scholarly journals Strategies toward protecting group-free glycosylation through selective activation of the anomeric center

2017 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 1239-1279 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Michael Downey ◽  
Michal Hocek

Glycosylation is an immensely important biological process and one that is highly controlled and very efficient in nature. However, in a chemical laboratory the process is much more challenging and usually requires the extensive use of protecting groups to squelch reactivity at undesired reactive moieties. Nonetheless, by taking advantage of the differential reactivity of the anomeric center, a selective activation at this position is possible. As a result, protecting group-free strategies to effect glycosylations are available thanks to the tremendous efforts of many research groups. In this review, we showcase the methods available for the selective activation of the anomeric center on the glycosyl donor and the mechanisms by which the glycosylation reactions take place to illustrate the power these techniques.

Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (8) ◽  
pp. 2341
Author(s):  
Flavio Cermola ◽  
Serena Vella ◽  
Marina DellaGreca ◽  
Angela Tuzi ◽  
Maria Rosaria Iesce

The synthesis of glycosides and modified nucleosides represents a wide research field in organic chemistry. The classical methodology is based on coupling reactions between a glycosyl donor and an acceptor. An alternative strategy for new C-nucleosides is used in this approach, which consists of modifying a pre-existent furyl aglycone. This approach is applied to obtain novel pyridazine C-nucleosides starting with 2- and 3-(ribofuranosyl)furans. It is based on singlet oxygen [4+2] cycloaddition followed by reduction and hydrazine cyclization under neutral conditions. The mild three-step one-pot procedure leads stereoselectively to novel pyridazine C-nucleosides of pharmacological interest. The use of acetyls as protecting groups provides an elegant direct route to a deprotected new pyridazine C-nucleoside.


Author(s):  
Jie Jack Li ◽  
Chris Limberakis ◽  
Derek A. Pflum

In his book, Protecting Groups, Philip J. Kocieński stated that there are three things that cannot be avoided: death, taxes, and protecting groups. Indeed, protecting groups mask functionality that would otherwise be compromised or interfere with a given reaction, making them a necessity in organic synthesis. In this chapter, for each protecting group showcased, only the most widely used methods for protection and cleavage are shown. Also, this section is not comprehensive and only addresses some of the most common blocking groups in organic synthesis. For a thorough review of protecting groups, the reader should consult the following references: (a) Wuts, P. G. M.; Greene, T. W.; Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis, 4th ed.; Wiley: Hoboken, NJ, 2007; (b) Kocienski, P. J. Protecting Groups, 3rd edition.; Thieme: Stuggart, 2004. In this section, the formation and cleavage of eight protecting groups for alcohols and phenols are presented: acetate; acetonides for diols; benzyl ether; para-methoxybenzyl (PMB) ether; methyl ether; methoxymethylene (MOM) ether; tert-butyldiphenylsilyl (TBDPS) silyl ether; and tetrahydropyran (THP). Acetate is a convenient protecting group for alcohols—easy on and easy off. Selective protection of a primary alcohol in the presence of a secondary alcohol can be achieved at low temperature. The drawback of this protecting group is its incompatibility with hydrolysis and reductive conditions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (9) ◽  
pp. 2140-2144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong-Shuang Wang ◽  
Hui-Jing Li ◽  
Jun-Li Wang ◽  
Yan-Chao Wu

The atom- and step-economical synthesis of seven puupehenone- and haterumadienone-type marine natural products without the use of protecting groups and transition metals has been achieved from the abundant feedstock chemical sclareolide in only 6 to 9 steps.


Synthesis ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (05) ◽  
pp. 1113-1122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santosh Tilve ◽  
Sandesh Bugde ◽  
Prajesh S.Volvoikar

An efficient synthesis of naturally occurring 1,2- and 1,3-amino alcohol unit containing 2-substituted piperidine alkaloids and their analogues has been developed from l-pipecolinic acid. The protocol describes the regio- and stereoselective oxymercuration–demercuration of 2-alkenyl piperidines based on protecting groups to give piperidine alkaloids as a key step.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Emma Marie Dangerfield

<p>In this thesis I investigated two aspects of glycobiology. In the first, I investigated the potential of α-GalCer analogues to be used in cancer immunotherapy. Two 4-deoxy α-GalCer analogues, with either a sphinganine or a sphingosine base, were synthesised using a convergent strategy. The α-GalCer sphinganine derivative was synthesised in 14 steps from D-arabinose, and in an overall 13% yield. The α-GalCer sphingosine analogue was synthesised in 13 steps also in 13% yield. Biological analysis revealed that both 4-deoxy analogues possessed comparable activity to α-GalCer in mice, however demonstrated significantly reduced hNKT cell activity. The reduced activity was attributed to species-specific differences in iNKT cell glycolipid recognition rather than reduced CD1d presentation. From these results we suggest that glycolipids developed for potent CD1d-iNKT cell activity in humans should contain a ceramide base with the 4-hydroxyl present. The second part of this thesis focused on protecting group free methodology for the synthesis of sugar mimetics that have proven potential as glycosidase inhibitors. In this work I developed an efficient, high yielding and diastereoselective strategy for the synthesis of a number of five and six membered azasugars. This strategy utilises two novel reaction methodologies. The first enabled the stereoselective formation of cyclic carbamates from olefinic amines, the transition states controlling the stereoselectivity during this reaction are discussed. The second reaction facilitated the synthesis of primary amines without the need for protecting groups, the scope of this reductive amination methodology is also investigated. The five membered azasugars 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-Dxylitol, 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-L-lyxitol, 1,4-dideoxy-1,4-imino-L-xylitol and 1,2,4-trideoxy-1,4-imino-L-xylitol were prepared in 5 steps, in good overall yields (57%, 55%, 54% and 48% respectively), and without the need for protecting groups. The six membered azasugar DGJ was prepared over six steps in 33% yield using similar methodology. The synthesised compounds were also tested for anti-tubercular activity using a BCG alamar blue assay.</p>


1998 ◽  
Vol 45 (4) ◽  
pp. 949-976 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Kamaike ◽  
H Takahashi ◽  
K Morohoshi ◽  
N Kataoka ◽  
T Kakinuma ◽  
...  

