The damn thing took me more time in Chemdraw than I expected. If anyone wants the cdx file, I will be happy to mail it to them. That way it could save you some slave labour. Please be merciful and don't point out any mistakes in the structure...at least for now.
Going back to the original structure determination papers for maitotoxin (Yasumoto, Kishi; 1993, 1994, 1996), I find that some of the NOE assignments are kind of fuzzy, because the spectrum was naturally incredibly crowded in the disputed region. Regular 2D NOESY produced a smatter of fizz.
(Reference DOI: 10.1039/a901979k)
So they resorted to a fancier technique, PFG 3D NOESY, to pick out the cross peaks. The third axis in this NOESY is the C13 shifts, so that the protons are also separated on the basis of C13 shifts which differ more than proton chemical shifts (although still not by much, 3-4 ppm in some cases).
If I were asked if I believe in the assignments and the NOE correlations, I would probably say yes, but mainly on the basis of a process of elimination, and not on the basis of unambiguous confidence. But then I guess such is the nature of painstaking NMR structure determination of such complex natural products.
In any case, Spencer, Gallimore, and Nicolaou are definitely on to something, as described in the post before the last one, and we may learn something quite interesting about the NMR data or the biosynthesis.
I'm SO glad I'm not a natural products chemist.
ReplyDeleteI can feel what you are talking about, I had to draw Palytoxin the other day..
ReplyDeletePsi: Praise you...and me
ReplyDeleteKutti: Welcome to the club! (Or rather, you welcomed ME to the club it seems)
Re: Maitotoxin CDX file
ReplyDeleteHi,
I would love to have this cdx file for my masters thesis, the picture is blurry and well not that I dont appreciate hard work, but its been done.
lucas.mccann.1@gmail.com if you can help a chemist out!
Best wishes, thanks in advance!
Lucas McCann
Ph.D candidate.