Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition , doi: 10.1002/anie.200705421 Nr. 05/2008 They Were Right After AllDisputed total synthesis of quinine by Woodward and Doering confirmedContact: Robert M. Williams, Colorado State University (USA) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Rabe Rest in Peace: Confirmation of the Rabe-Kindler Conversion of d-Quinotoxine to Quinine: Experimental Affirmation of the Woodward-Doering Formal Total Synthesis of Quinine
Drugs derived from cinchona bark, known as cinchona alkaloids, have been
used in healing from ancient times. The most prominent representative of
this group is quinine, a bitter substance contained in beverages such as
tonic water and used in modern medicine to combat malaria. As early as
1945, Robert Burns Woodward and William von Eggers Doering (Harvard
University) described how to synthesize quinine in the laboratory. The
last step of this “formal” total synthesis, a three-step reaction
procedure previously described by Paul Rabe and Karl Kindler in 1918,
has continued to be the subject of much controversy to this day. Aaron
C. Smith and Robert M. Williams at Colorado State University (USA) have
now successfully reproduced the Rabe–Kindler protocol. As described in
an Angewandte Chemie article dedicated to Doering on his 90th
birthday, they repeated the entire procedure without employing any
modern methods.
Had they done it or not? That has been the question for decades.
Woodward and Doering published the synthesis of d-quinotoxine in
1944. Based on the conversion of d-quinotoxine into quinine
described by Rabe and Kindler in 1918, they claimed to have derived the
total synthesis of quinine, though they had not actually completed this
last step themselves before publishing. Their “formal” total synthesis
was strongly challenged and was even dismissed as a “myth” by Gilbert
Stork (Columbia University) in 2001.
“Quinine and the cinchona bark alkaloids play an important role in
modern medicine. It is thus amazing that no attempts to reproduce the
Rabe–Kindler conversion of quinotoxine into quinine have been
published,” marvels Williams. Smith and Williams reviewed the old
publications, researched further references, and set themselves the task
of repeating the procedure outlined by Rabe and Kindler—and with
techniques available at the time. Initially, the yield of quinine they
obtained was far too low. The key turned out to be the aluminum powder
used as a reducing agent in the last step. It must not be too fresh,
instead it must be exposed to air for a while first to produce a small
amount of aluminum oxide. This results in yields of quinine in agreement
with those in the old publications.
“Analytically pure quinine can be isolated from this reaction by the
selective crystallization of the corresponding tartrate salt, just as
described by Rabe in 1939,” says Williams. “We have thus corroborated
Rabe and Kindler’s 1918 publication. Woodward and Doering could
theoretically also have followed this procedure in 1944.”
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