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Article

Structural Revision of Wentiquinone C and Related Congeners from Anthraquinones to Xanthones Using Chemical Derivatization and NMR Analysis

1
Key Laboratory of Experimental Marine Biology, Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Laboratory of Marine Biology and Biotechnology, Pilot National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology (Qingdao), Nanhai Road 7, Qingdao 266071, China
2
Center for Ocean Mega-Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanhai Road 7, Qingdao 266071, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Mar. Drugs 2019, 17(1), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/md17010008
Submission received: 4 December 2018 / Revised: 17 December 2018 / Accepted: 20 December 2018 / Published: 24 December 2018
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Chemical Modification of Marine Natural Products)

Abstract

:
Wentiquinone C, which was previously isolated from the marine brown alga-derived endophytic fungus Aspergillus wentii EN-48, was found to be a potent antioxidant against α,α-diphenyl-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical. The structure of wentiquinone C was originally assigned as an anthraquinone derivative (1,10-dihydroxy-3-(hydroxymethyl)-8-methoxydibenzo [b,e]oxepine-6,11-dione, 1) by 1D and 2D NMR experiments. However, the minor differences of the chemical shifts between xanthones and anthraquinones were queried, leading to the structure of 1 to be revised as a xanthone analog (8-hydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)-3-methoxy-9-oxo-9H-xanthene-1-carboxylic acid, 2) on the basis of a methylation and subsequent NMR measurements, and was confirmed by X-ray crystallographic analysis. The method established in this paper could be applied to the structural re-examination or revision for some of the reported seco-anthraquinone derivatives.

1. Introduction

In the course of our chemical investigation of marine-derived fungi for bioactive metabolites, we have isolated and assigned the structure of wentiquinone C as an anthraquinone derivative from the marine brown algal-derived endophytic fungus Aspergillus wentii EN-48, and the compound showed potent antioxidant activity against α,α-diphenyl-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radicals [1]. Based on the NMR analysis, its structure was originally assigned as 1,10-dihydroxy-3-(hydroxymethyl)-8- methoxydibenzo[b,e]oxepine-6,11-dione (anthraquinone derivative, 1), which contained a seven-membered lactone ring in the structure (Figure 1). In our continuing investigation for more bioactive secondary metabolites from the same fungal strain, compound 3 was characterized, and its 1H and 13C NMR spectral data were very similar to those of wentiquinone C, indicating that 3 might be an analog of wentiquinone C. However, the structure of 3 was finally assigned to be calyxanthone, a xanthone derivative that was firstly discovered in 1983, according to its NMR data [2]. Compounds 1 and 3 have very similar NMR data but belonged to anthraquinone and xanthone derivatives, respectively, and this phenomenon promoted us to query if there is other possible structure assigned for wentiquinone C (1) as a xanthone (2). Meanwhile, Yenesew and co-workers proposed the revision for a group of seco-anthraquinones to xanthones [3], and suggested that the structure of wentiquinone C should also be revised. Nevertheless, it was challenging to distinguish 1 and 2 based only on the MS and NMR data because they possessed the same carbon connectivity, similar NMR chemical shifts, and identical HMBC correlations. To clear up this confusion, a methylation and subsequent NMR analysis were employed successfully, and leading to unambiguously revision of the structure of wentiquinone C from an anthraquinone derivative (1) to a xanthone analogue (2) (Figure 1). This paper details the structure revision of wentiquinone C and other related natural products.

