| Literature DB >> 27735117 |
Benjamin Schumann1,2, Sharavathi G Parameswarappa1, Marilda P Lisboa1, Naresh Kottari1, Fabio Guidetti1, Claney L Pereira3, Peter H Seeberger4,5.
Abstract
The glycosylation reaction is the key transformation in oligosaccharide synthesis, but it is still difficult to control in many cases. Stereocontrol during cis-glycosidic linkage formation relies almost exclusively on tuning the glycosylating agent or the reaction conditions. Herein, we use nucleophile-directed stereocontrol to manipulate the stereoselectivity of glycosylation reactions. Placing two fluorine atoms in close proximity to the hydroxy group of an aliphatic amino alcohol lowers the oxygen nucleophilicity and reverses the stereoselectivity of glycosylations to preferentially form the desired cis-glycosides with a broad set of substrates. This concept was applied to the design of a cis-selective linker for automated glycan assembly. Fluorination of an amino alcohol linker does not impair glycan immobilization and lectin binding as illustrated by glycan microarray experiments. These fluorinated linkers enable the facile generation of α-terminating synthetic glycans for the formation of glycoconjugates.Entities:
Keywords: diastereoselectivity; fluorine; glycosylation; microarrays; nucleophilicity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27735117 DOI: 10.1002/anie.201606774
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 15.336