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Natural Rubrolides and Their Synthetic Congeners as Inhibitors of the Photosynthetic Electron Transport Chain.

Milandip KarakJaime A M AcostaHéctor F Cortés HernándezJohnny L CardonaGiuseppe ForlaniLuiz Cláudio Almeida Barbosa
Published in: Journal of natural products (2024)
Rubrolides are a family of naturally occurring 5-benzylidenebutenolides, which generally contain brominated phenol groups, and nearly half of them also present a chlorine attached to the butenolide core. Seven natural rubrolides were previously synthesized. When these compounds were tested against the model plant Raphanus sativus , six were found to exert a slight inhibition on plant growth. Aiming to exploit their scaffold as a model for the synthesis of new compounds targeting photosynthesis, nine new rubrolide analogues were prepared. The synthesis was accomplished in 2-4 steps with a 10-39% overall yield from 3,4-dichlorofuran-2(5 H )-one. All compounds were evaluated for their ability to inhibit the whole Hill reaction or excluding photosystem I (PSI). Several natural rubrolides and their analogues displayed good inhibitory potential (IC 50 = 2-8 μM). Molecular docking studies on the photosystem II-light harvesting complex II (PSII-LHCII supercomplex) binding site were also performed. Overall, data support the use of rubrolides as a model for the development of new active principles targeting the photosynthetic electron transport chain to be used as herbicides.
Keyphrases
  • molecular docking
  • electron transfer
  • plant growth
  • cancer therapy
  • drinking water
  • drug delivery
  • machine learning
  • human health
  • climate change
  • artificial intelligence
  • deep learning
  • case control