Alkynyl ketones – the boron way

I have enjoyed reading Prof. Yuri Bolshan’s paper, recently published in Org. Lett. Yuri hails from the University of Toronto, where he did his PhD under the direction of Professor Robert Batey. Afterwards, Yuri did his postdoctoral studies with Tohru Fukuyama in Tokyo and worked at the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (OICR) here in Toronto. Right now Yuri is an Assistant Professor at the University of Ontario Institute of Technology (http://sites.uoit.ca/yuri-bolshan/y-bolshan/). What attracted me to the Org. Lett. paper is the symbiotic relationship between two types of boron units: BF3 and BCl3. The BF3 fragment enters the reaction bound to an alkynyl ligand (as the trifluoroborate salt), while BCl3 acts as the Lewis acid promoter. The authors propose several mechanistic possibilities, one of which is shown below. In it, the transiently formed alkyne-BCl2 reagent coordinates to the oxygen center of the acyl chloride component, which triggers alkynyl migration to the carbonyl carbon, ultimately producing the alkynyl ketone product. I want to wish Yuri all the best in his new position. It looks to me that he is off to a nice start!

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http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ol403370t

In and out, without a trace

The sulfonamide… I have always been fascinated by this functional group. Tonight I will discuss its relationship to regular amides. If you look at the inset below, you will find a peculiar difference in behavior of cyclic and acyclic sulfonamides/amides. We all know that acyclic sulfonamides are substantially more stable than regular amides towards hydrolysis (boiling HBr has been prescribed many a time, especially in the older literature). However, if you consider 4-memberd ring sultams and their carbonyl “relatives” – beta-lactams, you will note that now the reactivity is reversed and the sulfur analogs are more reactive during hydrolysis.

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There is a paper by Page that discusses this interesting property:

http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja050787z

There are many outstanding features possessed by sultams, and one of them is their ability to inhibit serine proteases. Not long ago, Sieber and colleagues made an interesting observation in the course of figuring out the mode of action of sultam-containing inhibitors of ClpP. Covalent labeling of ClpP’s Ser98 resulted not only in irreversible labelling of the active site serine, but proceeded to give the product of elimination, which resulted in dehydroalanine formation. This is an interesting lesson for those of us who are interested in the design of irreversible enzyme inhibitors. I am not aware of similar cases where the active site residue participates in such an elimination, although there might be some. Notably, the Dha residue was characterized by the authors using X-ray crystallography.

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http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja4082793

Using math in synthesis

Synthetic chemists do not use a lot of math. We rely on it, there is no question about it, especially when it comes to our daily NMR experiments. Indeed, there is just so much math in the FID treatment alone. It just does not seem to affect our hypothesis-generating abilities, so we do not have a need to worry about all those complexities.

When I was doing my protein experiments with Elena Dobrovetsky during my sabbatical stay at SGC, it seemed that the “C1V1 = C2V2 (C: concentration, V: volume)” equation ruled our days. I suppose this one simple relationship is the most widely used piece of math when you need to prepare your 142nd buffer of the day.

But what is the single most important mathematical equation every organic chemist should know? In my personal view, it is the one describing the relationship between temperature, energy, and the ratio of two molecular entities expressed as K:

1

We normally refer to K as the equilibrium constant, but I wish we had a more generic term. This is because the value of the equation is in that it relates the difference in energy barriers to the ratio of products or transition states. Thus, the equation covers the domains of both thermodynamics and kinetics. Below you will see that equation again, this time rewritten in a more palatable way for quick calculations at room temperature. An immediate consequence is that each factor of 10 between the respective ratios of A and B (these could be ground or transition states) translates into a free energy change of about 1.4 kcal / mole.

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Simple tools are often better

I am continuing my second year organic chemistry class, and although I am now covering NMR spectroscopy, the material of last week stirred some more “infrared memories”. I want to come back to the glory of this kind of spectroscopy and make it even more exciting… What if we want to see a situation where a unique reactivity insight is offered by way of analyzing an IR spectrum? This is different from the example I discussed in my last week’s post, in which the isocyanide functional group was distinguished from its cyanide counterpart through a shift in the wavenumber. This was more about functional group characterization. Now we want to shed light on reactivity preferences.

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http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jo00078a014?journalCode=joceah

Above is a classic aziridine paper from Stamm and co-workers. Due to their substantial strain (about 27 kcal/mol), aziridines are different from other amines because aziridine nitrogen is much more pyramidal (which is to say that its barrier to inversion is high). Stamm’s experiments suggest that there is a marked difference between the chemistry of cis- and trans-acyl aziridines shown. You can see that the cis-isomer has a stronger C=O bond (reflected in the higher wavenumber). Interestingly, the cis-aziridine was found to preferentially react with nucleophiles (there were several nucleophiles and these details are beyond the scope of this post) at the carbonyl carbon, whereas the trans-aziridine preferentially reacted just like an epoxide. What might be the reason for this peculiar dichotomy? The IR spectra provide valuable clues. Apparently, the equalized steric environments of the top and bottom faces in the trans- case contribute to more efficient conjugation between the nitrogen lone pair and the carbonyl group. The trans-aziridine reacts as strained heterocycles normally do: the three-membered ring pops open. In contrast, in the cis-aziridine case, the acyl substituent prefers to occupy the less hindered face of the molecule. The nitrogen center is substantially more pyramidalized, which is reflected in less extensive conjugation and, hence, lower wavenumber. This explains why the carbonyl carbon is now preferentially attacked by the nucleophile. The Stamm study clearly shows the strong dependence of acyl aziridine reactivity on the nitrogen pyramid. In closing, IR can be really useful and full of insights.

