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      Asymmetric total syntheses of (+)- and (-)-versicolamide B and biosynthetic implications.

      Nature Chemistry
      Aspergillus, enzymology, metabolism, Circular Dichroism, Cyclization, Dioxygenases, Fungal Proteins, Indole Alkaloids, chemistry, Stereoisomerism

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          Abstract

          The Diels-Alder reaction is one of the most well-studied, synthetically useful organic transformations. While a significant number of naturally occurring substances are postulated to arise by biosynthetic Diels-Alder reactions, rigorous confirmation of a mechanistically distinct natural Diels-Alderase enzyme remains elusive. Within this context, several related fungi within the Aspergillus genus produce a number of metabolites of opposite absolute configuration including (+)- or (-)-versicolamide B. These alkaloids are hypothesized to arise via biosynthetic Diels-Alder reactions implying that each Aspergillus species possesses enantiomerically distinct Diels-Alderases. Herein, experimental validation of these biosynthetic proposals via deployment of the IMDA reaction as a key step in the asymmetric total syntheses of (+)- and (-)-versicolamide B is described. Laboratory validation of the proposed biosynthetic Diels-Alder construction, coupled with the secondary metabolite profile of the producing fungi, reveals that each Aspergillus species has evolved enantiomerically distinct indole oxidases, as well as enantiomerically distinct Diels-Alderases.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          20300443
          2840645
          10.1038/nchem.110

          Chemistry
          Aspergillus,enzymology,metabolism,Circular Dichroism,Cyclization,Dioxygenases,Fungal Proteins,Indole Alkaloids,chemistry,Stereoisomerism

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