Article | REF: PHA2005 V1

Bio-inspired total synthesis of natural products Concepts

Authors: Erwan POUPON, Laurent EVANNO, Guillaume VINCENT

Publication date: December 10, 2019

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ABSTRACT

In this article, the way chemists can devise bio-inspired total synthesis of natural products is exposed and analyzed. It is in the context of “the art of total synthesis” that the approach will enroll. A “retrobiosynthetic” analysis will be crucial. A special thought on the biosynthesis of natural substances is necessary and will imply a good mastering of the main classes of natural products. A tool box of “good reactions” exploited in biochemistry is presented as well as an analysis of concepts, pre-requisites and rigorous conditions to bring together. In the semantic field, terms like “bio-inspiration” and “biomimicry” will be explicated.

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AUTHORS

  • Erwan POUPON: University Professor, - BioCIS, - Université Paris-Saclay, Université Paris-Sud, CNRS, Faculty of Pharmacy, Châtenay-Malabry, France

  • Laurent EVANNO: University lecturer, - BioCIS, - Université Paris-Saclay, Université Paris-Sud, Faculté de Pharmacie, Châtenay-Malabry, France

  • Guillaume VINCENT: Director of research at CNRS, - ICMMO, Orsay Institute of Molecular and Materials Chemistry, - Université Paris-Saclay, Université Paris-Sud, CNRS, Faculté des Sciences d'Orsay, France

 INTRODUCTION

Taking inspiration from nature... For organic chemists who are passionate about the "art of total synthesis", bio-inspired or biomimetic strategies are an original – and often effective – way of approaching retrosynthesis (i.e. the logical approach invented by chemists to design a synthetic route).

The notion of "natural substance" is made explicit in order to evoke their biosynthetic pathways, i.e. the enzymatic machinery at work in cells to assemble these molecules. Indeed, the biosynthetic pathways (known or postulated) of the sometimes incredibly complex molecules produced by living beings form the basis of the concept and serve as a source of inspiration for the chemist. Nature offers a limited panel of "good reactions" (often known for their robustness), which it is sometimes possible to mimic in the laboratory under abiotic conditions (without the use of enzymes). The main reaction intermediates are found in reactions used in biochemistry (carbocations, carbanions, free radicals, for example), as well as in so-called pericyclic reactions. The aim of this article is to provide fundamental concepts and a general framework for designing a bio-inspired strategy for the total synthesis of complex molecules. The strategy will be applicable in fine chemistry in a research and development context, for example, of molecules with biological activity (natural substances frequently having powerful biological activities). The article [PHA 2 006] discusses examples of successful applications of such strategies and opens up further perspectives.

A glossary of terms is provided at the end of the article.

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