2. Results and Discussion

The different ways of cyclization led to two possible assignments for the structure of wentiquinone C: one contained a seven-membered lactone (anthraquinone derivative, 1), and another possessed a six-membered ether ring instead (xanthone analog, 2), which having free carboxyl group (Figure 1). The 13C NMR chemical shifts were seemingly reasonable for both assignments, except that in the case of 1, the resonance assigned for the oxygenated quaternary carbon (C-10) at δC 168.9 was more downfielded than its usual value (around δC 162.0) [4] (Figure 1). The minor distinction implicated an incorrect assignment might be made during the structure elucidation of wentiquinone C [1].
Herein, a methylation method, which applied to demonstrate the authentic structure of wentiquinone C, was established inspired by the struactually related analogue (3) (Figure 2). Two crucial methoxy groups in 3 were found to have different 13C NMR shifts, indicating that they are in different chemical environment. One of them is an aromatic methoxy group (δC 56.3), and another is a methyl ester (δC 53.2). A literature survey indicated the interesting distinction for the chemical shifts of aromatic methoxy and methyl ester groups [5,6,7,8,9,10] (Figure 2), which supported the undoubted difference in chemical shifts between the two types of methoxy groups. That is, in the 13C NMR spectrum the chemical shifts for aromatic methoxy groups are always bigger than δC 55.0, while those for methyl esters are usually smaller than δC 55.0. Thus, unlike wentiquinone C, the structure of 3 was unambiguous because of the existence of the methyl ester (δC 53.2), which revealed that the carboxyl had not participate in the cyclization. Similarly, it would be achievable to determine the structure of wentiquinone C by analyzing the shifts of methoxy groups after methylation for carboxyl or aromatic hydroxyl groups, and then the assignment of the intramolecular ring could be confirmed accordingly: for the case of structure 1, there should be three aromatic methoxy groups resonating at δC > 55 after methylation, while with respect to structure 2, one methyl ester resonating at δC < 55 and two aromatic methoxy group resonating at δC > 55 should be observed (Scheme 1).
Methylation of wentiquinone C was achieved by treatment of the compound with CH3I in anhydrous DMF with the presence of NaH for 45 min [11]. The major product 2a was obtained as yellowish amorphous powder in 92% yield (Figure 3). Its molecular formula was determined to be C18H16O7 by HRESIMS (m/z 345.0964 [M + H]+, calcd for C18H17O7+, 345.0969), with 28 unit (C2H4) more than that of wentiquinone C. The differences in the 1D NMR data between 2a and wentiquinone C were that signals for two more methoxy groups at δC/H 52.4/3.85 (C/H-17) and 56.1/3.88 (C/H-18) were detected in 2a (Figure 4), while the exchangeable proton of a phenolic hydroxyl group (δH 12.41) in wentiquinone C disappeared in the 1H NMR spectrum of 2a. As mentioned earlier, C-17 was observed at δC 52.4 and could be confirmed as a methyl ester, while C-18 was detected at δC 56.1 and should be an aromatic methoxy group (Figure 4). Therefore, it could be deduced that there is a carboxyl group in wentiquinone C, whose structure should be related to xanthone (2) rather than anthraquinone (1). This deduction was verified by the key HMBC correlations (Figure 4) from H-17 to C-14 and from H-18 to C-1.
Slow evaporation of the solvents (MeOH:CHCl3 = 1:1) by keeping the sample of wentiquinone C in a refrigerator for one month yielded quality crystals suitable for X-ray crystallographic analysis, which unambiguously confirmed its structure (2) as shown in Figure 5. Thus, the structure of wentiquinone C should be revised to 2.
The results from a literature survey revealed that, besides wentiquinone C, the structures of several other noteworthy molecules of seco-anthraquinone class (Figure 6) need to be revisited, and the method established in this paper could be applied to the structural re-examining or revision for these compounds. For instance, janthinone (11) was originally reported as a seco-anthraquinones in 2005 [12], the structure of which has been revised to a xanthone by another group on the basis of X-ray crystallographic analysis [13]. The structures of some other natural products, such as wentiquinones A and B (12 and 13), CT-1 (14), and compounds 1518, which were initially assigned the structures as seco-anthraquinones [14,15,16,17,18], are likely incorrectly assigned and their structures should be reassessed. Compounds 19 and 20 [19,20], which were considered being seco-anthraquinones, are also required to be re-checked carefully.

3. Materials and Methods

3.1. General Experimental Procedures

Melting points were determined with an SGW X-4 micromeltingpoint apparatus (Shanghai Shenguang Instrument Co. Ltd, Shanghai, China). UV spectra were measured on a PuXi TU-1810 UV-visible spectrophotometer (Shanghai Lengguang Technology Co. Ltd., Shanghai, China). 1D and 2D NMR spectra were obtained at 500 and 125 MHz for 1H and 13C, respectively, on a Bruker Avance 500 MHz spectrometer (Bruker Biospin Group, Karlsruhe, Germany) with tetramethyl silane (TMS) as an internal standard. Mass spectra were generated on a VG Autospec 3000 (VG Instruments, London, UK) or an API QSTAR Pulsar 1 mass spectrometer (Applied Biosystems, Foster, Waltham, MA, USA). Analytical and semipreparative HPLC were performed using a Dionex HPLC system equipped with a P680 pump, an ASI-100 automated sample injector, and a UVD340U multiple wavelength detector controlled by Chromeleon software (version 6.80) (Dionex, Sunnyvale, CA, USA). Commercially available Si gel (200–300 mesh, Qingdao Haiyang Chemical Co., Qingdao, China), Lobar LiChroprep RP-18 (40–63 μm, Merck, Darmstadt, Germany), and Sephadex LH-20 (Pharmacia, Pittsburgh, PA, USA) were used for open column chromatography. All solvents were distilled prior to use.

