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The Synthesis and Antimicrobial Evaluation of Novel Sideromycins

This thesis consists of two chapters, each of which is a unique research project. Chapter 1 is focused on the synthesis and biological evaluation of novel sideromycin antibiotics. Sideromycins are bifunctional “Trojan Horse” molecules that have an iron chelator “siderophore” moiety covalently bound to an antibiotic. Such molecules exploit existing bacterial mechanisms for obtaining iron from their environment. Antibiotics that would typically not pass Gram-negative membranes are allowed access via siderophore transporter proteins. This project utilized a siderophore that has not previously been used in this capacity. The synthesis and biological evaluation of multiple sideromycin conjugates is reported.
Chapter 2 describes the chemical synthesis of coumarin natural products using a synthetic process recently developed in the Magolan laboratory that enables the efficient prenylation of phenols. These natural products are molecules of biological interest in various capacities but are rare and difficult to isolate from their plant sources. They have also previously been cumbersome to make via chemical synthesis. The chemistry described herein constitutes an inexpensive and efficient process to produce these compounds that is superior to previously known methods. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / This thesis is divided into two chapters. The first chapter is focused on the development of new sideromycin antibiotics. Sideromycins are “Trojan Horse”-like antibiotics that exploit the mechanisms of Gram-negative bacteria for obtaining iron, an essential nutrient, to enable antibiotic entry. This chapter details the synthesis of molecules that attach functionalities called “siderophores” to antibiotics, enabling them to be “smuggled” into Gram-negative microbes. This project uses a siderophore not previously utilized in sideromycin research. The second chapter is focused on the chemical synthesis of rare natural products that are phenols with prenyl substituents. Many such compounds are plant-derived and have potential for biomedical use. However, difficulty in isolating them makes them prohibitively expensive in the purity and quantity required for research. They are also challenging to make synthetically. This chapter details the application of a recently discovered process in the Magolan laboratory to synthesize coumarin-containing prenylated phenolic natural products.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/27583
Date January 2022
CreatorsKaul, Arnav
ContributorsMagolan, Jakob, Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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