Publications by authors named "Fabricio Bisogno"

Natural products are an unsurpassed source of leading structures in drug discovery. The biosynthetic machinery of the producing organism offers an important source for modifying complex natural products, leading to analogs that are unattainable by chemical semisynthesis or total synthesis. In this report, through the combination of natural products chemistry and diversity-oriented synthesis, a diversity-enhanced extracts approach is proposed using chemical reactions that remodel molecular scaffolds directly on extracts of natural resources.

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A novel multicomponent chemoenzymatic strategy for the preparation of enantioenriched β-acyloxy thioethers has been developed. This robust methodology employs mild bases, air atmosphere, room temperature and avoids the use of foul-smelling thiols. Instead, potassium thioacetate is employed as a universal sulfur source.

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This work focusses on the chemical diversification of an Ambrosia tenuifolia extract and its bioguided fractionation, aiming to unveil the chemical entity responsible for the trypanocidal activity. Besides, a revision of the phytochemical study of this species, based on previous reports of the antiparasitic psilostachyins A and C as main compounds, was conducted. To improve the biological properties of a plant extract through a simple chemical reaction, the oxidative diversification of the dichloromethane extract of this plant species was carried out.

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Room temperature ionic liquids (RTILs) have been widely used as (co)solvents in several catalytic processes modifying, in most of the cases, the catalyst activity and/or the selectivity for the studied reactions. However, there are just a few examples of their use in hydrogen bonding organocatalysis. In this paper, we show the positive effect of a set of imidazole-based ionic liquids ([bmim]BF and [hmim]PF) in the enantioselective addition of formaldehyde -butylhydrazone to prochiral α-keto esters catalyzed by a sugar-based chiral thiourea.

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A preparation of β-ketosulfides avoiding the use of thiols is described. The combination of a multicomponent reaction and a lipase-catalysed hydrolysis has been developed in order to obtain high chemical diversity employing a single sulfur donor. This methodology for the selective synthesis of a set of β-ketosulfides is performed under mild conditions and can be set up in one-pot two-step and on a gram-scale.

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Article Synopsis
  • The synthesis of steroids and their derivatives is important for clinical applications, with a focus on molecules like testolactone that have bioactivity.
  • Aspergillus parasiticus was used to study the bioconversion of dehydro-epi-androsterone (DHEA), showing its ability to produce D-ring lactonization products, including testololactone.
  • The research also indicated that A. parasiticus exhibits Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenase (BVMO) activity, making it a promising biocatalyst for producing bioactive steroid-based compounds on a larger scale.
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A stereoselective one-pot procedure was developed to prepare S-substituted (Z)-enol esters through a base-triggered rearrangement. This transition metal-free multicomponent approach can be performed under an air atmosphere at room temperature, tolerates a wide set of chemical functionalities and generally affords high isolated yields. The (Z)-selectivity arises from the [1,4]-S- to O-acyl migration.

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A fully convergent one-pot two-step synthesis of different chiral 1,2,3-triazole-derived diols in high yields and excellent enantio- and diastereoselectivities has been achieved under very mild conditions in aqueous medium by combining a single alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) with a Cu-catalysed 'click' reaction.

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Coumarin metabolism by several Aspergillus strains was studied. Aspergillus ochraceus and Aspergillus niger carried out the reduction of the C3-C4 double bond to yield dihydrocoumarin in 24h. Meanwhile, the first strain did not transform dihydrocoumarin after 7d, A.

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To ensure the quasi-irreversibility of the oxidation of alcohols coupled with the reduction of ketones in a hydrogen-transfer (HT) fashion, stoichiometric amounts of α-halo carbonyl compounds have been employed as hydrogen acceptors. The reason that these substrates lead to quasi-quantitative conversions has been tacitly attributed to both thermodynamic and kinetic effects. To provide a clear rationale for this behavior, we investigate herein the redox equilibrium of a selected series of ketones and 2-propanol by undertaking a study that combines experimental and theoretical approaches.

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Parallel interconnected kinetic asymmetric transformations were performed in order to obtain enantioenriched derivatives starting from a set of racemic or prochiral compounds. Thus, in a one-pot reaction using two redox biocatalysts (a BVMO and an ADH) and a catalytic amount of cofactor that acts as a mediator, enantioenriched ketones, sulfoxides, and sec-alcohols were concurrently obtained in a strict parallel way, minimising the quantity of reagents employed. By selecting the appropriate biocatalysts, this methodology represents a potential tool for performing stereodivergent transformations.

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A novel one-pot tandem biohydrogen transfer process to concurrently obtain two enantiopure sec-alcohols is presented; thus, using a suitable single enzyme and a catalytic amount of cofactor, several interesting building blocks could be easily achieved in an enantiocomplementary fashion, minimizing dramatically the quantity of reagents usually employed in the "coupled-substrate" approach.

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As part of our studies on the biochirogenesis of peptides of homochiral sequence during early evolution, the formation of oligopeptides composed of 14-24 residues of the same handedness in the polymerization of dl-leucine (Leu), dl-phenylalanine (Phe), and dl-valine (Val) in aqueous solutions, by activation with N, N'-carbonyldiimidazole and then initiation with a primary amine, in a one-pot reaction, was demonstrated by MALDI-TOF MS using deuterium enantio-labeled alpha-amino acids. The formation of long isotactic peptides is rationalized by the following steps occurring in tandem: (i) creation of a library of short diasteroisomeric oligopeptides containing isotactic peptides in excess in comparison to a binomial kinetics, as a result of an asymmetric induction exerted by the N-terminal residue of a given handedness; (ii) precipitation of the less soluble racemic isotactic penta- and hexapeptides in the form of beta-sheets that are delineated by homochiral rims; (iii) regio-enantiospecific chain elongation occurring heterogeneously at the beta-sheets/solution interface. Polymerization of l-Leu with l-isoleucine (Ile) or l-Phe with l- (1) N-Me-histidine yielded mixtures of copeptides containing both residues.

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A structure-antifungal activity relationship (SAR) study of 22 related cinnamic acid derivatives was carried out. Attention was focused on the antifungal activities exhibited against Aspergillus flavus, Aspergillus terreus, and Aspergillus niger. (E)-3-(4-methoxy-3-(3-methylbut-2-enyl)phenyl)acrylic acid (16) exhibited antifungal activity against A.

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5,6-Epoxycholestan-3beta-ol derivatives were hydrolyzed in a diastereoconvergent manner by growing and resting cells of several strains of Aspergillus niger, particularly A. niger ATCC 11394. These strains displayed opposite regioselectivity toward each isomer in an alpha and beta epoxide mixture, thus, the nucleophilic attack took place at the less substituted and the most substituted carbon atom on each diasteromer, respectively.

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