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Phase transfer catalysis conjugates

To facilitate accesses to suitably functionalized sialic acid derivatives and complex sialyloligosaccharides for other usehil neoglycoconjugates, phase transfer catalysis (PTC) has been exploited extensively [for reviews see 42]. This process provided a wide range of carbohydrate derivatives under essentially clean Sn2 transformations. In the case of acetochloroneuraminic acid 1, the PTC reactions always provided inverted a-sialic acid derivatives [43]. para-Formylphenyl sialoside 7 [44], together with many other sialoside derivatives such as 8-10 [43], including thioacetate 12 [45] and azide 14 [46], were thus obtained (Scheme 1). Aldehyde 7 and similar glycosides are of particular interest since they could be directly conjugated to protein by reductive amina-tion after suitable deprotection [44]. [Pg.246]

An additional interesting example is the conjugate addition of 1 to activated allylic acetates 18 under the chiral phase-transfer catalysis of 4d, and subsequent elimination reaction, as reported by Ramachandran and coworkers, as this enables the synthesis of various enantiomerically enriched glutamic add derivatives [39]. The utility of this process has been demonstrated by the transformation of (S)-19 (R = Ph) into 4-substituted pyroglutamate (2S,4S)-20, as illustrated in Scheme 2.17. [Pg.23]

Michael-aldol reaction as an alternative to the Morita-Baylis-Hillman reaction 14 recent results in conjugate addition of nitroalkanes to electron-poor alkenes 15 asymmetric cyclopropanation of chiral (l-phosphoryl)vinyl sulfoxides 16 synthetic methodology using tertiary phosphines as nucleophilic catalysts in combination with allenoates or 2-alkynoates 17 recent advances in the transition metal-catalysed asymmetric hydrosilylation of ketones, imines, and electrophilic C=C bonds 18 Michael additions catalysed by transition metals and lanthanide species 19 recent progress in asymmetric organocatalysis, including the aldol reaction, Mannich reaction, Michael addition, cycloadditions, allylation, epoxidation, and phase-transfer catalysis 20 and nucleophilic phosphine organocatalysis.21... [Pg.288]

Another important asymmetric epoxidation of a conjugated systems is the reaction of alkenes with polyleucine, DBU and urea H2O2, giving an epoxy-carbonyl compound with good enantioselectivity. The hydroperoxide anion epoxidation of conjugated carbonyl compounds with a polyamino acid, such as poly-L-alanine or poly-L-leucine is known as the Julia—Colonna epoxidation Epoxidation of conjugated ketones to give nonracemic epoxy-ketones was done with aq. NaOCl and a Cinchona alkaloid derivative as catalyst. A triphasic phase-transfer catalysis protocol has also been developed. p-Peptides have been used as catalysts in this reaction. ... [Pg.1176]

Enantioselective Conjugate Addition Reactions via Phase-transfer Catalysis... [Pg.187]

Several very interesting cascade processes have also been developed under phase-transfer catalysis which are initiated by a conjugate addition reaction, although the number of reports is remarkably more limited compared to other organocatalytic cascades proceeding via other different mechanisms of activation. Representative examples will be presented in the following pages. [Pg.311]

The most widely studied type of cascade initiated by a conjugate addition proceeding under phase-transfer catalysis conditions involves the use of either a... [Pg.311]


See other pages where Phase transfer catalysis conjugates is mentioned: [Pg.89]    [Pg.739]    [Pg.552]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.468]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.739]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.627]    [Pg.1107]    [Pg.739]    [Pg.261]    [Pg.739]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.218]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.131 ]




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Conjugal transfer

Conjugate phase

Conjugation transfer

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