| Literature DB >> 35539943 |
H H Fokoue1, J V Marques2, M V Correia3, L F Yamaguchi4, X Qu5, J Aires-de-Sousa5, M T Scotti6, N P Lopes7, M J Kato4.
Abstract
Amides are important natural products which occur in a few plant families. Piplartine and piperine, major amides in Piper tuberculatum and P. nigrum, respectively, have shown a typical N-CO cleavage when analyzed by EI-MS or HRESI-MS. In this study several synthetic analogs of piplartine and piperine were subjected to both types of mass spectrometric analysis in order to identify structural features influencing fragmentation. Most of the amides showed an intense signal of the protonated molecule [M + H]+ when subjected to both HRESI-MS and EI-MS conditions, with a common outcome being the cleavage of the amide bond (N-CO). This results in the loss of the neutral amine or lactam and the formation of aryl acylium cations. The mechanism of N-CO bond cleavage persists in α,β-unsaturated amides because of the stability caused by extended conjugation. Computational methods determined that the protonation of the piperamides and their derivatives takes place preferentially at the amide nitrogen supporting the dominant the N-CO bond cleavage. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35539943 PMCID: PMC9080946 DOI: 10.1039/c7ra00408g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1EI-MS and HRESI-MS of piplartine (1a).
Fig. 2EI-MS and HRESI-MS of piperine (6a).
Structures of natural amides and derivativesa
|
| |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amides |
| Ra | Rb | Rc | R |
| 1a | 1 | OMe | OMe | OMe | RA |
| 1b | 1 | OMe | OMe | OMe | RF |
| 1c | 1 | OMe | OMe | OMe | RE |
| 1d | 1 | OMe | OMe | OMe | RG |
| 1e | 1 | OMe | OMe | OMe | RD |
| 1f | 1 | OMe | OMe | OMe | RC |
| 2a | 1 | OMe | OMe | H | RE |
| 2b | 1 | OMe | OMe | H | RG |
| 2c | 1 | OMe | OMe | H | RD |
| 2d | 1 | OMe | OMe | H | RC |
| 2e | 1 | OMe | OMe | H | RF |
| 3a | 1 | H | Br | H | RD |
| 3b | 1 | H | Br | H | RG |
| 3c | 1 | H | Br | H | RE |
| 4a | 1 | OCH2O | H | RD | |
| 4b | 1 | OCH2O | H | RE | |
| 5a | 1 | H | H | H | RE |
| 5b | 1 | H | H | H | RG |
| 5c | 1 | H | H | H | RD |
| 5d | 1 | H | H | H | RF |
| 6a | 2 | OCH2O | H | RC | |
| 6b | 2 | OCH2O | H | RG | |
| 7a | 2 | H | OMe | H | RG |
| 7b | 2 | H | OMe | H | RE |
| 7c | 2 | H | OMe | H | RC |
| 8a | 2 | H | Br | H | RG |
| 8b | 2 | H | Br | H | RC |
| 9 | 1 (Δ = 0) | OMe | OMe | OMe | RB |
| 10 | 2 (Δ = 0) | OCH2O | H | RC | |
For R see Fig. 6.
Fig. 6Amine (RC, RD, RE, RG) and lactame (RA, RB, RF) moieties.
Fig. 5Main fragmentation pattern of the amides in EI-MS.
