Abstract

Ancistrosecolines A-F (8-13) are the first seco-type naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids discovered in Nature. In all these novel compounds, the tetrahydroisoquinoline ring is cleaved, with loss of C-1. They were isolated from the root bark of Ancistrocladus abbreviatus (Ancistrocladaceae), along with 1-nor-8-O-demethylancistrobrevine H (14), which is the first naturally occurring naphthylisoquinoline lacking the otherwise generally present methyl group at C-1. The stereostructures of the new alkaloids were established by HRESIMS, 1D and 2D NMR, oxidative degradation, and experimental and quantum-chemical ECD investigations. Ancistrosecolines A-F (8-13) and 1-nor-8-O-demethylancistrobrevine H (14) are typical Ancistrocladaceae-type metabolites, i.e., oxygenated at C-6 and S-configured at C-3, belonging to the subclasses of 7,1'- and 7,8'-coupled alkaloids. The biaryl linkages of 8-14 are rotationally hindered due to bulky ortho-substituents next to the axes. Owing to the constitutionally unsymmetric substitution patterns on each side of the axis, this C-C single bond represents an element of chirality in 1-nor-8-O-demethylancistrobrevine H (14) and in ancistrosecolines A-D (8-11). In ancistrosecolines E (12) and F (13), however, the likewise rotationally hindered biaryl axes do not constitute chiral elements, due to a symmetric substitution pattern, with its identical two methoxy functions at C-6 and C-8 in the phenyl subunit. And these two methoxy groups are, for the first time, not constitutionally heterotopic, but diastereotopic to each other. Ancistrosecoline D (11) exhibits strong cytotoxicity against HeLa cervical cancer cells. As visualized by Hoechst nuclei staining and by real-time imaging experiments, 11 induced massive nuclei fragmentation in HeLa cells, leading to apoptotic cell death.

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