Abstract
Chalcones and flavanones are isomeric structures and also classes of natural products, belonging to the flavonoid family. Moreover, their wide range of biological activities makes them key scaffolds for the synthesis of new and more efficient drugs. In this work, the synthesis of hydroxy and/or methoxychalcones was studied using less common bases, such as sodium hydride (NaH) and lithium bis(trimethylsilyl)amide (LiHMDS), in the aldol condensation. The results show that the use of NaH was more effective for the synthesis of 2′-hydroxychalcone derivatives, while LiHMDS led to the synthesis of polyhydroxylated chalcones in a one-pot process. During this study, it was also possible to establish the conditions that favor their isomerization into flavanones, allowing at the same time the synthesis of hydroxy and/or methoxyflavanones. The chalcones and flavanones obtained were evaluated to disclose their antioxidant, anticholinesterasic, antibacterial and antitumor activities. 2′,4′,4-Trihydroxychalcone was the most active compound in terms of antioxidant, anti-butyrylcholinesterase (IC50 26.55 ± 0.55 μg/mL, similar to control drug donepezil, IC50 28.94 ± 1.76 μg/mL) and antimicrobial activity. 4′,7-Dihydroxyflavanone presented dual inhibition, that is, the ability to inhibit both cholinesterases. 4′-Hydroxy-5,7-dimethoxyflavanone and 2′-hydroxy-4-methoxychalcone were the compounds with the best antitumor activity. The substitution pattern and the biological assay results allowed the establishment of some structure/activity relationships.
Highlights
The (E)-1,3-diphenylpropen-1-ones, best known as chalcones, belong to the flavonoids family and are an important class of natural products across the plant kingdom [1]
Compounds 1 and 3 were synthesized, as far as we could confirm, using for the first time in the aldol condensation the strong non-nucleophilic base NaH, which was used with success in similar condensations [43,44]
The results suggest that the cyclization seems to increase the inhibitory activity compound 7, which is a flavanone, is more active than compound 6, the respective chalcone
Summary
The (E)-1,3-diphenylpropen-1-ones, best known as chalcones, belong to the flavonoids family and are an important class of natural products across the plant kingdom [1]. These compounds contain two aromatic rings, bonded by a three-carbon α,β unsaturated carbonyl bridge (Figure 1), which are synthesized in plants as the C15 key intermediate in the biosynthesis of the other flavonoids [2]. Flavanones are naturally occurring compounds and are chalcones’ isomeric forms. The equilibrium between chalcones and flavanones is common in nature and is regulated by chalcone-isomerase [3].
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