3.2. Methylation of Wentiquinone C

A suspension of NaH (1.0 mg) in 1.0 mL of anhydrous DMF was treated with a solution of wentiquinone C (3.0 mg) in 3.0 mL of DMF at 0 °C. The reaction mixture was stirred at 0 °C for 30 min, and then CH3I (30 μL) was added. After 45 min, a saturated solution of NH4Cl (10.0 mL) was added to quench the reaction. The product was extracted with EtOAc (4 × 10 mL) and purified by HPLC to give 2a (3.0 mg, 92%).

3.3. Wentiquinone C (2)

Yellow crystals; m.p. 287–289 °C; UV (MeOH) λmax (log ε) 236 (4.61), 247 (4.55), 305 (4.28), 354 (3.93) nm; 1H NMR(DMSO-d6, 500 MHz) δ 6.75 (1H, brs, H-2), 6.95 (1H, brs, H-4), 7.16 (1H, d, J = 2.0 Hz, H-7), 6.93 (1H, d, J = 2.0 Hz, H-9), 4.59 (2H, s, H-15), 3.94 (3H, s, H-16), 12.41 (1H, s, 1-OH); 13C NMR (DMSO-d6, 125 MHz) δ 160.6 (C-1, C), 107.6 (C-2, CH), 153.6 (C-3, C), 103.8 (C-4, CH), 155.3 (C-5, C), 157.7 (C-6, C), 100.8 (C-7, CH), 164.8 (C-8, C), 111.7 (C-9, CH), 137.0 (C-10, C), 109.7 (C-11, C), 106.5 (C-12, C), 179.4 (C-13, C), 168.9 (C-14, C), 62.3 (C-15, CH2), 56.5 (C-16, CH3). HRESIMS m/z 317.0639 ([M + H]+) (calculated for C16H13O7+,317.0656).

3.4. Compound 2a

Yellow amorphous powder; UV (MeOH) λmax (log ε) 235 (4.53), 248 (4.45), 303 (4.15), 350 (3.86) nm; 1H NMR (DMSO-d6, 500 MHz) δ 6.94 (1H, s, H-2), 7.06 (1H, s, H-4), 7.17 (1H, s, H-7), 6.94 (1H, s, H-9), 4.63 (2H, d, J = 5.6 Hz, H-15), 3.92 (3H, s, H-16), 3.85 (3H, s, H-17), 3.88 (3H, s, H-18), 5.54 (1H, brs, 15-OH); 13C NMR(DMSO-d6, 125 MHz) δ 159.8 (C-1, C), 104.1 (C-2, CH), 151.5 (C-3, C), 106.0 (C-4, CH), 157.0 (C-5, C), 156.2 (C-6, C), 101.4 (C-7, CH), 163.4 (C-8, C), 111.6 (C-9, CH), 135.0 (C-10, C), 113.1 (C-11, C), 109.9 (C-12, C), 172.7 (C-13, C), 168.7 (C-14, C), 62.3 (C-15, CH2), 56.4 (C-16, CH3), 52.4 (C-17, CH3), 56.1 (C-18, CH3). HRESIMS m/z 345.0964 ([M + H]+) (calculated for C18H17O7+, 345.0969).

3.5. X-ray Crystallographic Analysis of Wentiquinone C (2)

All crystallographic data were collected on an Agilent Xcalibur Eos Gemini CCD plate diffractometer equipped with a graphite-monochromatic Cu Kα radiation (λ = 1.54178 Å) at 293(2) K. The data were corrected for absorption by using the program SADABS [21]. The structure was solved by direct methods with the SHELXTL software package [22]. All nonhydrogen atoms were refined anisotropically. The H atoms were located by geometrical calculations, and their positions and thermal parameters were fixed during the structure refinement. The structure was refined by full-matrix least-squares techniques [23].

3.6. Crystal Data for Wentiquinone C (2)

C32H24O14·CHCl3, FW = 751.88, monoclinic space group C2/c, unit cell dimensions a = 12.9467(7) Å, b = 10.9982(8) Å, c = 22.0459(15) Å, V = 3041.8(3) Å3, α = 90°, β = 104.302(2)°, γ = 90°, Z = 4, dcalcd = 1.642 mg/m3, crystal dimensions 0.42 mm × 0.40 mm × 0.25 mm, μ = 3.414 mm−1, F(000) = 1544. The 9808 measurements yielded 2675 independent reflections after equivalent data were averaged, and Lorentz and polarization corrections were applied. The final refinement gave R1 = 0.0431 and wR2 = 0.1156 [I > 2σ(I)]. Crystallographic data of wentiquinone C (2) have been deposited in the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre as CCDC 1406785. The data can be obtained free of charge via http://www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif (or from the CCDC, 12 Union Road, Cambridge CB21EZ, UK; fax: +44-1223-336-033; e-mail: [email protected]).