Molecular ions [M]+˙ (relative abundance%) and significant fragmentary ions observed in EI-MS spectra of amidesa
| Amide | [M]+˙ | RCO+ | Fragmentary ions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | 317 (90) | 221 (100) | 274 (32), 193 (20), 190 (32) |
| 1b | 305 (100) | 221 (55) | 205 (40), 190 (22) |
| 1c | 349 (37) | 221 (100) | 222 (63), 190 (15) |
| 1d | 307 (85) | 221 (95) | 236 (42), 222 (100), 191 (26), 190 (27), 181 (55), 179 (27) |
| 1e | 307 (50) | 221 (100) | 222 (60), 190 (26) |
| 1f | 305 (60) | 221 (65) | 222 (100), 194 (25), 191 (35), 190 (25), 84 (69) |
| 2a | 319 (20) | 191 (100) | 276 (12), 262 (10), 163 (11), 151 (15) |
| 2b | 277 (43) | 191 (100) | 206 (35), 192 (40), 151 (45) |
| 2c | 277 (31) | 191 (100) | 192 (23), 163 (14) |
| 2d | 275 (55) | 191 (100) | 192 (35), 163 (20), 161 (20), 84 (42) |
| 2e | 275 (51) | 191 (100) | 163 (12) |
| 3a | 295 (21) | 209 (72) | 211 (70), 183 (13), 181 (11), 126 (27), 102 (100), 86 (52), 56 (34) |
| 3b | 295 (10) | 209 (74) | 211 (75), 102 (100) |
| 3c | 337 (5) | 209 (100) | 211 (91), 102 (100), 44 (83) |
| 4a | 261 (57) | 175 (100) | 176 (32), 145 (81), 117 (37), 89 (47) |
| 4b | 303 (18) | 175 (100) | 145 (42), 89 (26) |
| 5a | 259 (7) | 131 (100) | 216 (14), 103 (33) |
| 5b | 217 (7) | 131 (100) | 188 (10), 146 (20), 103 (45), 77 (25) |
| 5c | 217 (18) | 131 (100) | 103 (60), 86 (26), 77 (28) |
| 5d | 215 (26) | 131 (100) | 187 (14), 103 (57), 77 (32) |
| 6a | 285 (63) | 201 (87) | 202 (25), 173 (42), 143 (35), 115 (100), 84 (35) |
| 6b | 287 (55) | 201 (57) | 173 (99), 115 (100) |
| 7a | 273 (87) | 187 (100) | 188 (35), 155 (20), 159 (62), 144 (60), 121 (42), 115 (60) |
| 7b | 315 (26) | 187 (100) | 144 (27), 128 (27), 115 (27), 44 (35) |
| 7c | 271 (67) | 187 (100) | 159 (30), 144 (40), 115 (42), 84 (35) |
| 8a | 321 (18) | 235 (37) | 237 (35), 156 (25), 128 (100), 96 (45) |
| 8b | 319 (25) | 235 (25) | 237 (25), 156 (27), 138 (27), 129 (28), 128 (100), 84 (74) |
| 9 | 321 (35) | 223 (15) | 222 (100), 194 (40), 181 (25), 179 (55), 44 (75) |
| 10 | 289 (35) | 205 (5) | 204 (25), 140 (31), 135 (25), 127 (100), 112 (52), 84 (35) |
RCO+ = [[M] − NRdRe]+.
Fig. 7McLafferty rearrangement for amide 10 under EI conditions.
Molecular formula, compound exact mass, HRESI [M + H]+ and acylium ions (RCO+) observed in MS/MS spectra of amidesa
| Amides | Molecular formula | [M + H]+ calculated | [M + H]+ observed | Error ppm | RCO+ | Molecular formula |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | C17H19NO5 | 318.1336 | 318.1337 | 0.31 | 221.0803 | C12H13O4+ |
| 1b | C16H19NO5 | 306.1336 | 306.1345 | 2.94 | 221.0859 | C12H13O4+ |
| 1c | C20H31NO4 | 350.2326 | 350.2334 | 2.28 | 221.0817 | C12H13O4+ |
| 1d | C17H25NO4 | 308.1856 | 308.1859 | 0.97 | 221.0830 | C12H13O4+ |
| 1e | C16H21NO5 | 308.1492 | 308.1496 | 1.30 | 221.0822 | C12H13O4+ |
| 1f | C17H23NO4 | 306.1700 | 306.1704 | 1.31 | 221.0815 | C12H13O4+ |
| 2a | C19H29NO3 | 320.2220 | 320.2226 | 1.87 | 191.0703 | C11H11O3+ |
| 2b | C16H23NO3 | 278.1751 | 278.1758 | 2.52 | 191.0702 | C11H11O3+ |
| 2c | C15H19NO4 | 278.1387 | 278.1389 | 0.72 | 191.0706 | C11H11O3+ |
| 2d | C16H21NO3 | 276.1594 | 276.1602 | 2.90 | 191.0700 | C11H11O3+ |
| 2e | C15H17NO4 | 276.1230 | 276.1235 | 1.81 | 191.0702 | C11H11O3+ |
| 3a | C13H14BrNO2 | 296.0281 | 296.0282 | 0.34 | 208.9588 | C9H6BrO+ |
| 3b | C14H18BrNO | 296.0645 | 296.0647 | 0.68 | 208.9585 | C9H6BrO+ |
