Synlett 2018; 29(14): 1823-1835
DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1610242
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© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Emergent Properties of Natural Products

Seth B. Herzon*
Department of Chemistry, Yale University, and Department of Pharmacology, Yale School of Medicine, 275 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT 06511, USA   Email: seth.herzon@yale.edu
› Author Affiliations
Financial support from the National Institutes of Health and Yale University is gratefully acknowledged.
Further Information

Publication History

Received: 08 July 2018

Accepted after revision: 24 July 2018

Publication Date:
09 August 2018 (online)


Abstract

Emergence is the phenomenon by which novel properties arise from the combination of simpler fragments that lack those properties at their given levels of hierarchal complexity. Emergence is a centuries-old concept that is commonly invoked in biological systems. However, the penetration of this idea into chemistry, and studies of natural products in particular, has been more limited. In this article I will describe how the perspective of emergence provided a framework to elucidate the complex properties of two classes of natural products – the diazofluorene antitumor agent lomaiviticin A and the genotoxic bacterial metabolites known as colibactins, and sets the stage for a third class of molecules – antibiotics derived from the fungal metabolite pleuromutilin. Embracing the idea of emergence helped us to connect the aggregate reactivities of the colibactins and lomaiviticin A with their biological phenotypes. Emergence is a top-down approach to natural products and complements the classical bottom-up analysis of functional group structure and reactivity. It is a useful intellectual framework to study the complex evolved properties of natural products.

1 Introduction

2 Diazofluorenes

3 Precolibactins and Colibactins

4 Pleuromutilins

5 Discussion and Conclusion