Abstract
The optical purity of cannabichromene (CBC, 1a) is affected by the matrix in which it is generated by thermolysis from its native carboxylated form (cannabichromenic acid, CBCA, 1b). Thus, thermolysis at 130 °C in planta caused a marked decrease of the enantiomeric excess (ee), while, under the same conditions, only a modest decrease of optical purity was observed when thermolysis was carried out in extracto. To rationalize these puzzling observations, the kinetics of thermal (100 °C) racemization of enantiopure cannabichromene (1a) was evaluated by enantioselective ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography in solvents (decalin and isopropyl alcohol, neat and acidified with TFA) and surfaces (native and silanized borosilicate glass) of complementary polarity. Optical stability was more than halved in isopropanol compared to decalin (t1/2 50 h vs 135 h), but acidification had no effect on racemization. However, contact with a solid surface dramatically accelerated the process, with a t1/2 of only 6 h on both glass surfaces. The overall extent of racemization of enantiopure CBC (1a) was compared under conditions commonly used for decarboxylation (heating at 130 °C) between a decalin solution and a thin film on three different surfaces (native and silanized borosilicate glass and powdered blank cannabis biomass). In line with the kinetic data, a significant erosion of enantiopurity was observed on all solid surfaces compared to the solution. These observations suggest that discrepancies in the reported enantiomeric purity of natural CBC could be not only of biogenetic derivation but also be associated with the decarboxylation protocol of cannabichromenic acid (1b). These findings, while relevant for the exploitation of the bioactivity of natural CBC for human health, should also prompt the adoption of a standardized decarboxylation protocol for the studies on the configurational status of CBC (1a) in cannabis and, in general, of cannabinochromanoids in nature.
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