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Synthesis of 12β-Methyl-18-nor-bile Acids.

Andreas LuxenburgerLawrence D HarrisElizabeth M UreRoselis A Landaeta AponteAnthony D WoolhouseScott A CameronChris D LingRoss O PiltzAndrew R LewisGraeme J GainsfordAlex Weymouth-WilsonRichard H Furneaux
Published in: ACS omega (2021)
Decoupling the roles of the farnesoid X nuclear receptor and Takeda G-protein-coupled bile acid receptor 5 is essential for the development of novel bile acid therapeutics targeting metabolic and neurodegenerative diseases. Herein, we describe the synthesis of 12β-methyl-18-nor-bile acids which may serve as probes in the search for new bile acid analogues with clinical applicability. A Nametkin-type rearrangement was applied to protected cholic acid derivatives, giving rise to tetra-substituted Δ13,14- and Δ13,17-unsaturated 12β-methyl-18-nor-bile acid intermediates (24a and 25a). Subsequent catalytic hydrogenation and deprotection yielded 12β-methyl-18-nor-chenodeoxycholic acid (27a) and its 17-epi-epimer (28a) as the two major reaction products. Optimization of the synthetic sequence enabled a chromatography-free route to prepare these bile acids at a multi-gram scale. In addition, the first cis-C-D ring-junctured bile acid and a new 14(13 → 12)-abeo-bile acid are described. Furthermore, deuteration experiments were performed to provide mechanistic insights into the formation of the formal anti-hydrogenation product 12β-methyl-18-nor-chenodeoxycholic acid (27a).
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • molecular docking
  • mass spectrometry
  • drug delivery
  • gram negative
  • binding protein
  • tandem mass spectrometry
  • fluorescence imaging
  • simultaneous determination