| Literature DB >> 15279573 |
A R A S Deshmukh1, B M Bhawal, D Krishnaswamy, Vidyesh V Govande, Bidhan A Shinkre, A Jayanthi.
Abstract
Azetidin-2-one, a four-membered cyclic lactam (beta-lactam) skeleton has been recognised as a useful building block for the synthesis of a large number of organic molecules by exploiting the strain energy associated with it, in addition to its use in the synthesis of a variety of beta-lactam antibiotics. Efforts have been made in exploring such new aspects of beta-lactam chemistry using enantiomerically pure beta-lactams as versatile intermediates for the synthesis of aromatic beta-amino acids and their derivatives, peptides, polyamines, polyamino alcohols, amino sugars and polyamino ethers. The development of methodologies based on beta-lactam nucleus is now referred as 'the beta-lactam synthon methods'. The selective bond cleavage of the strained ring coupled with further interesting transformation render this fascinating molecule as a powerful building block. This provides an access to diverse structural type of synthetic target molecules lacking beta-lactam ring structure. This review provides an account of synthesis of organic compounds having biological significance at the same time lacking beta-lactam ring, by using beta-lactam as synthon.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15279573 DOI: 10.2174/0929867043364874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Med Chem ISSN: 0929-8673 Impact factor: 4.530