| 3c | C17H24BrNO | 338.1114 | 338.1116 | 0.59 | 208.9533 | C9H6BrO+ |
| 4a | C14H15NO4 | 262.1074 | 262.1072 | −0.76 | 175.0384 | C10H7O3+ |
| 4b | C18H25NO3 | 304.1907 | 304.1902 | −1.64 | 175.0380 | C10H7O3+ |
| 5a | C17H25NO | 260.2008 | 260.2010 | 0.77 | 131.0430 | C9H7O+ |
| 5b | C14H19NO | 218.1539 | 218.1538 | −0.46 | 131.0487 | C9H7O+ |
| 5c | C13H15NO2 | 218.1175 | 218.1180 | 2.29 | 131.0482 | C9H7O+ |
| 5d | C13H13NO2 | 216.1019 | 216.1015 | −1.85 | 131.0480 | C9H7O+ |
| 6a | C17H19NO3 | 286.1438 | 286.1441 | 1.05 | 201.0556 | C12H10O3+ |
| 6b | C17H21NO3 | 288.1594 | 288.1596 | 0.69 | 201.0535 | C12H10O3+ |
| 7a | C17H23NO3 | 274.1802 | 274.1800 | −0.73 | 187.0744 | C12H12O2+ |
| 7b | C20H29NO2 | 316.2260 | 316.2258 | −0.63 | 187.0743 | C12H12O2+ |
| 7c | C17H21NO2 | 272.1645 | 272.1646 | 0.37 | 187.0744 | C12H12O2+ |
| 8a | C16H20BrNO | 322.0801 | 322.0801 | 0.00 | 234.9745 | C11H9BrO+ |
| 8b | C16H18BrNO | 320.0645 | 320.0649 | 1.25 | 234.9749 | C11H9BrO+ |
| 9 | C17H23NO5 | 322.1649 | 322.1649 | 0.00 | 223.0969 | C12H15O4+ |
| 10 | C17H23NO3 | 290.1751 | 290.1752 | 0.34 | 205.0845 | C12H14O3+ |
RCO+ = [[M + H] − NRdRe].
Fig. 8Main fragmentation pathway for amides (A) and imides (B) in HRESI-MS.
Fig. 3General structures of amides.
Proton affinity (kJ mol−1) of amide (PA)a
| Amides | PA(a) | PA(b) | Δ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1c | 933.66 | 903.37 | 30.29 |
| 1d | 973.89 | 946.86 | 27.03 |
| 1f | 984.40 | 976.82 | 7.58 |
| 6a | 996.12 | 976.24 | 19.88 |
| 10 | 980.89 | 945.19 | 35.70 |
a and b: bonding sites for hydrogens (Fig. 3).
Bond energy (kJ mol−1) of amides with proton bonded at position a and b of the N–C bond (E, Ea, Eb) calculated with Spartan 16 softwarea
| Amides |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| 1c | 1695.86 | 211.93 | 167.08 |
| 1d | 948.43 | 222.97 | 179.04 |
| 1e | 890.08 | 210.00 | 180.59 |
| 1f | 912.47 | 228.24 | 198.91 |
| 3a | 846.79 | 125.30 | 108.94 |
| 3b | 902.95 | 159.94 | 109.53 |
| 3c | 1528.89 | 152.62 | 121.72 |
| 4a | 801.33 | 121.38 | 99.34 |
| 4b | 1490.65 | 133.37 | 101.17 |
| 5a | 1522.02 | 151.48 | 100.01 |
| 5b | 891.07 | 157.18 | 94.95 |
| 5c | 833.14 | 147.35 | 116.79 |
| 6a | 803.07 | 120.94 | 104.79 |
| 6b | 838.06 | 125.59 | 96.50 |
| 7a | 838.07 | 124.79 | 94.25 |
| 7b | 1482.96 | 132.95 | 105.32 |
| 7c | 801.67 | 129.69 | 102.17 |
| 8a | 869.14 | 143.18 | 91.71 |
| 8b | 822.19 | 147.12 | 108.35 |
| 10 | 930.22 | 208.93 | 148.45 |
a and b: bonding sites for hydrogens (Fig. 3).
Fig. 4General structures of imides.
Proton affinity (kJ mol−1) of imides (PA)a
| Amide | PA(a) | PA(b) | PA(c) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1a | 945.75 | 898.82 | 927.77 |
| 1b | 951.73 | 887.15 | 899.90 |
| 2e | 981.27 | 885.84 | 899.73 |
| 5d | 951.08 | 891.88 | 917.21 |
| 9 | 941.94 | 889.96 | 946.81 |
a, b and c: bonding sites for hydrogens (Fig. 4).
Bond energy (kJ mol−1) of imides and proton bonded at a, b and c and of the N–C bonded at position 1 (E1, Ea1, Eb1, Ec1) calculated by Spartan 16 softwarea
| position | 1a | 1b | 2e | 5d | 9 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 764.92 | 774.95 | 678.95 | 731.28 | 770.14 |
|
| 148.35 | 168.29 | 86.81 | 108.23 | 99.55 |
|
| 115.22 | 97.53 | 11.76 | 38.21 | 84.98 |
|
| 139.98 | 124.70 | 39.36 | 67.22 | 112.60 |
a, b and c: bonding sites for hydrogens (Fig. 4).