11 research outputs found
Lipase-Catalyzed Strategies for the Preparation of Enantiomeric THIQ and THβC Derivatives: Green Aspects
This report reviews the most important lipase-catalyzed strategies for the preparation of pharmaceutically and chemically important tetrahydroisoquinoline and tetrahydro-β-carboline enantiomers through O-acylation of the primary hydroxy group, N-acylation of the secondary amino group, and COOEt hydrolysis of the corresponding racemic compounds with simple molecular structure, which have been reported during the last decade. A brief introduction describes the importance and synthesis of tetrahydroisoquinoline and tetrahydro-β-carboline derivatives, and it formulates the objectives of this compilation. The strategies are presented in chronological order, classified according to function of the reaction type, as kinetic and dynamic kinetic resolutions, in the main text. These reactions result in the desired products with excellent ee values. The pharmacological importance of the products together with their synthesis is given in the main text. The enzymatic hydrolysis of the hydrochloride salts as racemates of the starting amino carboxylic esters furnished the desired enantiomeric amino carboxylic acids quantitatively. The enzymatic reactions, performed in tBuOMe or H2O as usable solvents, and the transformations carried out in a continuous-flow system, indicate clear advantages, including atom economy, reproducibility, safer solvents, short reaction time, rapid heating and compression vs. shaker reactions. These features are highlighted in the main text
A Sustainable Green Enzymatic Method for Amide Bond Formation
A sustainable enzymatic strategy for the preparation of amides by using Candida antarctica lipase B as the biocatalyst and cyclopentyl methyl ether as a green and safe solvent was devised. The method is simple and efficient and it produces amides with excellent conversions and yields without the need for intensive purification steps. The scope of the reaction was extended to the preparation of 28 diverse amides using four different free carboxylic acids and seven primary and secondary amines, including cyclic amines. This enzymatic methodology has the potential to become a green and industrially reliable process for direct amide synthesis
N-Acetylation of Amines in Continuous-Flow with Acetonitrile-No Need for Hazardous and Toxic Carboxylic Acid Derivatives
A continuous-flow acetylation reaction was developed, applying cheap and safe reagent, acetonitrile as acetylation agent and alumina as catalyst. The method developed utilizes milder reagent than those used conventionally. The reaction was tested on various aromatic and aliphatic amines with good conversion. The catalyst showed excellent reusability and a scale-up was also carried out. Furthermore, a drug substance (paracetamol) was also synthesized with good conversion and yield
Stereo- and Regiocontrolled Syntheses of Exomethylenic Cyclohexane Beta-Amino Acid Derivatives
Cyclohexane analogues of the antifungal icofungipen [(1R,2S)-2-amino-4-methylenecy
clopentanecarboxylic acid] were selectively synthesized from unsaturated bicyclic beta-lactams
by transformation of the ring olefinic bond through three different regio- and stereocontrolled
hydroxylation techniques, followed by hydroxy group oxidation and oxo-methylene
interconversion with a phosphorane. Starting from an enantiomerically pure bicyclic beta-lactam
obtained by enzymatic resolution of the racemic compound, an enantiodivergent procedure led to
the preparation of both dextro- and levorotatory cyclohexane analogues of icofungipen
Continuous-flow catalytic deuterodehalogenation carried out in propylene carbonate
A selective continuous-flow (CF) deuterodehalogenation approach is described performed in propylene carbonate, which is considered as one of the greenest solvents. Various CF technologies are known for hydrodehalogenation reactions; however, they are not directly transferable for deuteration transformations. A novel spherical activated carbon-supported palladium catalyst has been found to be useful for the catalytic deuterodehalogenation of haloarenes. After careful reaction parameter optimization, complete conversion was achieved for bromine-and chlorine-substituted haloarenes. Nonetheless, no deuterium exchange was observed for the fluorine substituent, while iodine-substituted compounds poisoned the catalyst. Importantly, deuterated compounds were obtained with a rate of 3 mg min-1 and the catalyst showed reasonable reusability. Moreover, benzylic amides were also deuterated without any debenzylation side-reaction
N-Acetylation of Amines in Continuous-Flow with Acetonitrile—No Need for Hazardous and Toxic Carboxylic Acid Derivatives
A continuous-flow acetylation reaction was developed, applying cheap and safe reagent, acetonitrile as acetylation agent and alumina as catalyst. The method developed utilizes milder reagent than those used conventionally. The reaction was tested on various aromatic and aliphatic amines with good conversion. The catalyst showed excellent reusability and a scale-up was also carried out. Furthermore, a drug substance (paracetamol) was also synthesized with good conversion and yield
Stereo- and Regiocontrolled Syntheses of Exomethylenic Cyclohexane β-Amino Acid Derivatives
Cyclohexane analogues of the antifungal icofungipen [(1R,2S)-2-amino-4-methylenecyclopentanecarboxylic acid] were selectively synthesized from unsaturated bicyclic β-lactams by transformation of the ring olefinic bond through three different regio- and stereocontrolled hydroxylation techniques, followed by hydroxy group oxidation and oxo-methylene interconversion with a phosphorane. Starting from an enantiomerically pure bicyclic β-lactam obtained by enzymatic resolution of the racemic compound, an enantiodivergent procedure led to the preparation of both dextro- and levorotatory cyclohexane analogues of icofungipen