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A Chemical Synthesis of Porphobilinogen Imitating the Pathway Proposed by Shemin for the Biosynthesis: Comparing Inhibition Studies with Investigations of Chemical Reactivity
Published:
01 November 1998
by MDPI
in The 2nd International Electronic Conference on Synthetic Organic Chemistry
session Medicinal and Bioorganic Application of Organic Synthesis
Abstract: Nature's pathways have been a strong motivation for synthetic chemists. Trying to imitate what has been shown or what is supposed to be a biosynthetic transformation always pursues several objectives: One evident goal is to obtain the natural product via the elegant way used in the natural process. The second not less important goal is to obtain insight into the mechanistic details of the biosynthetic pathway. Finally during the synthetic effort compounds are obtained which are potentially interesting as inhibitors of the natural process. Porphobilinogen, the second dedicated intermediate in the biosynthesis of ´pigments of lifeª was synthesised following the mechanistic rationale proposed 30 years ago by Shemin for the biosynthesis. Substances obtained during this synthetic effort and inhibitors especially synthesised for our studies were tested in order to evaluate the different mechanistic proposals. This biomimetic approach allowed to guide at the same time the synthetic as well as the biosynthetic studies.
Keywords: n/a