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Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis

Carboxylic acids are an important structural feature in many drugs, but are associated with a number of unfavorable pharmacological properties. To address this problem, carboxylic acids can be replaced with bioisosteric mimics that interact similarly with biological targets but avoid these liabiliti...

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Autores principales: Delos Reyes, Avelyn Mae V., Nieves Escobar, Christopher S., Muñoz, Alberto, Huffman, Maya I., Tan, Derek S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10548506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37799988
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc00936j
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author Delos Reyes, Avelyn Mae V.
Nieves Escobar, Christopher S.
Muñoz, Alberto
Huffman, Maya I.
Tan, Derek S.
author_facet Delos Reyes, Avelyn Mae V.
Nieves Escobar, Christopher S.
Muñoz, Alberto
Huffman, Maya I.
Tan, Derek S.
author_sort Delos Reyes, Avelyn Mae V.
collection PubMed
description Carboxylic acids are an important structural feature in many drugs, but are associated with a number of unfavorable pharmacological properties. To address this problem, carboxylic acids can be replaced with bioisosteric mimics that interact similarly with biological targets but avoid these liabilities. Recently, 3-oxetanols have been identified as useful carboxylic acid bioisosteres that maintain similar hydrogen-bonding capacity while decreasing acidity and increasing lipophilicity. However, the installation of 3-oxetanols generally requires multistep de novo synthesis, presenting an obstacle to investigation of these promising bioisosteres. Herein, we report a new synthetic approach involving direct conversion of carboxylic acids to 3-oxetanols using a photoredox-catalyzed decarboxylative addition to 3-oxetanone. Two versions of the transformation have been developed, in the presence or absence of CrCl(3) and TMSCl cocatalysts. The reactions are effective for a variety of N-aryl α-amino acids and have excellent functional group tolerance. The Cr-free conditions generally provide higher yields and avoid the use of chromium reagents. Further, the Cr-free conditions were extended to a series of N,N-dialkyl α-amino acid substrates. Mechanistic studies suggest that the Cr-mediated reaction proceeds predominantly via in situ formation of an alkyl-Cr intermediate while the Cr-free reaction proceeds largely via radical addition to a Brønsted acid-activated ketone. Chain propagation processes provide quantum yields of 5 and 10, respectively.
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spelling pubmed-105485062023-10-05 Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis Delos Reyes, Avelyn Mae V. Nieves Escobar, Christopher S. Muñoz, Alberto Huffman, Maya I. Tan, Derek S. Chem Sci Chemistry Carboxylic acids are an important structural feature in many drugs, but are associated with a number of unfavorable pharmacological properties. To address this problem, carboxylic acids can be replaced with bioisosteric mimics that interact similarly with biological targets but avoid these liabilities. Recently, 3-oxetanols have been identified as useful carboxylic acid bioisosteres that maintain similar hydrogen-bonding capacity while decreasing acidity and increasing lipophilicity. However, the installation of 3-oxetanols generally requires multistep de novo synthesis, presenting an obstacle to investigation of these promising bioisosteres. Herein, we report a new synthetic approach involving direct conversion of carboxylic acids to 3-oxetanols using a photoredox-catalyzed decarboxylative addition to 3-oxetanone. Two versions of the transformation have been developed, in the presence or absence of CrCl(3) and TMSCl cocatalysts. The reactions are effective for a variety of N-aryl α-amino acids and have excellent functional group tolerance. The Cr-free conditions generally provide higher yields and avoid the use of chromium reagents. Further, the Cr-free conditions were extended to a series of N,N-dialkyl α-amino acid substrates. Mechanistic studies suggest that the Cr-mediated reaction proceeds predominantly via in situ formation of an alkyl-Cr intermediate while the Cr-free reaction proceeds largely via radical addition to a Brønsted acid-activated ketone. Chain propagation processes provide quantum yields of 5 and 10, respectively. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10548506/ /pubmed/37799988 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc00936j Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Delos Reyes, Avelyn Mae V.
Nieves Escobar, Christopher S.
Muñoz, Alberto
Huffman, Maya I.
Tan, Derek S.
Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis
title Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis
title_full Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis
title_fullStr Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis
title_full_unstemmed Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis
title_short Direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis
title_sort direct conversion of amino acids to oxetanol bioisosteres via photoredox catalysis
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10548506/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37799988
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc00936j
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