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HIV-1 Integrase Inhibitor, Dihydroobionin B, and the Investigation of Its Extraordinary Specific Rotation.

Kazuki HashimotoKana KimuraKotaro IshidaEiji MoritaKazuaki TanakaMasaru Hashimoto
Published in: Journal of natural products (2023)
Dihydroobionin B ( 1 ), a chiral congener of known obionin B, was isolated from Pseudocoleophoma sp. KT4119, a freshwater fungus collected from a submerged wood block in Kochi Prefecture, Japan, in 2020. The planar structure of 1 was characterized by mass and NMR spectral analysis and confirmed by density functional theory (DFT)-based chemical shift calculations. Its absolute structure was determined by electronic circular dichroism spectral analysis. Notably, 1 exhibited an extraordinarily large specific rotation [[α] 20 D +1080 ( c 0.056, CHCl 3 )], which was verified by DFT-based specific rotation calculations. However, these calculations indicated that the sign of the specific rotation based on static analysis was insufficient to determine the absolute configuration in this case. Furthermore, Pseudocoleophoma KT4119 produced coleophomapyrones A ( 2 ) and B ( 3 ) and coleophomaldehyde A ( 4 ). While this is the first report of 2 isolated from a natural source, it has also been prepared previously using a synthetic approach. Compound 1 potently inhibited HIV type 1 integrase (IC 50 = 0.44 μM) without significant cytotoxicity. Finally, docking experiments were conducted to propose a plausible mechanism for the behavior of 1 .
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