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Identification of the compound made in the original bio-transformation experiment #33
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@mattodd Have we ever gotten liver tox screens done in mice or rats? I suspect the electron deficient core might be a bit hard on the liver |
@MFernflower Details on biosynth should be in OpenSourceMalaria/OSM_To_Do_List#513; it's various liver microsomes. For identity of the R group - as of right now, I don't know so I'm leaving it as 'R' and that way I can't be wrong! I don't think it's a quinone however - we wouldn't be able to have the benzylic hydroxylation, and the chemical shifts of the pair of doublets would likely be more 6-7 ppm if it were a quinone. Will need to wait on more info - and expertise, from Scott and team. They're gonna rerun the original experiment as well which is fantastic |
@david1597 If it's of any help for your NMR work the distance between the O of the OCHF2 and the hydrogen of the added hydroxyl group is predicted by MMFF94 to be 492 pm - I think that's a bit far for shielding to happen???? Do you see any traces of sulfur in the NMR? I suspect the R might have been sulfated |
How hard would this be to make in a lab as a sort of control to verify potency of the dihydroxy motif??? @david1597 @mattodd |
Update 10/4/18 @mattodd, @edwintse and myself had a conference call with the team from Pfizer this morning.
Thanks to Scott, Greg and Raman for the call, and for the interest in working on this intriguing issue! |
Just trying to catch up on latest OSM developments... It's been a busy and productive month or two! Great detective work @david1597 - I particularly appreciated being able to download and look at the NMRs via your MestreNova file, and the presentation of all those stacked NMR traces is fantastic. Complete details of the structure seem so close! I don't have anything significant to put in the mix, but do have a couple of minor comments:
Once again, great work! |
Thanks @mcoster - comments, whether minor or major are always welcomed and appreciated! Small update:
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@david1597 thanks for the update - quick results are a beautiful aspect of having industry collaborators! Just another thought occurred to me... If the new compound is a phosphate ester or some other highly ionizable species, I would expect the hplc properties to be drastically different to the other compounds in the series. Certainly, I would expect it to move more than just an extra hydroxyl or two. Do we have details of retention times for this compound vs starting materials and other congeners? |
True @mcoster . Email came in overnight from the Pfizer team (@david1597 will I'm sure update when he's a moment away from busy lab work at the moment) suggesting that the compound has been re-made in the biosynthesis experiment, and extra data acquired, that supports a product with a benzylic oxidation (as per the OHOH). Awaiting the raw data to confirm, which we'll post as soon as we get it. (The Pfizer team are not (yet) on GH, so we have to relay like this at present) |
ICP-OES would tell us the if phosphorylation happened but that involves destruction of the sample and I do not know how much would be needed for ICP testing @david1597 @mattodd |
OK, a little more info - as Mat said above, the Pfizer team got back within 24 h with a further update. (We jumped the NMR queue on this one!)
The actual data should follow next week, this is right up to the minute news - but worth sharing now - and some time is needed to write it up first. The structure is shown below, it has been assigned MMV and OSM numbers. And, as it happens, I set about making this exact molecule earlier this week - details on that synthesis at #36. FC(F)OC(C=C1)=CC=C1C2=NN=C3C=NC=C(OCC(CO)(O)C4=CC=CC=C4)N32 |
Is this a single enantiomer? Perhaps try a chiral shift reagent? |
@drc007 compound currently under resynthesis is going to be racemic |
But what about compound from biotransformation? |
@mattodd do we know if the stuff made in vivo was racemic or single isomer? |
@mattodd @cdsouthan When we have unambiguously confirmed the structure what is the mechanism for correcting all the web pages, tweets, identifiers, PubChem? |
@mattodd @drc007 good question i.e. how do we keep our open records straight when these are revised/corrected?
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Sounds good, if we are working in the "open" we have an extra responsibility to ensure we don't contaminate the literature. |
@drc007 @MFernflower Scott indicated to us that the biotransformation would be a single enantiomer. |
@drc007 @cdsouthan Excellent points regarding how we correct everything.
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Innit just a small world. Article on the Obach team metabolic transformation work popped into my Twitter feed https://cen.acs.org/pharmaceuticals/drug-discovery/Mixtures-liver-enzymes-improve-drug/96/i17 |
Background
Earlier last year, a bio-transformation experiment created a product which exhibited a potency of <10 nM. At the time this was believed to be the para-phenol transformation. The compound with this structure was synthesised in the lab, and was found to have potency around 3.4 µM. Subsequent comparison of the NMR spectra revealed differences between the two and we now believe that the original structure proposed was incorrect. We need to identify what the original product was. This Issue is to discuss the NMR spectra of the original biosynthesis, compare to other related compounds made in our labs, and propose the structure of that original compound.
All spectra
downloadable as a MestraNova file: Pfizer compound comparison.zip
Observations and deductions of the NMR spectra
COSY indicates a para-substitution in the Pfizer compound.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/30584472/38227556-11fd0d30-3742-11e8-8830-d6994fb93791.png)
The chemical shifts of the LHS aromatics in the Pfizer compound are significantly different to the para substituted phenol (and aniline), potentially suggesting an electron withdrawing substituent in this para position.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/30584472/38228007-619ba8d6-3744-11e8-99ca-bab3deb34f25.png)
There is a peak(s) at around 11.3 in the Pfizer compound, which integrates to 2. This could indicate a carboxylic acid, or potentially two distinct acids. This would explain the observed chemical shift of the pair of aromatics, but I am unsure how this bio transformation would occur.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/30584472/38228038-a1cdff76-3744-11e8-8606-58c5ff956319.png)
There appears to be no benzylic CH in the Pfizer compound.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/30584472/38228066-c126135e-3744-11e8-98b6-f257335e852d.png)
The splitting of the CH2 directly attached to the core is simpler, each H is a doublet rather than doublet of doublets as observed in the phenol and aniline This is to be expected if 4 is true.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/30584472/38228126-1ddcc7b4-3745-11e8-8748-dfc591cfc350.png)
The triplet from the -OCHF2 proton is shifted (more shielded) in the Pfizer compound, whereas it occurs at a near identical position for the phenol, aniline and phenyl and hERG evador.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/30584472/38227957-1e553b28-3744-11e8-8f34-e173d0fc4d4b.png)
Is it possible that an intramolecular H-bond interaction is occurring between the proposed benzylic OH and the -OCHF2, causing this shift?
Proposed compound:
Based on the above, we are propose that the benzylic carbon was hydroxylated, and that an event also occurred in the para position of the LHS.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/30584472/38227244-afac6348-3740-11e8-8ec2-8bf020df5a09.png)
What else is currently happening?
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