Strategies for the Generation of Molecularly Imprinted Polymeric Nitroxide Catalysts
Strategies for the Generation of Molecularly Imprinted Polymeric Nitroxide Catalysts
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Two strategies for preparing catalytically active molecularly imprinted nitroxide-containing polymers are outlined. Both strategies rely upon the thermal rearrangement chemistry of tertiary amine N-oxides. To this end, several polymers were prepared and the polymeric nitroxides were revealed by oxidation with m-CPBA. All of the resulting polymeric catalysts proved to be competent mediators of the oxidation of alcohols.
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10.1021/ol051749n
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ORGANIC
LETTERS
Strategies for the Generation of
Molecularly Imprinted Polymeric
Nitroxide Catalysts
2005
Vol. 7, No. 22
4879-4882
Christopher D. Anderson, Kenneth J. Shea,* and Scott D. Rychnovsky*
Department of Chemistry, UniVersity of California-IrVine, 516 Rowland Hall, IrVine,
California 92697-2025
srychnoV@uci.edu
Received July 23, 2005
ABSTRACT
Two strategies for preparing catalytically active molecularly imprinted nitroxide-containing polymers are outlined. Both strategies rely upon
the thermal rearrangement chemistry of tertiary amine N-oxides. To this end, several polymers were prepared and the polymeric nitroxides
were revealed by oxidation with m-CPBA. All of the resulting polymeric catalysts proved to be competent mediators of the oxidation of
alcohols.
Whereas enzymatic processes achieve selectivity by imposing
geometric constraints on a given substrate, organic reactions
are typically subject to the intrinsic bias of a substrate. One
strategy for attaining selectivity by mimicking the geometric
constraints imposed by enzymes is the use of molecularly
imprinted polymers (MIPs).1 MIPs are typically highly crosslinked networks with defined and accessible “binding sites”.
These sites result from the presence of a removable template
molecule during the polymerization event. After polymerization, the template can be removed (typically by chemical
or physical means) to leave a polymer that retains the shape
and complementary polarity of the template molecule (Figure
1). To date, MIPs have been successfully utilized to effect
enantioselective hydrolysis,2 diastereoselective and regioselective reduction,3 and enantioselective alkylation,4 among
(1) Wulff, G. Chem. ReV. 2002, 102, 1-28 and references therein.
(2) (a) Sellergren, B.; Shea, K. J. Tetrahedron: Asymmetry 1994, 5,
1403-1406. (b) Sellergren, B.; Karmalkar, R. N.; Shea, K. J. J. Org. Chem.
2000, 65, 4009-4027.
(3) Bystrom, S. E.; Boerje, A.; Akermark, B. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1993,
¨
115, 2081-2083.
(4) (a) Wulff, G.; Vietmeier, J. Makromol. Chem. 1989, 190, 17171726. (b) Wulff, G.; Vietmeier, J. Makromol. Chem. 1989, 190, 17271735.
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other transformations. Substrate-selective metal-catalyzed
oxidation has also been accomplished by the use of MIPs.5
Nitroxides, such as TEMPO (1), are stable free radicals
that are efficient catalysts for the oxidation of alcohols to
Figure 1. General strategy for the generation of molecularly
imprinted polymers.
Figure 2. Proposed mechanism of TEMPO-mediated oxidation
under alkaline conditions.
ketones, aldehydes, and carboxylic acids (Figure 2). These
catalysts have found widespread use in synthetic chemistry.6
Several studies have focused on the mechanism of this
process, and the currently accepted mechanism under alkaline
reaction conditions is depicted in Figure 2.7 The utility of
this organocatalyst has attracted our group and others to
investigate the use of chiral nitroxides for the kinetic
resolution of secondary alcohols; however, these endeavors
have met with limited success.8
Our longstanding interest in the chemistry of nitroxides,
coupled with the potential of molecularly imprinted polymers
for achieving selectivity, led us to initiate a project investigating the interface of these two areas. To this end, we
decided to approach the generation of nitroxide polymers
from a unique perspective. To date, several immobilized
TEMPO moieties have been prepared, including silicasupported TEMPO,9 MCM-41-supported TEMPO,10 sol-gel
TEMPO,11 PEG-TEMPO,12 polynorbornene-derived TEMPO,13
and polyamine TEMPO.14 These are all effective catalysts
for the oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes and can be
(5) (a) Efendiev, A. A. Macromol. Symp. 1994, 80, 289-313. (b)
Efendiev, A. A.; Orudzhev, D. D.; Shakhtakhinsky, T. N.; Kabanov, V. A.
In Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Catalysis; Yermakov, Y., Likholobov,
V.; Eds.; VNU Science: Utrecht, 1986; pp 717-725.
(6) Merbouh, N.; Bobbitt, J. M.; Brueckner, C. Org. Prep. Proced. Int.
2004, 36, 3-31.
(7) (a) Golubev, V. A.; Borislavskii, V. N.; Alexandrov, A. L. Bull. Acad.
Sci. USSR, DiV. Chem. Sci. 1977, 1874-1881. (b) Golubev, V. A.; Sen, V.
D.; Rozantsev, E. G. Bull. Acad. Sci. USSR, DiV. Chem. Sci. 1979, 1927Ä
1931. (c) Semmelhack, M. F.; Schmid, C. R.; Cortes, D. A. Tetrahedron
´
Lett. 1986, 27, 1119-1122.
(8) (a) Formaggio, F.; Bonchio, M.; Crisma, M.; Peggion, C.; Mezzato,
S.; Polese, A.; Barazza, A.; Antonello, S.; Maran, F.; Broxterman, Q. B.;
Kaptein, B.; Kamphuis, J.; Vitale, R. M.; Saviano, M.; Benedetti, E.;
Toniolo, C. Chem. Eur. J. 2002, 8, 84-93. (b) Kashiwagi, Y.; Kurashima,
F.; Kikuchi, C.; Anzai, J.; Osa, T.; Bobbitt, J. M. Chem. Commun. 1999,
1983-1984. (c) Naik, N.; Braslau, R. Tetrahedron 1998, 54, 667-696. (d)
Rychnovsky, S. D.; McLernon, T. L.; Rajapakse, H. J. J. Org. Chem. 1996,
61, 1194-1195. (e) Ma, Z.; Huang, Q.; Bobbitt, J. M. J. Org. Chem. 1993,
58, 4837.
(9) (a) Bolm, C.; Fey, T. Chem. Commun. 1999, 1795-1796. (b) Fey,
T.; Fischer, H.; Bachmann, S.; Albert, K.; Bolm, C. J. Org. Chem. 2001,
66, 8154-8159.
(10) Brunel, D.; Fajula, F.; Nagy, J. B.; Deroide, B.; Verhoef, M. J.;
Veum, L.; Peters, J. A.; van Bekkum, H. Appl. Catal., A 2001, 213, 7382.
(11) (a) Ciriminna, R.; Blum, J.; Avnir, D. Pagliaro, M. Chem. Commun.
2000, 1441-1442. (b) Ciriminna, R.; Bolm, C.; Fey, T.; Pagliaro, M. AdV.
Synth. Catal. 2002, 344, 159-163.
(12) (a) Pozzi, G.; Cavazzini, M.; Quici, S.; Benaglia, M.; Dell′Anna,
G. Org. Lett. 2004, 6, 441-443. (b) Ferreira, P.; Hayes, W.; Phillips, E.;
Rippon, D.; Tsang, S. C. Green Chem. 2004, 6, 310-312.
(13) Tanyeli, C.; Gumus, A. Tetrahedron Lett. 2003, 44, 1639-1642.
¨ ¨¸
4880
Figure 3. Allylamines.
removed from reaction mixtures by filtration. However, these
catalysts were prepared with monomers incapable of imprinting. In contrast to these methods, we sought to use 2,2,6,6tetramethylpiperidine derivatives to template the polymer and
then selectively remove the N-substituent to reveal a catalytically active nitroxide with an imprinted cavity adjacent to
the N-O• catalyst site.
