4.7 Article

Molecular bilateral symmetry of natural products: Prediction of selectivity of dimeric molecules by density functional theory and semiempirical calculations

Journal

JOURNAL OF NATURAL PRODUCTS
Volume 67, Issue 7, Pages 1141-1146

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/np049899e

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A literature survey and theoretical calculations have been applied to explore bilateral symmetry in natural product systems. Molecular bilateral symmetry is defined to include C-2 (sigma plane or axis), C-s, and C-2v point groups in molecules. Natural products that possess chirality in the form of C-2-axes or sigma planes of symmetry are present in higher proportions (69%) compared to molecules bearing achiral C-s or C-2v point groups (14% and 16%, respectively). Density functional theoretical and semiempirical calculations indicate that the dimers 3,3'-dibromo-5,5'-[N-(2-(3-bromo-4-hydroxyphenyl)ethyl)-2-hydroxyiminoacetamide]biphenyl-2,2'-diol (1), (S,S)-1,2-bis(2-amino-3H-imidazol-4-yl)-(R,R)-3,4-bis(1H-pyrrole-2-amido)cyclobutane (2), 2-oxo-dimethyl-1,3-bis(3,4-dibromobenzene-1,2-diol) (11), 1,7-bis(4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenyl)hepta-1,6-diene-3,5-dione (12), and bis(5-isopropyl-8-methylazulene)methane (13) evolve more energy per connecting bond than the corresponding trimers or tetramers would. This we propose is a guiding parameter that may adjust molecule growth. The corresponding trimers, tetramers, or higher oligomers of 1, 2, and 11-13 appear to represent missing compounds in nature. Natural products 1, 2, and 11-13, having 3-fold and higher levels of symmetry, would founder on the lack of a facile method of synthesis and on the prohibitively high-energy costs caused by steric crowding at their core.

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