Twisting and turning: small molecule ligands in bound states

The protein database (www.rcsb.org) is a wonderful resource that provides plenty of ideas for structural biologists and chemists alike. While the value of pdb is self-explanatory when it comes to structural biologists, it is not that clear-cut as far as organic chemists is concerned. I do think we should all use this important and searchable resource. There are many reasons to like it and one of them is that you can get some interesting ideas about molecular design. Today I will discuss torsional preferences in protein-bound small molecules. Entropic tricks used by chemists allow one to narrow down conformational freedom that is accessible for a given small molecule and, regardless of your view on the entropy/enthalpy compensation (this should be a separate topic for a post), small molecules likely engage their targets by involving a “quantized” set of functional group orientations. But do these correspond to energy minima? For instance, what if you look at the diarylamine fragment shown below and ask a question about statistical analysis of all pdb instances where it appears bound to a protein? Might there be a preferred abc dihedral angle? If yes, what is it?

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In this regard, I will post two important papers today. The first one is rather controversial. It has seen a fair amount of criticism in the literature. This work by Perola shows that over 60% of the ligands do not bind to their targets in a local minimum conformation (http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jm030563w). The criticism directed against this work questions the validity of geometrical parameters of small molecules determined by protein crystallographers (remember my old posts – these guys are a different breed when compared to chemistry-oriented crystallographers). The controversy here is connected to the age-old problem of resolution, I suppose. The second paper is by Hao and co-workers (http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ci700189s ). This work is about accessible ranges of geometrical parameters for functional groups in small molecule ligands. Figure 1 of this paper is really cool: it shows the conformational histogram derived from PDB X-ray structures as a bar diagram. The authors superimpose the number of occurrences of a given torsional motif with the potential energy calculated using DFT. This paper suggests that the most probable values of the torsion angles agree well with the calculated global energy minima. I think there are creative ways of using these kinds of findings in efforts to design constrained ligands.

Old habits and common sense: a case of desulfurization

In our group meetings I always lament on how reluctant we are to change our set ways of running a given synthetic operation. I understand the argument of sticking to what works, but I just don’t get it when we are reluctant to give a chance to superior methodology, especially when it represents a synthetic operation that might be superior to our favorite tool. For instance, in our peptide work, we often run reductions of C-SH bonds into C-H bonds. What do we use in order to effect this transformation? We typically use Raney nickel… My main “beef” with this substance is its poor safety profile. The misery this reagent can bring when mishandled is considerable. Given the emphasis on safe laboratory operations these days, pyrophorics should be the first chemicals to be careful about. Yet, we continue to rely on that Raney nickel concoction. In this regard, Danishefsky’s radical desulfurization mediated by trialkylphosphites provides a marvelous and significantly safer alternative. Below is its mechanism and a paper that appeared some time ago.

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http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.200704195/abstract

In my view, one of the goals of modern chemistry research should be to replace hazardous reagents with alternatives that accomplish the same objective while minimizing risks. While technical expertise is a reliable antidote against mistakes in the lab, complacency and routine are among the dangers affecting everyone. And routine is the worst of them, a real bane of laboratory practice. Even experienced chemists may fall into this trap… A given reaction would go safely and without a glitch 100 times, but might abruptly fail without an apparent reason on the 101st attempt.

Azetes and their reasons to exist

Here is a heterocycle we do not hear a whole lot about these days: azete. Once you wonder about this kind of molecule, you will find yourself at the outskirts of organic chemistry! Azetes do not get mentioned at all when we teach sp2-rich nitrogen heterocycles (such as pyridine and pyrrole). However, they do exist and are isolable, despite being antiaromatic. I am always reminded of Alan Marchand’s instructive remark that one should not incorporate thermodynamically controlled steps when building strained molecules. Accordingly, azetes are made by a thermal decomposition of the cyclopropenyl azide (see below). The very existence of azetes is clearly kinetic in origin, which is to say that these four-membered rings can be obtained once a sufficient barrier preventing their decomposition has been secured. In the language of those brave souls who consider making molecules of this kind, successful isolation of an azete can be achieved once several tert-butyl groups are placed at the periphery of the molecule. The NMR of tris(tert-butyl)azete is the most interesting part of the classic Angewandte paper by Regitz (link below). There are only two groups of signals corresponding to tert-butyl groups, which means that the molecule is a time-averaged form of the two structures shown in the magenta rectangle below. It is as if the atoms are dancing around and the molecule keeps distorting itself…

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.198608421/abstract

az

Why am I bringing up this obscure heterocycle? As I teach my CHM 249 class, I always contemplate really weird things. I feel a need to mention this sort of stuff as it makes me feel particularly good to be a synthetic chemist. What can be better? We create our own subject, the stuff that often has no business being stable, let alone found in nature. Just think about it: have you ever heard of synthetic astronomy? Nope. But synthetic chemistry – by all means! Synthetic biology seems to be emerging, though.