4. Conclusions

In conclusion, the structure of wentiquinone C was revised to be 8-hydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)-3-methoxy-9-oxo-9H-xanthene-1-carboxylic acid (2) by a methylation method and confirmed by an X-ray diffraction study. The characteristic differences between aromatic methoxy group and methyl ester were discussed here based on the literatures data, and the methylation method has proven to be useful to rectify such a misassignment for structurally related compounds.

Author Contributions

X.L. performed the experiments for the isolation, structure elucidation, and synthesis reactions, and prepared the manuscript; X.-M.L. performed the 1D and 2D NMR experiments; B.-G.W. supervised the research work and revised the manuscript.

Funding

This work was financially supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China (31330009 and 41706182) and by Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation (ZR2017BB073).

Acknowledgments

The authors appreciate Weaam Ebrahim at Institute of Pharmaceutical Biology and Biotechnology, Heinrich-Heine Universität Düsseldorf, for drawing our attention to the incorrect assignment of the chemical structure of wentiquinone C. Bin-Gui Wang acknowledges the support of Taishan Scholar Project from Shandong Province.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Two possible structures for wentiquinone C (1 and 2) and their characteristic 13C NMR data assignments (in DMSO-d6) as well as the reference compound 3.
Figure 1. Two possible structures for wentiquinone C (1 and 2) and their characteristic 13C NMR data assignments (in DMSO-d6) as well as the reference compound 3.
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Figure 2. 13C NMR chemical shifts for methoxy groups of compound 3 and some previously reported natural products with aromatic methoxy groups and/or methyl esters.
Figure 2. 13C NMR chemical shifts for methoxy groups of compound 3 and some previously reported natural products with aromatic methoxy groups and/or methyl esters.
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Scheme 1. Synthesis of compound 2a.
Scheme 1. Synthesis of compound 2a.
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Figure 3. HPLC profiles for wentiquinone C and the reaction products at 30 and 45 min. Gradient: 0–5 min, 10% methanol in water; 6–35 min, gradient from 10% methanol in water to 100% methanol; 35–45 min, 100% methanol; 45–60 min, gradient from 100% methanol to 10% methanol in water. TLC developing solvent: CH2Cl2:MeOH = 10:1.
Figure 3. HPLC profiles for wentiquinone C and the reaction products at 30 and 45 min. Gradient: 0–5 min, 10% methanol in water; 6–35 min, gradient from 10% methanol in water to 100% methanol; 35–45 min, 100% methanol; 45–60 min, gradient from 100% methanol to 10% methanol in water. TLC developing solvent: CH2Cl2:MeOH = 10:1.
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Figure 4. Comparison for 13C NMR spectra between compounds 2a and 2 in DMSO-d6.
Figure 4. Comparison for 13C NMR spectra between compounds 2a and 2 in DMSO-d6.
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Figure 5. X-ray crystallographic structure of wentiquinone C (Note: The inclusive of CHCl3 was detected in the X-ray structure of wentiquinone C).
Figure 5. X-ray crystallographic structure of wentiquinone C (Note: The inclusive of CHCl3 was detected in the X-ray structure of wentiquinone C).
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Figure 6. Assigned structures of seco-anthraquinones requiring reassessment as xanthones.
Figure 6. Assigned structures of seco-anthraquinones requiring reassessment as xanthones.
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MDPI and ACS Style

Li, X.; Li, X.-M.; Wang, B.-G. Structural Revision of Wentiquinone C and Related Congeners from Anthraquinones to Xanthones Using Chemical Derivatization and NMR Analysis. Mar. Drugs 2019, 17, 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/md17010008

AMA Style

Li X, Li X-M, Wang B-G. Structural Revision of Wentiquinone C and Related Congeners from Anthraquinones to Xanthones Using Chemical Derivatization and NMR Analysis. Marine Drugs. 2019; 17(1):8. https://doi.org/10.3390/md17010008

Chicago/Turabian Style

Li, Xin, Xiao-Ming Li, and Bin-Gui Wang. 2019. "Structural Revision of Wentiquinone C and Related Congeners from Anthraquinones to Xanthones Using Chemical Derivatization and NMR Analysis" Marine Drugs 17, no. 1: 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/md17010008

APA Style

Li, X., Li, X. -M., & Wang, B. -G. (2019). Structural Revision of Wentiquinone C and Related Congeners from Anthraquinones to Xanthones Using Chemical Derivatization and NMR Analysis. Marine Drugs, 17(1), 8. https://doi.org/10.3390/md17010008

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