A comparative study on the utility of 2-(levulinyloxymethyl)-5-nitrobenzoyl (LMNBz) and 2-(levulinyloxymethyl)benzoyl (LMBz) protecting groups for the 5'-positions of nucleoside 3'-phosphoramidite derivatives in the oligonucleotide synthesis is presented in terms of the syntheses of TpTpT, TpTpTpT, and UpCpApGpUpUpGpG. In addition we describe the synthesis, using the LMNBz protecting group, of the CpCpA terminus triplet of tRNAs bearing exocyclic amino groups with 15N-labeling, and the trimer Gp[A*]pG containing 2'-O-(beta-D-ribofuranosyl)adenosine ([A*]), the latter of which is found at position 64 in the yeast initiator tRNA(Met).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Thomas Bevan

<p>Protecting groups form an indispensable part of modern organic synthetic chemistry. Besides the benefits of selectively passivating certain reactive functionalities, they often provide handling benefits – such as a decrease in the polarity of the compound that facilitates purification, an increase in the structural order of a compound that allows for easier crystallisation, and chromophores that enable easy visualisation on fluorescent TLC plates under UV light.  Coloured protecting groups offer additional advantages in synthetic chemistry. They expedite purification by allowing the material to be tracked visually. Phase separation and column chromatography are easier to perform, and reduce the need for the collection of large numbers of fractions, while small-scale loss of material (left behind on taps or in flasks during routine handling) and spillages are much more readily apparent. Despite these advantages, only a few coloured protecting groups have been reported in the literature.  The azulenes are a class of compounds with several attractive qualities that can be exploited for use as protecting groups. They are coloured, but not overwhelmingly so. The colour is tunable through placement of electron-donating or electron-withdrawing groups at positions on the ring system, which further allows for protection/deprotection reactions to be designed that incorporate a colour change. Azulene itself is both non-polar and structurally compact, unlike many other organic chromophores such as triarylmethane dyes and carotenoids. Furthermore, azulene’s ability to stabilise both positive and negative charges through resonance with tropylium and cyclopentadienide motifs allows for unusual chemistry, and therefore potentially orthogonal modes of deprotection.  Four protecting group candidates incorporating azulene were devised. The 1-azulenylmethylene amine 79 and the 1-azulenesulfonamide 82 protecting group candidates for amines had fatal flaws that were discovered early, such as a tendency to rapidly degrade in open air. The 1-azulenecarboxylate protecting group candidate 74 for alcohols showed some promise, with a high-yielding protection reaction, but none of the deprotection conditions that were developed were sufficiently mild to be usable in a late-stage deprotection strategy on a complex target molecule.  The final protecting group candidate, 6-(2-[oxycarbonyl]ethyl)azulene 89, can be used for the protection of carboxylic acids, amines and alcohols as esters, carbamates and carbonates, respectively. The substitution at the 6-position of azulene allows for deprotection through an E1cB mechanism with mild base, involving a cyclopentadienide-stabilised carbanion intermediate, in a similar fashion to the FMOC protecting group. Mild conditions for the protection of all three were found: for carboxylic acids Steglich esterification is employed, and for alcohols and amines coupling with CDI is used. A selection of mild protocols for deprotection were developed, using bases such as DBU or TBAF, or involving two-step activation-deprotection procedures.  Finally, the compatibility of the protecting group 89 (dubbed Azul) with common and representative procedures in synthetic chemistry was investigated, such as with bases and with reaction conditions such as oxidations, reductions, cross-couplings, etc. Orthogonality with other common protecting groups (such as TBS, MOM, FMOC) was also explored. Some incompatibilities were found with strongly acidic conditions, high-temperature Suzuki cross-coupling reactions and Swern oxidations, but otherwise the Azul protecting group shows promise as a protecting group that expedites total synthesis through its colourful properties.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 4464
Author(s):  
Mahama Alhassan ◽  
Ashish Kumar ◽  
John Lopez ◽  
Fernando Albericio ◽  
Beatriz G. de la Torre

The protection of side-chain arginine in solid-phase peptide synthesis requires attention since current protecting groups have several drawbacks. Herein, the NO2 group, which is scarcely used, has been revisited. This work shows that it prevents the formation of δ-lactam, the most severe side-reaction during the incorporation of Arg. Moreover, it is stable in solution for long periods and can be removed in an easy-to-understand manner. Thus, this protecting group can be removed while the protected peptide is still anchored to the resin, with SnCl2 as reducing agent in mild acid conditions using 2-MeTHF as solvent at 55 °C. Furthermore, we demonstrate that sonochemistry can facilitate the removal of NO2 from multiple Arg-containing peptides.


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