Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B (Oct 2024)

Targeted isolation of antiviral cinnamoylphloroglucinol-terpene adducts from Cleistocalyx operculatus by building blocks-based molecular networking approach

  • Jianguo Song,
  • Ruili Huang,
  • Jialiao Cai,
  • Zhenlong Wu,
  • Lijun Hu,
  • Wanyang Sun,
  • Xiaojun Huang,
  • Rongrong He,
  • Wei Tang,
  • Wencai Ye,
  • Ying Wang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 10
pp. 4443 – 4460

Abstract

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The building blocks-based molecular network (BBMN) strategy was applied to the phytochemical investigation of Cleistocalyx operculatus, leading to the targeted isolation of eighteen novel cinnamoylphloroglucinol-terpene adducts (CPTAs) with diverse skeleton types (cleistoperones A–R, 1–18). Their structures including absolute configurations were determined by extensive spectroscopic methods, quantum chemical calculations, and single-crystal X-ray crystallographic experiments. Cleistoperone A (1), consisting of a cinnamoylphloroglucinol motif and two linear monoterpene moieties, represents an unprecedented macrocyclic CPTA, whose densely functionalized tricyclo[15.3.1.03,8]heneicosane bridge ring skeleton contains an enolizable β,β′-triketone system and two different kinds of stereogenic elements (including five point and three planar chiralities). Cleistoperones B and C (2 and 3) are two new skeletal CPTAs with an unusual coupling pattern between the (nor)monoterpene moiety and the cinnamoyl chain of the cinnamoylphloroglucinol unit. Cleistoperone D (4) possesses an unprecedented cage-like 6/6/6/4/6-fused heteropentacyclic scaffold. The plausible biosynthetic pathways for 1–18 were also proposed. Notably, compounds 1, 4, 7, 8, and 18 exhibited significant antiviral activity against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). The most potent one, cleistoperone A (1) with IC50 value of 1.71 ± 0.61 μmol/L, could effectively inhibit virus replication via affecting the Akt/mTOR/p70S6K signaling pathway.

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