Abstract

Although much attention has been devoted to resveratrol, a unique polyphenol produced by plants throughout the world and credited as potentially being responsible for the so-called “French paradox” given its broad spectrum activity, the hundreds of oligomeric materials derived from it have been largely ignored despite their similarly high biochemical potential. Challenges in achieving their isolation in quantity from natural sources, coupled with an inability to rationally prepare them in the laboratory, are the main culprits. Here we show that a programmable, controlled, and potentially scaleable synthesis of the resveratrol family is possible through a unique three-stage design. These efforts required novel tactics coupled with strategy- and reagent-guided functionalizations to differentiate two distinct cores possessing multiple sites with the same and/or similar reactivity, ultimately leading to five higher-order natural products. We anticipate that this work 1) demonstrates that challenging, positionally-selective functionalizations of complex materials are possible where biosynthetic studies have indicated otherwise, 2) provides materials and tools to finally unlock the full biochemical potential of the family, particularly from the standpoint of activity and drug-property optimization, and 3) affords an intellectual framework to potentially access other oligomeric families controllably.

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