Many natural products have been used as a model for the development of new drugs and agrochemicals. Following this strategy 11 rubrolide analogues, bearing electron-withdrawing and -donating groups at both benzene rings, were prepared starting from commercially available mucobromic acid. The ability of all compounds to inhibit the photosynthetic electron transport chain in the chloroplast was investigated. The rubrolide analogues were effective in interfering with the lightdriven ferricyanide reduction by isolated chloroplasts. The IC50 values of the most active derivatives are in fact only 1 order of magnitude higher than those of commercial herbicides sharing the same mode of action, such as Diuron (0.27 μM). QSAR studies indicate that the most efficient compounds are those having higher ability to accept electrons, either by a reduction process or by an electrophilic reaction mechanism. The results obtained suggest that the rubrolide analogues represent promising candidates for the development of new active principles targeting photosynthesis to be used as herbicides.
Synthesis of rubrolides analogs as new inhibitors of the photosynthetic electron transport chain.
FORLANI, Giuseppe
2012
Abstract
Many natural products have been used as a model for the development of new drugs and agrochemicals. Following this strategy 11 rubrolide analogues, bearing electron-withdrawing and -donating groups at both benzene rings, were prepared starting from commercially available mucobromic acid. The ability of all compounds to inhibit the photosynthetic electron transport chain in the chloroplast was investigated. The rubrolide analogues were effective in interfering with the lightdriven ferricyanide reduction by isolated chloroplasts. The IC50 values of the most active derivatives are in fact only 1 order of magnitude higher than those of commercial herbicides sharing the same mode of action, such as Diuron (0.27 μM). QSAR studies indicate that the most efficient compounds are those having higher ability to accept electrons, either by a reduction process or by an electrophilic reaction mechanism. The results obtained suggest that the rubrolide analogues represent promising candidates for the development of new active principles targeting photosynthesis to be used as herbicides.I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.