One feature of enzymes that is desirable to emulate is the
transition-state stabilization imparted by the structure of the
active site. As such, our initial plan was to template structures
that would effectively mimic N-oxide 2. Unfortunately, it
was found that all of the 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine
N-oxide derivatives we attempted to synthesize decomposed
thermally above 0 °C, precluding the use of such N-oxides
as templates for the desired MIPs. Thus an alternate strategy
of imprinting amine structures, such as allylic amines 4 and
O-alkyl hydroxylamines 9b, 16, and 17, was adopted. These
templates omit the zwitterionic character of the proposed
transition structure 2 but maintain an appropriately positioned
templating element.
Initially, allylic amines 4a-c were targeted to evaluate
the potential of this strategy for the preparation of catalytically active nitroxide polymers (Figure 3). An alkylation
approach to these molecules was identified as the most
efficient means of attaining the desired structures. 1-Bromo2-hexene reacted with amine 6 at elevated temperature to
provide hydroxy amine 7 in 53% yield, which could be
derivatized to acetate 3b and methacrylate 4b (Scheme 1).
Scheme 1.
Preparation of Tertiary Amine Template 4b
Allylamine 4a and allylic amine 4c were prepared by an
analogous sequence. To validate this strategy, 3a was treated
(14) Dijksman, A.; Arends, I. W. C. E.; Sheldon, R. A. Chem. Commun.
2000, 271-272.
Org. Lett., Vol. 7, No. 22, 2005
with m-CPBA to provide acetoxy TEMPO 12a as the only
product by GC analysis. This occurs via initial generation
of N-oxide 8 followed by Meisenheimer [2,3]-rearrangement15 to provide an O-allyl hydroxylamine 9a, which
undergoes oxidation to provide another N-oxide, 10a (Scheme
2). Decomposition by a Cope-like elimination generates a
Scheme 2.
Scheme 3.
Synthesis of Diisopropylidene Galactose Template
16
Proposed Mechanism of Template Removal
and washing, the resultant colorless polymers were treated
with excess mCPBA to reveal the pink-colored imprinted
TEMPO catalysts.19, 20
hydroxylamine 11a, which is subsequently oxidized to the
nitroxide 12a. The one limitation of this strategy is the
inability to easily access allylic amines 5 in enantiopure form,
which would provide entry into chiral templates.
Given the limitation of the allylamine templates, we
envisaged that O-alkylated hydroxylamines might be suitable
templates for MIPs. Additionally, this method would allow
direct access into chiral templates. To this end, iodo-galactose
13 was photolyzed in the presence of nitroxide 14 and
HSnBu3 to give silyl-protected hydroxylamine 15 in 71%
yield.16 Conversion to a polymerizable methacrylate derivative 16 was achieved in 70% yield over two steps. O-Alkyl
hydroxylamines 9b and 17 were prepared by a similar
sequence. As a validation of this approach for generating
nitroxides, hydroxylamine 16 was treated with m-CPBA to
give nitroxide 12 in quantitative yield. A proposed mechanism of oxidative removal of the O-alkyl hydroxylamine
template moiety is illustrated in Scheme 2.
With the desired polymerizable templates in hand, templates 4a-c, 9b, 16, and 17 (5 mol % template) were each
copolymerized with ethylene glycol dimethacrylate (EGDMA) and methyl methacrylate (MMA) under free-radical
conditions using acetonitrile as porogen.17,18 After crushing
(15) Albini, A. Synthesis 1993, 263-277 and references therein.
(16) Weigel, T. M.; Liu, H.-w. Tetrahedron Lett. 1988, 29, 42214224.
(17) Spivak, D.; Gilmore, M. A.; Shea, K. J. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1997,
119, 4388-4393.
(18) The polymerization mixture was composed of 80 mol % EDGMA,
14 mol % MMA, 5 mol % template, 1 mol % AIBN, and a volume of
CH3CN equal to the four other components.
Org. Lett., Vol. 7, No. 22, 2005
After surveying known TEMPO oxidation protocols with
the catalyst derived from 4b, Anelli’s procedure (NaOCl,
NaHCO3, KBr, H2O, CH2Cl2, 0 °C) emerged as the best
method for use with this polymeric catalyst.21 The oxidations
of primary alcohols were rapid (
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