Asymmetric Transfer Hydrogenation as a Key Step in the Synthesis of the Phosphonic Acid Analogs of Aminocarboxylic Acids

Author:

Dinhof Tamara12,Kalina Thomas1,Stanković Toda1,Braunsteiner Kristóf1,Rohrbach Philipp1,Turhan Ertan12,Gradwohl Andreas23,Königshofer Artur1,Horak Jeannie4,Pallitsch Katharina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Organic Chemistry Faculty of Chemistry University of Vienna Währingerstraße 38 1090 Vienna Austria

2. Vienna Doctoral School in Chemistry (DoSChem) University of Vienna Währingerstraße 42 1090 Vienna Austria

3. Institute of Inorganic Chemistry Faculty of Chemistry University of Vienna Josef-Holaubek-Platz 2 1090 Vienna Austria

4. Division of Metabolic and Nutritional Medicine Dr. von Hauner Children's Hospital Ludwig Maximilians University Munich Medical Center Lindwurmstraße 4 80337 Munich Germany

Abstract

Abstractα‐Aminophosphonic acids have a remarkably broad bioactivity spectrum. They can function as highly efficient transition state mimics for a variety of hydrolytic and angiotensin‐converting enzymes, which makes them interesting target structures for synthetic chemists. In particular, the phosphonic acid analogs to α‐aminocarboxylic acids (PaAAs) are potent enzyme inhibitors, but many of them are only available by chiral or enzymatic resolution; sometimes only one enantiomer is accessible, and several have never been prepared in enantiopure form at all. Today, a variety of methods to access enantiopure α‐aminophosphonic acids is known but none of the reported approaches can be generally applied for the synthesis of PaAAs. Here we show that the phosphonic acid analogs of many (proteinogenic) α‐amino acids become accessible by the catalytic, stereoselective asymmetric transfer hydrogenation (ATH) of α‐oxo‐phosphonates. The highly enantioenriched (enantiomeric excess (ee) ≥ 98 %) α‐hydroxyphosphonates obtained are important pharmaceutical building blocks in themselves and could be easily converted to α‐aminophosphonic acids in most studied cases. Even stereoselectively deuterated analogs became easily accessible from the same α‐oxo‐phosphonates using deuterated formic acid (DCO2H).

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Chemistry,Catalysis,Organic Chemistry

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