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O-Alkyl hydroxamic acids

As illustrated by the examples in Table 3.9, resin-bound 4-alkoxybenzylamides often require higher concentrations of TFA and longer reaction times than carboxylic acids esterified to Wang resin. For this reason, the more acid-sensitive di- or (trialkoxy-benzyl)amines [208] are generally preferred as backbone amide linkers. The required resin-bound, secondary benzylamines can readily be prepared by reductive amination of resin-bound benzaldehydes (Section 10.1.4 and Figure 3.17 [209]) or by A-alkyla-tion of primary amines with resin-bound benzyl halides or sulfonates (Section 10.1.1.1). Sufficiently acidic amides can also be A-alkylated by resin-bound benzyl alcohols under Mitsunobu conditions (see, e.g., [210] attachment to Sasrin of Fmoc cycloserine, an O-alkyl hydroxamic acid). [Pg.59]

Aldehydes and ketones have also been prepared by nucleophilic cleavage of resin-bound O-alkyl hydroxamic acids (Weinreb amides [744]) with lithium aluminum hydride [745] or Grignard reagents (Entries 1 and 2, Table 3.41). Similarly, support-bound thiol esters can be cleaved with Grignard reagents to yield ketones [272], or with reducing agents to yield aldehydes (Entry 3, Table 3.41). Polystyrene-bound sele-nol esters (RCO-Se-Pol) react with alkynyl cuprates to yield alkynyl ketones [746]. [Pg.121]

Hydroxylamines and hydrazines can be acylated on insoluble supports using the same type of acylating agent as is used for the acylation of amines [146-149]. Because of their higher nucleophilicity, hydroxylamines or hydrazines can be acylated more readily than amines, and unreactive acylating agents such as carboxylic esters can sometimes be successfully employed (Table 13.10). Polystyrene-bound O-alkyl hydroxamic acids can be N-alkylated by treatment with reactive alkyl halides and bases such as DBU (Entry 5, Table 13.10). [Pg.342]




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Hydroxamate

Hydroxamates

Hydroxamic acid

O-alkyl

O-alkylation

O-alkylations

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