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Regioselective silyl/acetate exchange of disaccharides yields advanced glycosyl donor and acceptor precursors.

Authors :
Hsieh HW
Schombs MW
Witschi MA
Gervay-Hague J
Source :
The Journal of organic chemistry [J Org Chem] 2013 Oct 04; Vol. 78 (19), pp. 9677-88. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Sep 17.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Glycoconjugates are composed of carbohydrate building blocks linked together in a multitude of ways giving rise to diverse biological functions. Carbohydrates are especially difficult to synthetically manipulate because of the similar reactivity of their numerous and largely equivalent hydroxyl groups. Hence, methodologies for both the efficient protection and selective modification of carbohydrate alcohols are considered important synthetic tools in organic chemistry. When per-O-TMS protected mono- or disaccharides in a mixture of pyridine and acetic anhydride are treated with acetic acid, regioselective exchange of silicon for acetate protecting groups occurs. Acid concentration, thermal conditions, and microwave assistance mediate the silyl/acetate exchange reaction. Regiocontrol is achieved by limiting the equivalents of acetic acid, and microwave irradiation hastens the process. We coined the term Regioselective Silyl Exchange Technology (ReSET) to describe this process, which essentially sets the protecting groups anew. To demonstrate the scope of the reaction, the conditions were applied to lactose, melibiose, cellobiose, and trehalose. ReSET provided rapid access to a wide range of orthogonally protected disaccharides that would otherwise require multiple synthetic steps to acquire. The resulting bifunctional molecules are poised to serve as modular building blocks for more complex glycoconjugates.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-6904
Volume :
78
Issue :
19
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of organic chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23980653
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jo4013805