Literature DB >> 18314969

A kinetic and mechanistic study of the amino acid catalyzed aldol condensation of acetaldehyde in aqueous and salt solutions.

Barbara Nozière1, Armando Córdova.   

Abstract

The amino acid catalyzed aldol condensation is of great interest in organic synthesis and natural environments such as atmospheric particles. However, kinetic and mechanistic information on these reactions is limited. In this work the kinetics of the aldol condensation of acetaldehyde in water and aqueous salt solutions (NaCl, CaCl2, Na2SO4, MgSO4) catalyzed by five amino acids (glycine, alanine, serine, arginine, and proline) at room temperature (295 +/- 2 K) has been studied. Monitoring the formation of three products, crotonaldehyde, 2,4-hexadienal, and 2,4,6-octatrienal, by UV-vis absorption over 200-1100 nm revealed two distinct kinetic regimes: at low amino acid concentrations (in all cases, below 0.1 M), the overall reaction was first-order with respect to acetaldehyde and kinetically limited by the formation of the enamine intermediate. At larger amino acid concentrations (at least 0.3 M), the kinetics was second order and controlled by the C-C bond-forming step. The first-order rate constants increased linearly with amino acid concentration consistent with the enamine formation. Inorganic salts further accelerated the enamine formation according to their pKb plausibly by facilitating the iminium or enamine formation. The rate constant of the C-C bond-forming step varied with the square of amino acid concentration suggesting the involvement of two amino acid molecules. Thus, the reaction proceeded via a Mannich pathway. However, the contribution of an aldol pathway, first-order in amino acid, could not be excluded. Our results show that the rate constant for the self-condensation of acetaldehyde in aqueous atmospheric aerosols (up to 10 mM of amino acids) is identical to that in sulfuric acid 10-15 M (kI approximately 10-7-10-6 s-1) clearly illustrating the potential importance of amino acid catalysis in natural environments. This work also demonstrates that under usual laboratory conditions and in natural environments aldol condensation is likely to be kinetically controlled by the enamine formation. Notably, kinetic investigations of the C-C bond-forming addition step would only be possible with high concentrations of amino acids.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18314969     DOI: 10.1021/jp7096845

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem A        ISSN: 1089-5639            Impact factor:   2.781


  7 in total

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Journal:  Atmos Chem Phys       Date:  2021-09-10       Impact factor: 7.197

2.  Aldol-type compounds from water-soluble indole-3,4-diones: synthesis, kinetics, and antiviral properties.

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Journal:  Mol Divers       Date:  2013-05-03       Impact factor: 2.943

3.  Mechanism of acetaldehyde-induced deactivation of microbial lipases.

Authors:  Benjamin Franken; Thorsten Eggert; Karl E Jaeger; Martina Pohl
Journal:  BMC Biochem       Date:  2011-02-22       Impact factor: 4.059

Review 4.  Formation and photochemical investigation of brown carbon by hydroxyacetone reactions with glycine and ammonium sulfate.

Authors:  Yan Gao; Yunhong Zhang
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 4.036

5.  Kinetics, Products, and Brown Carbon Formation by Aqueous-Phase Reactions of Glycolaldehyde with Atmospheric Amines and Ammonium Sulfate.

Authors:  Alyssa A Rodriguez; Michael A Rafla; Hannah G Welsh; Elyse A Pennington; Jason R Casar; Lelia N Hawkins; Natalie G Jimenez; Alexia de Loera; Devoun R Stewart; Antonio Rojas; Matthew-Khoa Tran; Peng Lin; Alexander Laskin; Paola Formenti; Mathieu Cazaunau; Edouard Pangui; Jean-François Doussin; David O De Haan
Journal:  J Phys Chem A       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 2.944

Review 6.  Formation and repair of unavoidable, endogenous interstrand cross-links in cellular DNA.

Authors:  Kurt Housh; Jay S Jha; Tuhin Haldar; Saosan Binth Md Amin; Tanhaul Islam; Amanda Wallace; Anuoluwapo Gomina; Xu Guo; Christopher Nel; Jesse W Wyatt; Kent S Gates
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2020-12-24

7.  Saline Accelerates Oxime Reaction with Aldehyde and Keto Substrates at Physiological pH.

Authors:  Shujiang Wang; Ganesh N Nawale; Sandeep Kadekar; Oommen P Oommen; Naresh K Jena; Sudip Chakraborty; Jöns Hilborn; Oommen P Varghese
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-02-01       Impact factor: 4.379

  7 in total

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