Sulfation Made Simple Gill, Daniel; Male, Louise; Jones, Alan M

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Sulfation Made Simple Gill, Daniel; Male, Louise; Jones, Alan M University of Birmingham Sulfation made simple Gill, Daniel; Male, Louise; Jones, Alan M. DOI: 10.1039/C9CC01057B License: Creative Commons: Attribution (CC BY) Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Citation for published version (Harvard): Gill, D, Male, L & Jones, AM 2019, 'Sulfation made simple: a strategy for synthesising sulfated molecules', Chemical Communications , vol. 55, no. 30, pp. 4319-4322. https://doi.org/10.1039/C9CC01057B Link to publication on Research at Birmingham portal Publisher Rights Statement: Published in Chemical Communications on 12/03/2019 DOI: 10.1039/c9cc01057b General rights Unless a licence is specified above, all rights (including copyright and moral rights) in this document are retained by the authors and/or the copyright holders. The express permission of the copyright holder must be obtained for any use of this material other than for purposes permitted by law. •Users may freely distribute the URL that is used to identify this publication. •Users may download and/or print one copy of the publication from the University of Birmingham research portal for the purpose of private study or non-commercial research. •User may use extracts from the document in line with the concept of ‘fair dealing’ under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (?) •Users may not further distribute the material nor use it for the purposes of commercial gain. Where a licence is displayed above, please note the terms and conditions of the licence govern your use of this document. When citing, please reference the published version. Take down policy While the University of Birmingham exercises care and attention in making items available there are rare occasions when an item has been uploaded in error or has been deemed to be commercially or otherwise sensitive. If you believe that this is the case for this document, please contact [email protected] providing details and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate. Download date: 02. Oct. 2021 ChemComm View Article Online COMMUNICATION View Journal Sulfation made simple: a strategy for synthesising sulfated molecules† Cite this: DOI: 10.1039/c9cc01057b Daniel M. Gill,a Louise Maleb and Alan M. Jones *a Received 5th February 2019, Accepted 12th March 2019 DOI: 10.1039/c9cc01057b rsc.li/chemcomm The study of organosulfates is a burgeoning area in biology, yet there are significant challenges with their synthesis. We report the development of a tributylsulfoammonium betaine as a high yielding route to organosulfates. The optimised reaction conditions were Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. interrogated with a diverse range of alcohols, including natural products and amino acids. Organosulfates play a variety of important roles in biology, from xenobiotic metabolism to the downstream signalling of steroidal Fig. 1 Examples of drug molecules containing organosulfates: heparin, s s sulfates in disease states.1 Sulfate groups on glycosaminoglycans sotradecol and avibactam ; a chemical tool compound (C3)anda metabolite of paracetamol. (GAGs) such as heparin, heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate, facilitate molecular interactions and protein ligand binding at the cellular surface,2 an area of interest in drug discovery.3 A variety of methods to prepare organosulfates are shown in This article is licensed under a Heparin (an anticoagulant),4 avibactams (a b-lactamase Chart 1. inhibitor),5 sotradecol (a treatment for varicose veins),6 the The preparation of organosulfate esters include a microwave 7 sulfate metabolite of paracetamol (an analgesic), and the assisted approach to the sulfation of alcohols, using Me3NSO3 and 8 15,16 Open Access Article. Published on 12 March 2019. Downloaded 3/25/2019 9:29:49 AM. glycomimetic C3 (used to study atherosclerosis), contain organo- PySO3,Chart1(i)). The addition of catalytic diaryl borinic acid 17 sulfate motifs (Fig. 1). There are many other natural sources of can be used with Me3NSO3 to sulfate carbohydrates. The limita- bioactive sulfated compounds.9 tions with these routes include the need for a stoichiometric excess The incorporation of polar hydrophilic organosulfate groups onto of the reagent per alcohol group (up to 10 eq. per hydroxyl group) drug-like molecules is timely to facilitate research investigating and difficulties with purification. Poor solubility in organic solvents sulfated GAGs as potential new therapies.10 However, the insertion makes aqueous purification protocols and ion-exchange chromato- and isolation of sulfate groups into target molecules remains a graphy a standard procedure, limiting the practicality. An alkyl challenging aspect of their synthesis,11 prompting recent advances chlorosulfate ester with subsequent deprotection has proven a into sulfate revealing pro-drugs.12 reliable method, but limitations include the need to use a strong The presence of one or more sulfate group makes chemical base and a deprotection step leads to side products (Chart 1(ii)).18 A synthesis and purification