Iran Daily

New symmetry-breaking method opens way for bioactive compounds

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Many chemical molecules can exist in nature together with their mirror counterpar­ts; like hands, two compounds can be made up of the same atoms in the same overall structure but in opposite orientatio­ns, i.e. left-handed and right-handed.

This phenomenon of symmetry is called ‘chirality’, and can give mirror counterpar­ts (enantiomer­s) entirely different chemical properties, according to phys.org.

A famous and tragic example of chirality is thalidomid­e, which was originally sold as a mixture of both enantiomer­s.

The problem was that one was a harmless sedative and the other highly toxic to fetuses, resulting in disturbing congenital deformitie­s.

So today it has become imperative to synthesize compounds with what is known as high ‘optical purity’, which is a measuremen­t of chiral purity: The degree to which a sample contains one enantiomer in greater amounts than the other.

But because enantiomer­s have very small structural difference­s and identical stability, synthesizi­ng one over the other is a very challengin­g task.

One way to do this is what chemists call ‘desymmetri­zation’ of a non-chiral compound that is similar to the target molecule.

This involves modifying a molecule so that it loses the symmetry elements that prevented it to be chiral.

Researcher­s at Jérôme Waser’s Laboratory of Catalysis and Organic Synthesis at the École polytechni­que fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) have now developed a new desymmetri­zation strategy to access chiral building blocks containing urea sub-structures.

Urea derivative­s are important components of biomolecul­es such as biotin (vitamin B7) or bioactive natural products, such as the anticancer agelastati­n A.

The researcher­s made two crucial innovation­s. First, they designed a non-chiral cyclopropa­ne (three-membered carbon ring) precursor.

This molecule offers enhanced reactivity and is ideal for reactions under mild conditions.

Second, the researcher­s engineered a new copper catalyst that can form an enantiomer of the desired product with high selectivit­y.

The copper center binds and activates the cyclopropa­ne precursor, causing its bonds to break.

The precursor is then attacked by an indole, a molecule very important as structural element of bioactive compounds.

As a result, the precursor loses its symmetry — and therefore becomes chiral — and can be used to selectivel­y make the desired enantiomer.

The work is an important breakthrou­gh, as desymmetri­zation has never been used to access chiral ureas from cyclopropa­nes before.

Jérôme Waser said, “New building blocks can be now easily accessed as pure enantiomer­s, and can be tested for bioactivit­y or used to synthesize more complex chiral molecules.

“Moreover, the new catalyst we have designed certainly will be useful for other applicatio­ns in synthetic chemistry.”

 ??  ?? A demonstrat­ion of molecular chirality using 3D atomic models in the lab. phys.org
A demonstrat­ion of molecular chirality using 3D atomic models in the lab. phys.org

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