Tropinone Explained
Tropinone is an alkaloid, famously synthesised in 1917 by Robert Robinson as a synthetic precursor to atropine, a scarce commodity during World War I.[1] [2] Tropinone and the alkaloids cocaine and atropine all share the same tropane core structure. Its corresponding conjugate acid at pH 7.3 major species is known as tropiniumone.[3]
Synthesis
The first synthesis of tropinone was by Richard Willstätter in 1901. It started from the seemingly related cycloheptanone, but required many steps to introduce the nitrogen bridge; the overall yield for the synthesis path is only 0.75%.[4] Willstätter had previously synthesized cocaine from tropinone, in what was the first synthesis and elucidation of the structure of cocaine.[5]
Robinson's "double Mannich" reaction
The 1917 synthesis by Robinson is considered a classic in total synthesis[6] due to its simplicity and biomimetic approach. Tropinone is a bicyclic molecule, but the reactants used in its preparation are fairly simple: succinaldehyde, methylamine and acetonedicarboxylic acid (or even acetone). The synthesis is a good example of a biomimetic reaction or biogenetic-type synthesis because biosynthesis makes use of the same building blocks. It also demonstrates a tandem reaction in a one-pot synthesis. Furthermore, the yield of the synthesis was 17% and with subsequent improvements exceeded 90%.
This reaction is described as an intramolecular "double Mannich reaction" for obvious reasons. It is not unique in this regard, as others have also attempted it in piperidine synthesis.[7] [8]
In place of acetone, acetonedicarboxylic acid is known as the "synthetic equivalent" the 1,3-dicarboxylic acid groups are so-called "activating groups" to facilitate the ring forming reactions. The calcium salt is there as a "buffer" as it is claimed that higher yields are possible if the reaction is conducted at "physiological pH".
Reaction mechanism
The main features apparent from the reaction sequence below are:
- Nucleophilic addition of methylamine to succinaldehyde, followed by loss of water to create an imine
- Intramolecular addition of the imine to the second aldehyde unit and first ring closure
- Intermolecular Mannich reaction of the enolate of acetone dicarboxylate
- New enolate formation and new imine formation with loss of water for
- Second intramolecular Mannich reaction and second ring closure
- Loss of 2 carboxylic groups to tropinone
Some authors have actually tried to retain one of the CO2H groups.[9]
CO2R-tropinone has 4 stereoisomers, although the corresponding ecgonidine alkyl ester has only a pair of enantiomers.
From cycloheptanone
IBX dehydrogenation (oxidation) of cycloheptanone (suberone) to 2,6-cycloheptadienone [1192-93-4] followed by reaction with an amine is versatile a way of forming tropinones.[10] The mechanism evoked is clearly delineated to be a double Michael reaction (i.e. conjugate addition).
Biochemistry method
[11]
Reduction of tropinone
The reduction of tropinone is mediated by NADPH-dependent reductase enzymes, which have been characterized in multiple plant species.[12] These plant species all contain two types of the reductase enzymes, tropinone reductase I and tropinone reductase II. TRI produces tropine and TRII produces pseudotropine. Due to differing kinetic and pH/activity characteristics of the enzymes and by the 25-fold higher activity of TRI over TRII, the majority of the tropinone reduction is from TRI to form tropine.[13]
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Robinson . R.. LXIII. A Synthesis of Tropinone. Journal of the Chemical Society, Transactions. 111. 762–768. 1917. 10.1039/CT9171100762.
- Nicolaou . K. C. . K. C. Nicolaou. Vourloumis . D. . Winssinger . N. . Baran . P. S. . Phil S. Baran. The Art and Science of Total Synthesis at the Dawn of the Twenty-First Century . Angewandte Chemie International Edition . 39 . 1 . 44–122 . 2000 . 10.1002/(SICI)1521-3773(20000103)39:1<44::AID-ANIE44>3.0.CO;2-L . 10649349.
- https://www.ebi.ac.uk/chebi/chebiOntology.do?treeView=true&chebiId=CHEBI:57851 Chemical Entities of Biological Interest Identification code: ChEBI:57851 "tropiniumone"
- Book: Organic Synthesis. 1998. 978-0-85404-544-0. 10.1039/9781847551573. Smit. Wim A.. Smit. William A.. Bochkov. Alekseĭ Feodosʹevich. Caple. Ron.
- Humphrey . A. J.. O'Hagan. D.. Tropane alkaloid biosynthesis. A century old problem unresolved. Natural Product Reports. Royal Society of Chemistry. 18. 494–502. 2001. 10.1039/b001713m. 11699882 . 5.
- Birch . A. J.. Investigating a Scientific Legend: The Tropinone Synthesis of Sir Robert Robinson, F.R.S. Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 47. 2. 277–296. 1993 . 531792. 10.1098/rsnr.1993.0034 . 143267467.
- 10.1021/jm990516x . 10669562 . 2000 . Wang . S. . Sakamuri . Enyedy . Kozikowski . Deschaux . Bandyopadhyay . Tella . Zaman . Johnson. Discovery of a novel dopamine transporter inhibitor, 4-hydroxy-1-methyl-4-(4-methylphenyl)-3-piperidyl 4-methylphenyl ketone, as a potential cocaine antagonist through 3D-database pharmacophore searching. Molecular modeling, structure-activity relationships, and behavioral pharmacological studies . 43 . 3 . 351–360 . . S. . I. J. . A. P. . O. . B. C. . S. R. . W. A. . K. M..
- 11425577. 2001. Wang . S.. Sakamuri. Enyedy. Kozikowski. Zaman. Johnson. Molecular modeling, structure--activity relationships and functional antagonism studies of 4-hydroxy-1-methyl-4-(4-methylphenyl)-3-piperidyl 4-methylphenyl ketones as a novel class of dopamine transporter inhibitors. 9. 7. 1753–1764. Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry. 10.1016/S0968-0896(01)00090-6.
- Findlay . S. P.. Concerning 2-Carbomethoxytropinone . Journal of Organic Chemistry . 1957 . 22 . 11. 1385–1394. 10.1021/jo01362a022.
- 10.1021/ja012127+ . 11878978 . 2002 . Nicolaou . K. C. . Montagnon . T. . Baran . P. S. . Zhong . Y. L. . Iodine(V) reagents in organic synthesis. Part 4. O-Iodoxybenzoic acid as a chemospecific tool for single electron transfer-based oxidation processes . Journal of the American Chemical Society . 124 . 10 . 2245–58 .
- Bedewitz. Matthew A.. Jones. A. Daniel. D'Auria. John C.. Barry. Cornelius S.. Tropinone synthesis via an atypical polyketide synthase and P450-mediated cyclization. Nature Communications. 9. 1. 2018. 5281. 2041-1723. 10.1038/s41467-018-07671-3. 30538251. 6290073. 2018NatCo...9.5281B. free.
- 10.1016/0031-9422(92)80247-C . Two tropinone reducing enzymes from Datura stramonium transformed root cultures . 1992 . A. Portsteffen . B. Draeger . A. Nahrstedt . Phytochemistry . 31 . 1135 . 4. 1992PChem..31.1135P .
- Boswell HD, Dräger B, McLauchlan WR . Specificities of the enzymes of N-alkyltropane biosynthesis in Brugmansia and Datura . Phytochemistry . 52 . 5 . 871–8 . November 1999 . 10626376 . 10.1016/S0031-9422(99)00293-9. 1999PChem..52..871B . etal.