ABSTRACT
The discovery of a new naphthylisoquinoline alkaloid, dioncophyllidine E (4), from the tropical liana Ancistrocladus abbreviatus (Ancistrocladaceae) is described. Due to its rare 7,3'-coupling type, combined with the lack of an oxygen function at C-6, it is configurationally semi-stable at the biaryl axis, and thus occurs as a pair of slowly interconverting atropo-diastereomers, 4a and 4b. Its constitution was assigned mainly by 1D and 2D NMR. The absolute configuration at the stereocenter, C-3, was elucidated by oxidative degradation. The absolute axial configuration of the individual atropo-diastereomers was established by their HPLC resolution, combined with online electronic circular dichroism (ECD) investigations, providing nearly mirror-imaged LC-ECD spectra. These were assigned to the respective atropisomers by ECD comparison with a related, but configurationally stable alkaloid, ancistrocladidine (5). Dioncophyllidine E (4a/4b) exhibits a strong preferential cytotoxicity against PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cells under nutrient-deprived conditions, with a PC50 value of 7.4 µM, suggesting its potential as an agent against pancreatic cancer.