of (per)sulfated compounds challenging, DCC/H2SO4-sulfate coupling has been demonstrated but is not primarily due to their poor solubility in organic solvents.13 There- amenable to acid sensitive substrates (Chart 1(iii)).19 A sulfitylation– fore the insertion of organosulfate groups is typically the final step oxidation protocol (Chart 1(iv)) involves the synthesis of a protected in a synthetic method, limiting further chemical modifications.14 sulfite ester, oxidation to the protected sulfate ester and cleavage to the sodium sulfate salt.20 However, the use of multiple steps and purification sequences is limiting. A process route to Avibactam21 a School of Pharmacy, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, B15 2TT, UK. (Fig. 1 and Chart 1(v) involved sulfation of the hydroxylamine E-mail: [email protected]; Tel: +44 (0)1214147288 intermediate using Me3NSO3, followed by cation exchange with b School of Chemistry, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, B15 2TT, UK tetrabutylammonium acetate, gave the organosulfate as its tetra- † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Preparative routes, com- pound characterisation, copies of 1Hand13C spectra and the cif file for the X-ray butylammonium salt. The sodium salt was obtained by precipita- crystal structure of 1. CCDC 1894165 (1). For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF tion in 77% yield over 2 steps on a multi-kg scale. Similarly, the use or other electronic format see DOI: 10.1039/c9cc01057b of a sulfate bis(tributylammonium) salt for the preparation for This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 Chem. Commun. View Article Online Communication ChemComm Scheme 1 (a) Synthesis of Bu3NSO3 (1); (b) alternative views of the crystal structure of 1 obtained from small molecule single crystal X-ray diffraction. We synthesised 1 by reaction of tributylamine with chloro- sulfonic acid, affording a 90% yield on a 60 g scale (Scheme 1(a)).25 For the first time both NMR spectral data and the crystal structure of 1, obtained from small molecule single crystal X-ray diffraction, was 26 determined (Scheme 1(b)). Bu3NSO3 (1)adoptsaGauche conforma- tion within an asymmetric unit cell caused by hydrogen bonding between the methylene hydrogen atoms a to the nitrogen and the oxygens of SO3.ThemeasuredN–Sbondlengthin1 is 1.886(3) Å, a comparable bond length to a single N–S bond (typically: 1.73–1.83 Å versus 2.06 Å for a donor–acceptor system),27 suggesting that 1 exists as a betaine in the solid state which may have implications Chart 1 Previous strategies to the synthesis of sulfate esters: this work: for the other unsolved amine–SO3 complexes and their asso- sulfate ester formation using tributylsulfoammonium betaine gives direct ciated mechanisms. access to an organic soluble organosulfate intermediate that can be readily Benzyl alcohol (2a) was selected for the optimisation study Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. ion exchanged. (Chart 2) due to a distinct down-field shift (+0.35 ppm) of the benzylic signal after sulfation (by 1H-NMR spectroscopy). nucleoside phosphosulfates22 highlighted that the solubility of the We examined the sulfation of 2a with varying equivalents of 1 organosulfate ester can be modulated by increasing the lipophili- (entries 1 to 4). It was found that 2.0 equivalents of 1 was optimal city of the corresponding cation. for high conversions (499%) and isolated yields (95%, entry 3). During a medicinal chemistry programme we encountered difficulties using the established sulfation methods to per- sulfate compounds, due to the poor solubility of the organo- This article is licensed under a sulfate intermediates and their resulting purification. We sought to develop an all in one reagent, to improve the solubility of the intermediate organosulfate ester. Combining Open Access Article. Published on 12 March 2019. Downloaded 3/25/2019 9:29:49 AM. tributylamine (pKa, 10.89) with SO3, we envisioned this would create a complex (Bu3NSO3, 1) for the persulfation of alcohols, with increased lipophilicity of the intermediate sulfate ester, improving the overall solubility of the organosulfates in organic solvents. We rationalised that 1 would retain similar activity to SO3 complexes with Et3N and Me3N, due to their similar Lewis base strengths, pKa = 11.01 and 10.63, respectively. Overall, 1 may permit sequential chemical steps in organic solvents, with a simple purification method to the corresponding sodium salt, streamlining the synthesis of organosulfates. The complexation of sulfur trioxide to nitrogen or oxygen containing molecules (such as pyridine, NMe3, NEt3, DMF, THF and dioxane) is well known,11,15 the use of an organic solubilising partner, tributylamine, is however not. To the best of our knowl- edge, the only literature report of the synthesis and physical study of 1 was by Moede in 1949.23 It was not until 1976 that Parshikov and co-workers24 studied 1 as a sulfating agent on simple aliphatic alcohols (without spectroscopic characterisation) and found that 1 reacts via an SN2 mechanism driven by the hydrogen-bonding propensity of the alcohol under study.
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