1 / 24

Christina LeGay , Darren Derksen St. Francis Xavier University

Determination of Absolute Configuration Using Enantioselective Acylation Reactions. Christina LeGay , Darren Derksen St. Francis Xavier University. Stereochemistry. Stereoisomers can have vastly different biological activities ex. Thalidomide: S- enantiomer is teratogenic

eyal
Download Presentation

Christina LeGay , Darren Derksen St. Francis Xavier University

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Determination of Absolute Configuration Using EnantioselectiveAcylation Reactions Christina LeGay, Darren Derksen St. Francis Xavier University

  2. Stereochemistry • Stereoisomers can have vastly different biological activities • ex. Thalidomide: S-enantiomer is teratogenic • Important to know absolute configuration before continuing synthesis and/or testing • Biological activity • Patents Huang, Y.; Hsu, C. W.; Chiu, T. H. Tzu Chi Med. J.2008, 20, 188-195. 1

  3. Our Method • Asymmetric acylation using chiral catalysts • Enantiomeric starting alcohol reacts selectively with one catalyst • Compare reaction rates to deduce absolute configuration (−)-Catalyst (+)-Catalyst 2

  4. Our Method • Asymmetric acylation using chiral catalysts • Enantiomeric starting alcohol reacts selectively with one catalyst • Compare reaction rates to deduce absolute configuration (−)-Catalyst k1 = 1 [Pdct] k2 = 0.5 (+)-Catalyst Time 2

  5. Detection Methods • TLC: qualitative method • Operationally simple to use • More sensitive than NMR spectroscopy • Multiple visualization methods • 1H-NMR: quantitative method • Requires expertise for use and analysis • Fast, automated detection • Determine rate of conversion • TLC and NMR most readily available methods 3

  6. Detection Methods: TLC • Reactions carried out in vials, 16 mM of starting alcohol • Prepare stock solutions of each reagent • 10 eq. NEt3, 10 eq. Ac2O, 10 mol% catalyst • Set in chemical refrigerator • Progress of reaction checked at hourly intervals • Best results = most significant difference by TLC • 30 minutes to 24 hours reacting • t-amyl alcohol or chloroform • Minimal amount of reaction mixture spotted on plate 4

  7. Detection Methods: NMR • Reactions carried out in NMR tubes, 16 mM of starting alcohol • Prepare stock solutions of each reagent • 10 eq. NEt3, 10 eq. Ac2O, 10 mol% catalyst • Set in chemical refrigerator • Progress of reaction checked at 30 or 60 min intervals • Ideal result = greatest difference in conversion of reactant to product • Compile integration data from several NMR experiments • First 4-5 hours of reacting • CDCl3 consistently results in good selectivity 5

  8. Chiral Starting Materials • Develop method for a variety of chiral starting materials 6

  9. Cycloalkanol TLC Results L-Menthol D-Menthol (−) (−) (+) (+) Catalyst Catalyst 7

  10. Arylalkylcarbinol TLC Results (S)-(-)-1-phenylethanol (R)-(+)-1-phenylethanol (−) (−) (+) (+) Catalyst Catalyst 8

  11. (S)-(-)-1-PhenylEthanol, (+)-DMAP-C5Ph5 9

  12. (S)-(-)-1-PhenylEthanol, (-)-DMAP-C5Ph5 10

  13. Arylalkylcarbinol NMR Results (−)-catalyst (+)-catalyst 11

  14. Propargylic Alcohol NMR Results (−)-catalyst (+)-catalyst 12

  15. Predictive Model • Model developed is consistent with precedent • k(+) > k(−),R1 = unsaturated, R2 = alkyl • k(+) < k(−), R1 = alkyl, R2 = unsaturated (+)-catalyst (−)-catalyst 13

  16. Lobeline NMR Results (−)-catalyst (+)-catalyst 14

  17. Chloramphenicol TLC Results 5 hours 3 x 15% E/PE 30 min 25% E/PE (−) (−) (+) (+) Catalyst Catalyst 15

  18. Chloramphenicol NMR Results (−)-catalyst (+)-catalyst 16

  19. Solvent Selectivity: TLC • t-amyl alcohol generally the most selective • Catalyst solutions require heating & sonication • Chloroform less selective • Reactions need to be checked within a few hours 24 h 5 h 24 h (−) (+) (−) (+) (−) (+) Catalyst Catalyst Catalyst 17

  20. Solvent Selectivity: NMR • D-chloroform ranges in selectivity for NMR spectroscopy • Highly selective for arylalkylcarbinols and Chloramphenicol • D8-toluene used for lobeline • similar selectivity as CDCl3 • Starting material not easily dissolved in D8-toluene • Ideal: multiple 1H-NMR experiments within first 5 hours reacting 18

  21. Selectivity of Natural Product • Propargylic alcohols more selective if have alkyl or unsaturated substituent on terminal end of alkyne • Stereochemistry of substituents interferes with selectivity • Lobeline has pyrrolidine substituent with two chiral centers 19 Tao, B.; Ruble, J. C; Hoic, D. A.; Fu, G.C. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1999, 121, 5091-5092.

  22. Future Work • Develop additional models for comparison • Test more chiral alcohols and natural products • Improved detection methods • Increased sensitivity: Fluorescent acylating agents, Mass spectroscopy • Purify and detect: HPLC/UV/Vis, LC-MS 20

  23. Conclusions • Developed a method for determination of absolute configuration • Simple: only four reagents • Cheap: recoverable catalysts • Easy analysis: TLC and NMR • Quick results: can continue synthesis with knowledge of absolute configuration • If (k(+)-catalyst > k(−)-catalyst) implies R1 = unsaturated, R2 = alkyl • If (k(+)-catalyst < k(−)-catalyst) implies R1 = alkyl, R2 = unsaturated 21

  24. Acknowledgments and Funding • Derksen Research Group • Colton Boudreau • Shawn Brophy • Christine Parsans • Deanna Webb • Laura Brothers • St. FX Chemistry Department • Stephen Smith • St. FX Center for Biofouling Research

More Related