generates the stereocenters.
For the elegance of its "one-pot construction of a tetracyclic scaffold with complete stereocontrol of five contiguous stereo centers", the original Chapman design and synthesis is "ow considered a classic in total synthesis" that "highlights the power of biomimetic synthesis".