28217-36-9Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Rapid phenolic O-glycosylation of small molecules and complex unprotected peptides in aqueous solvent
Wadzinski, Tyler J.,Steinauer, Angela,Hie, Liana,Pelletier, Guillaume,Schepartz, Alanna,Miller, Scott J.
, p. 644 - 652 (2018/05/04)
Glycosylated natural products and synthetic glycopeptides represent a significant and growing source of biochemical probes and therapeutic agents. However, methods that enable the aqueous glycosylation of endogenous amino acid functionality in peptides without the use of protecting groups are scarce. Here, we report a transformation that facilitates the efficient aqueous O-glycosylation of phenolic functionality in a wide range of small molecules, unprotected tyrosine, and tyrosine residues embedded within a range of complex, fully unprotected peptides. The transformation, which uses glycosyl fluoride donors and is promoted by Ca(OH)2, proceeds rapidly at room temperature in water, with good yields and selective formation of unique anomeric products depending on the stereochemistry of the glycosyl donor. High functional group tolerance is observed, and the phenol glycosylation occurs selectively in the presence of virtually all side chains of the proteinogenic amino acids with the singular exception of Cys. This method offers a highly selective, efficient, and operationally simple approach for the protecting-group-free synthesis of O-aryl glycosides and Tyr-O-glycosylated peptides in water.
Engineering of glucoside acceptors for the regioselective synthesis of β-(1→3)-disaccharides with glycosynthases
Marton, Zsuzanna,Tran, Vinh,Tellier, Charles,Dion, Michel,Drone, Jullien,Rabiller, Claude
experimental part, p. 2939 - 2946 (2009/04/06)
Glycosynthase mutants obtained from Thermotoga maritima were able to catalyze the regioselective synthesis of aryl β-d-Galp-(1→3)-β-d-Glcp and aryl β-d-Glcp-(1→3)-β-d-Glcp in high yields (up to 90 %) using aryl β-d-glucosides as acceptors. The need for an aglyconic aryl group was rationalized by molecular modeling calculations, which have emphasized a high stabilizing interaction of this group by stacking with W312 of the enzyme. Unfortunately, the deprotection of the aromatic group of the disaccharides was not possible without partial hydrolysis of the glycosidic bond. The replacement of aryl groups by benzyl ones could offer the opportunity to deprotect the anomeric position under very mild conditions. Assuming that benzyl acceptors could preserve the stabilizing stacking, benzyl β-d-glucoside firstly assayed as acceptor resulted in both poor yields and poor regioselectivity. Thus, we decided to undertake molecular modeling calculations in order to design which suitable substituted benzyl acceptors could be used. This study resulted in the choice of 2-biphenylmethyl β-d-glucopyranoside. This choice was validated experimentally, since the corresponding β-(1→3) disaccharide was obtained in good yields and with a high regioselectivity. At the same time, we have shown that phenyl 1-thio-β-d-glucopyranoside was also an excellent substrate leading to similar results as those obtained with the O-phenyl analogue. The NBS deprotection of the S-phenyl group afforded the corresponding disaccharide quantitatively.
