4.7 Article

Concise and Scalable Synthesis of Aspalathin, a Powerful Plasma Sugar-Lowering Natural Product

Journal

JOURNAL OF NATURAL PRODUCTS
Volume 77, Issue 3, Pages 583-588

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/np4008443

Keywords

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Funding

  1. South African Medical Research Council
  2. South African Agricultural Research Council
  3. South African National Research Foundation THRIP
  4. University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa

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Aspalathin (1), a dihydrochalcone C-glucoside, exhibits powerful plasma sugar-lowering properties and thus potentially could be used to treat diabetes. Small quantities occur in rooibos tea, manufactured via fermentation of the leaves of Aspalathus linearis, hence necessitating the need for an efficient and concise synthesis. Efforts to synthesize aspalathin (1) via coupling of a glucose donor to the nucleophilic phloroglucinol ring of the dihydrochalcone moiety have invariably failed, presumably because of ring deactivation by the electron-withdrawing carbonyl group. Reduction of the carbonyl group of a chalcone (15) and coupling of the resulting 1,3-diarylpropane (16) to tetra-O-benzyl-beta-D-glucopyranose afforded the C-glucosyl-1,3-diarylpropane (17). Regiospecific benzylic oxidation regenerated the carbonyl group and afforded the per-O-methylaspalathin (la) quantitatively. This method was not successful with the per-O-benzyl-protected dihydrochalcone. However, the nucleophilicity of the phenolic hydroxy groups of the dihydrochalcone or its acetophenone precursor is not diminished by the carbonyl group. Thus, glucosylation of the di-O-benzylacetophenone (Sc) at -40 degrees C afforded the alpha-O-glucoside (19) in 86% yield. Raising the temperature allowed facile BF3-catalyzed rearrangement to the beta-C-glucoside (6b), which upon hydrogenation, afforded aspalathin (1) in 80% overall yield [based on the usage of di-O-benzylphloroacetophenone (Sc) and tetra-O-benzyl-1 alpha-fluoro-beta-glucose (2e)].

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