40778-32-3Relevant articles and documents
Oxidative Cleavage of Alkenes by O2with a Non-Heme Manganese Catalyst
Bennett, Elliot L.,Brookfield, Adam,Guan, Renpeng,Huang, Zhiliang,Mcinnes, Eric J. L.,Robertson, Craig M.,Shanmugam, Muralidharan,Xiao, Jianliang
supporting information, p. 10005 - 10013 (2021/07/19)
The oxidative cleavage of C═C double bonds with molecular oxygen to produce carbonyl compounds is an important transformation in chemical and pharmaceutical synthesis. In nature, enzymes containing the first-row transition metals, particularly heme and non-heme iron-dependent enzymes, readily activate O2 and oxidatively cleave C═C bonds with exquisite precision under ambient conditions. The reaction remains challenging for synthetic chemists, however. There are only a small number of known synthetic metal catalysts that allow for the oxidative cleavage of alkenes at an atmospheric pressure of O2, with very few known to catalyze the cleavage of nonactivated alkenes. In this work, we describe a light-driven, Mn-catalyzed protocol for the selective oxidation of alkenes to carbonyls under 1 atm of O2. For the first time, aromatic as well as various nonactivated aliphatic alkenes could be oxidized to afford ketones and aldehydes under clean, mild conditions with a first row, biorelevant metal catalyst. Moreover, the protocol shows a very good functional group tolerance. Mechanistic investigation suggests that Mn-oxo species, including an asymmetric, mixed-valent bis(μ-oxo)-Mn(III,IV) complex, are involved in the oxidation, and the solvent methanol participates in O2 activation that leads to the formation of the oxo species.
Specificities of Calreticulin Transacetylase to acetoxy derivatives of 3-alkyl-4-methylcoumarins: Effect on the activation of nitric oxide synthase
Kathuria, Abha,Gupta, Anjali,Priya, Nivedita,Singh, Prabhjot,Raj, Hanumantharao G.,Prasad, Ashok K.,Parmar, Virinder S.,Sharma, Sunil K.
experimental part, p. 1550 - 1556 (2009/08/07)
Calreticulin Transacetylase (CRTAase) catalyzes the transfer of acetyl groups from polyphenolic acetates (PAs) to the receptor proteins and modulates their biological activities. CRTAase was conveniently assayed by the irreversible inhibition of cytosolic glutathione S-transferase (GST) by the model acetoxycoumarin, 7,8-diacetoxy-4-methylcoumarin (DAMC). We have studied earlier, the influence of acetoxy groups on the benzenoid ring, the effect of reduction of double bond at C-3 and C-4 position, the effect of methyl/phenyl group at C-4, and the influence of position of carbonyl group with respect to oxygen heteroatom in the benzopyran nucleus, for the catalytic activity of CRTAase. In this communication, we have extended our previous work; wherein we studied the influence of an alkyl group (ethyl, hexyl and decyl) at the C-3 position of the acetoxy coumarins on the CRTAase activity. The substitution at C-3 position of coumarin nucleus resulted in the reduction of CRTAase activity and related effects. Accordingly the formation of NO in platelets by C-3 alkyl substituted acetoxy coumarins was found to be much less compared to the unsubstituted analogs. In addition the alkyl substitution at C-3 position exhibited the tendency to form radicals other than NO.