Clement Denhez
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Clement Denhez.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2013
Stephanie Gourdain; Clement Denhez; Linh Chi Bui; Fernando Rodrigues-Lima; Nathalie Janel; Jean Maurice Delabar; Kevin Cariou; Robert H. Dodd
A series of 3,5-diaryl-1H-pyrrolo[2,3-b]pyridines were synthesized and evaluated for inhibition of DYRKIA kinase in vitro. Derivatives having hydroxy groups on the aryl moieties (2c, 2j-l) demonstrated high inhibitory potencies with Kis in the low nanomolar range. Their methoxy analogues were up to 100 times less active. Docking studies at the ATP binding site suggested that these compounds bind tightly to this site via a network of multiple H-bonds with the peptide backbone. None of the active compounds were cytotoxic to KB cells at 10(-6) M. Kinase profiling revealed that compound 2j showed 2-fold selectivity for DYRK1A with respect to DYRK2 and DYRK3.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014
Hatice Berber; Pedro Lameiras; Clement Denhez; Cyril Antheaume; Jonathan Clayden
Terpenylation reactions of substituted phenols were used to prepare cannabidiol and linderatin derivatives, and their structure and conformational behavior in solution were investigated by NMR and, for some representative examples, by DFT. VT-NMR spectra and DFT calculations were used to determine the activation energies of the conformational change arising from restricted rotation about the aryl-Csp(3) bond that lead to two unequally populated rotameric epimers. The NBO calculation was applied to explain the electronic stabilization of one conformer over another by donor-acceptor charge transfer interactions. Conformational control arises from a combination of stereoelectronic and steric effects between substituents in close contact with each other on the two rings of the endocyclic epoxide atropisomers. This study represents the first exploration of the stereoelectronic origins of atropisomerism around C(sp(2))-C(sp(3)) single bonds through theoretical calculations.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2016
Manon Flos; Pedro Lameiras; Clement Denhez; Catherine Mirand; Hatice Berber
A catalytic hydrogenation of cannabidiol derivatives known as phenylcyclohexenes was used to prepare epimeric (1R,1S) and/or rotameric (M,P) phenylcyclohexanes. The reaction is diastereoselective, in favor of the 1S epimer, when large groups are attached to the phenyl ring. For each epimer, variable-temperature NMR experiments, including EXSY spectroscopy and DFT calculations, were used to determine the activation energies of the conformational exchange arising from the restricted rotation about the aryl-C(sp(3)) bond that led to two unequally populated rotamers. The conformational preference arises essentially from steric interactions between substituents vicinal to the pivot bond. The conformers of epimers (1S)-2e,f show high rotational barriers of up to 92 kJ mol(-1), unlike those of (1R)-2e,f and with much lower barriers of ∼72 kJ mol(-1). The height of the barriers not only depends on the substituents at the axis of chirality but also is influenced by the position of a methyl group on the monoterpene ring. The feature most favorable to high rotational barriers is when the methyl at C1 lies equatorially. This additional substituent effect, highlighted for the first time, seems fundamental to allowing atropisomerism in hindered ortho-substituted phenylcyclohexanes.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2017
Thomas Lepitre; Clement Denhez; Jan Moncol; Mohamed Othman; Ata Martin Lawson; Adam Daïch
Two successive original routes leading to two novel families of polyheterocycles starting from the versatile chromone-based Michael acceptors platform are reported herein. The major aspect of this work is the selective access to these frameworks by changing the course of the domino process involved in their formation. First, enaminochromanones were selectively accessed under uncommon kinetic control. In this study, we showed that the tuning of the selectivity toward the kinetic product could be achieved by key structural modifications of the different reaction partners involved in the domino process. Once selectivity was efficiently controlled, enaminochromanones were ultimately transformed into a more complex family of polyheterocycles containing the pyrrolo-oxazinone framework. Here, the modulation of the domino sequence toward these particularly scarce structures was enabled by a pivotal switch in reactivity induced by aryl-λ3-iodanes.
Organic Letters | 2005
Jean-Luc Vasse; Antoine Joosten; Clement Denhez; Jan Szymoniak
Organometallics | 2008
Antoine Joosten; Mohamad Soueidan; Clement Denhez; Dominique Harakat; Florence Helion; Jean-Louis Namy; Jean-Luc Vasse; Jan Szymoniak
Tetrahedron-asymmetry | 2007
Clement Denhez; Jean-Luc Vasse; Dominique Harakat; Jan Szymoniak
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2007
Gautier Moroy; Clement Denhez; Haquima El Mourabit; Alix Toribio; Alexandra Dassonville; Martine Decarme; Jean-Hugues Renault; Catherine Mirand; Georges Bellon; Janos Sapi; Alain J. P. Alix; William Hornebeck; Erika Bourguet
Organic Letters | 2006
Clement Denhez; Sedami Medegan; Florence Helion; Jean-Louis Namy; Jean-Luc Vasse; Jan Szymoniak
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015
Céline Moriou; Clement Denhez; Oleksandr Plashkevych; Stéphanie Coantic-Castex; Jyoti Chattopadhyaya; Dominique Guillaume; Pascale Clivio