Front Matter

(Tina Sui) #1
16.4.3 Protection of the hydroperoxide function and obtaining of

chiral synthons

In 1991, Dussaultet al. reported a method of protection of the hydroperoxide func-

tion by acid ketalization with 2-methoxy propene (Dussault et al., 1991) Starting

from enzymatically generated 13(S)-HPODE followed by HPOD protection, they

obtained access to a valuable optically activec-peroxy-a,b-unsaturated aldehyde

(Figure 15) through selective ozonolysis.

This chiral synthon could be further used in olefination through a Wittig reaction.

Indeed, various conjugated dienic hydroperoxides such as 15(S)-HPETE have been

synthesized in this way (Dussault et al., 1991; Dussault and Lee, 1992). In a sub-

sequent paper (Dussault and Lee, 1995) the same team reported, using the same

general methodology, a very elegant synthesis of 5(S)-HPETE. To conduct this

synthesis, synthon 10 was first produced enzymatically, and then used according

to the following retrosynthetic strategy (Figure 16).

Substrate 11 was first chemically synthesized (30 % overall yield, seven steps) in

order to generate 10 through SBLOX-1 oxygenation and subsequent ozonolysis

(Figure 17). Access to 5(S)-HPETE was then completed by Wittig olefination

and deprotection (34 % yield from 11 , six steps).

At the same time, a Japanese group (Baba et al., 1990) used the same perketal

protection strategy to synthesize a structured hydroperoxide phospholipid contain-

16.4 Applications of PUFA hydroperoxides in fine chemistry 353

Figure 15. Protection and ozonolysis of methyl 13(S)-HPODE (Dussault et al., 1991).


Figure 16. Retrosynthetic strategy for the chemo-enzymatic production of 5(S)-HPETE (Dussault and
Lee, 1995).


Figure 17. Chemoenzymatic synthesis of chiral synthon 10 (Dussault and Lee, 1995).

Free download pdf