Significance of chirality in pheromone science.

Bioorg Med Chem

Photosensitive Materials Research Center, Toyo Gosei Co., Ltd, Wakahagi 4-2-1, Inba-mura, Inba-gun, Chiba 270-609, Japan.

Published: December 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pheromones are crucial for chemical communication among organisms, with various chiral (mirror-image) and non-racemic (non-mirror-image) types identified since the 1960s.
  • Research on the enantioselective syntheses of these pheromones has revealed how their specific structures (absolute configurations) impact their biological effects, including examples like sulcatol and olean which affect beetle and fruit fly behavior differently based on their chirality.
  • The review also highlights around 140 chiral pheromones, discussing their relationships between stereochemistry and bioactivity, while addressing challenges in studying these compounds and suggesting future research directions.

Article Abstract

Pheromones play important roles in chemical communication among organisms. Various chiral and non-racemic pheromones have been identified since the late 1960s. Their enantioselective syntheses could establish the absolute configuration of the naturally occurring pheromones and clarified the relationships between absolute configuration and bioactivity. For example, neither the (R)- nor (S)-enantiomer of sulcatol, the aggregation pheromone of an ambrosia beetle Gnathotrichus sulcatus, is behaviorally active, while their mixture is bioactive. In the case of olean, the olive fruit fly pheromone, its (R)-isomer is active for the males, and the (S)-isomer is active for the females. About 140 chiral pheromones are reviewed with regard to their stereochemistry-bioactivity relationships. Problems encountered in studying chirality of pheromones were examined and analyzed to think about possible future directions in pheromone science.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bmc.2007.08.040DOI Listing

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