Author:
Wolfe Saul,Ro Stephen,Kim Chan-Kyung,Shi Zheng
Abstract
Penicillin V was converted in 14 steps into Δ2-cephems having hydrogen at C-3, hydrogen or ethyl at C-2, and two methoxycarbonyl, two benzyloxycarbonyl, or one methoxycarbonyl and one benzyloxycarbonyl substituent at C-4. Deprotection of these Δ2-cephem-4,4-dicarboxylic acid esters by alkaline hydrolysis (in the case of methyl esters) or hydrogenolysis (in the case of benzyl esters) led in all cases to rapid decarboxylation of the Δ2-cephem-4,4-dicarboxylic acid or Δ2-cephem-4,4-dicarboxylic acid monoester. With hydrogen at C-2, hydrolysis of the dimethyl ester with 1 equiv of base produced a Δ2-cephem. With 2 equiv of base, and with all compounds having methyl at C-2, hydrolysis or hydrogenolysis afforded 4α-substituted-Δ2-cephems.In contrast, simpler benzyl or methyl acetamidomalonates could be deprotected without difficulty to afford stable malonic acids. Reasons for the differences in ease of decarboxylation were examined using semiempirical (AM1) and ab initio (3-21G) molecular orbital calculations. The decarboxylation barriers of unionized cephem or acetamido malonic acids were found to be high (3540 kcal mol1). Although the monoanion of acetamidomalonic acid retained a high barrier, the epimeric monoanions of a Δ2-cephem malonic acid decarboxylated with barriers of only 2 kcal mol1.Key words: mercaptoazetidinone, bromomalonate esters, MO calculations, sulfoxides, hydrogenolysis.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Organic Chemistry,General Chemistry,Catalysis
Cited by
14 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献