124 CHAPTER 29 Pericyclic Reactions
oxyluciferin is promoted to an excited state because suprafacial overlap can occur only
under photochemical conditions. When the electron in the excited state drops down to
the ground state, a photon of light is released. In this case, the luciferin molecule acts
as both the source of the unstable four-membered ring and as the dye molecule that
had to be added to the cold-light reaction.
A Biological Reaction Involving an Electrocyclic Reaction
and a Sigmatropic Rearrangement
7-Dehydrocholesterol, a steroid found in skin, is converted into vitamin by two
pericyclic reactions. The first is an electrocyclic reaction that opens one of the six-
membered rings in the starting material to form provitamin This reaction occurs
under photochemical conditions. The provitamin then undergoes a [1,7] sigmatropic
rearrangement to form vitamin The sigmatropic rearrangement takes place under
thermal conditions and is slower than the electrocyclic reaction, so vitamin contin-
ues to be synthesized for several days after exposure to sunlight. Vitamin is not the
active form of the vitamin. The active form requires two successive hydroxylations of
vitamin D 3 —the first occurs in the liver and the second in the kidneys.
D 3
D 3
D 3.
D 3.
D 3
luciferin
luciferase
oxyluciferin
HO S
N S
N
H
COH ATP
−
O
HO S
N S
N
H
COAMP
O
HO S
N S
N COAMP
O
OO
−
HO S
N S
N COAMP
O
O O
−
OO
HO S
N S
N
C OAMP
O
B
O
OO
HO S
N S
N
C
HO S O*
N S
N HO S O
N S
N
+ CO 2 + light
an unstable
four- membered ring
has an electron in
an excited state
CH 3
HO
H 3 C
H H
H 3 C
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3
h
an electrocyclic
reaction
7-dehydrocholesterol
HO
H 3 C
H
H 3 C
CH 3
CH 3
CH 3
provitamin D 3
a [1,7] sigmatropic
rearrangement
HO
H 2 C
H
H 3 C
CH (^3) CH 3
vitamin D 3