4263-93-8Relevant articles and documents
One-pot, two-step synthesis of unnatural α-amino acids involving the exhaustive aerobic oxidation of 1,2-diols
Inada, Haruki,Furukawa, Keisuke,Shibuya, Masatoshi,Yamamoto, Yoshihiko
supporting information, p. 15105 - 15108 (2019/12/26)
Herein, we report the nor-AZADO-catalyzed exhaustive aerobic oxidations of 1,2-diols to α-keto acids. Combining oxidation with transamination using dl-2-phenylglycine led to the synthesis of free α-amino acids (AAs) in one pot. This method enables the rapid and flexible preparation of a variety of valuable unnatural AAs, such as fluorescent AAs, photoactivatable AAs, and other functional AAs for bioorthogonal reactions.
Direct Synthesis of Free α-Amino Acids by Telescoping Three-Step Process from 1,2-Diols
Inada, Haruki,Shibuya, Masatoshi,Yamamoto, Yoshihiko
supporting information, p. 709 - 713 (2019/01/25)
A practical telescoping three-step process for the syntheses of α-amino acids from the corresponding 1,2-diols has been developed. This process enables the direct synthesis of free α-amino acids without any protection/deprotection step. This method was also effective for the preparation of a 15N-labeled α-amino acid. 1,2-Diols bearing α,β-unsaturated ester moieties afforded bicyclic α-amino acids through intramolecular [3 + 2] cycloadditions. A preliminary study suggests that the resultant α-amino acids are resolvable by aminoacylases with almost complete selectivity.
Chemoselective catalytic oxidation of 1,2-diols to α-hydroxy acids controlled by TEMPO-ClO2 charge-transfer complex
Furukawa, Keisuke,Shibuya, Masatoshi,Yamamoto, Yoshihiko
supporting information, p. 2282 - 2285 (2015/05/13)
Chemoselective catalytic oxidation from 1,2-diols to α-hydroxy acids in a cat. TEMPO/cat. NaOCl/NaClO2 system has been achieved. The use of a two-phase condition consisting of hydrophobic toluene and water suppresses the concomitant oxidative cleavage. A study of the mechanism suggests that the observed selectivity is derived from the precise solubility control of diols and hydroxy acids as well as the active species of TEMPO. Although the oxoammonium species TEMPO+Cl- is hydrophilic, the active species dissolves into the organic layer by the formation of the charge-transfer (CT) complex TEMPO-ClO2 under the reaction conditions.