Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition , doi: 10.1002/anie.200902520 Nr. 29/2009 Of Cyclops and LiliesNew strategy for the synthesis of cylcopamine, a potential cancer treatmentContact: Athanassios Giannis, Universität Leipzig (Germany) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Synthesis of Cyclopamine Using a Biomimetic and Diastereoselective Approach In
1957, shepherds in Idaho (USA) discovered that when pregnant sheep ate
lilies of the species Veratrum californicum (corn lily,
California false hellebore), their lambs were born with only one eye in
the center of their foreheads, like a cyclops. The trigger for this was
found to be the alkaloid cyclopamine. Cyclopamine has proven to be an
effective candidate for cancer therapy in adult humans and is now
undergoing clinical trials. A research team at the Universities of
Leipzig (Germany) and Thessaloniki (Greece) has now developed a new
synthetic pathway for the production of cyclopamine. As they report in the
journal Angewandte Chemie, the scientists, led by Athanassios
Giannis, are confident that their research results will help to broaden
our understanding of the structure–activity relationships of cyclopamine
and to develop cyclopamine analogues with tuned bioactivities.
 © Wiley-VCH
Cyclopamine
is the first inhibitor of the hedgehog signal-transduction pathway,
which is used by cells to react to external signals. The signaling
pathway is named for its ligand “hedgehog”, a signal protein that
carries out an important function in embryonic development. Malfunction
of this signaling pathway leads to massive deformations in the course of
embryonic development, such as cyclopia, and can cause cancer in adults.
Inhibition of this pathway is a new possible cancer treatment.
Until
now, there has been no efficient synthesis for cyclopamine. The
structure of this unusual steroidal alkaloid contains many peculiarities
that make synthesis difficult. The German and Greek team has now
overcome these difficulties to develop an efficient twenty-step
synthetic strategy starting from commercially available
dehydroepiandrosterone, a natural steroid hormone. The strategy is based
on biomimetic and diastereoselective transformations. The researchers
achieved an overall yield of 1 %, which is a good result for such a
tricky synthesis. In addition, small modifications in the reagents used
allow this strategy to be used to produce cyclopamine analogues that do
not occur in nature. The scientists aim to use these analogues to further
examine the biological activity of this interesting natural product and
then to adjust the activity to develop a new anti-tumor agent.
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