Synlett 2006(19): 3294-3298  
DOI: 10.1055/s-2006-951530
LETTER
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Mild Deprotection of Primary N-(p-Toluenesulfonyl) Amides with SmI2 ­Following Trifluoroacetylation

Ziad Moussa, Daniel Romo*
Department of Chemistry, Texas A&M University, P. O. Box 30012, College Station, TX 77842-3012, USA
Fax: +1(979)8624880; e-Mail: romo@mail.chem.tamu.edu;
Further Information

Publication History

Received 13 June 2006
Publication Date:
23 November 2006 (online)

Abstract

A mild deprotection method for notoriously difficult to unmask primary N-(p-toluenesulfonyl) amides was developed during our total synthesis studies toward the marine toxin, gymnodimine. The deprotection occurs at low temperature (-78 °C) under mild conditions by initial activation of the nitrogen with a trifluoroacetyl group, followed by reductive cleavage of the p-toluenesulfonyl group with samarium diiodide. The substrate scope and functional group tolerance of this useful N-S cleavage process, which builds on related cleavage processes of other nitrogen-heteroatom bonds, is explored.

20

We were unable to isolate a clean sample of bistrifluoroacetamide 6 as it underwent partial deacetylation to acetamide 5 during chromatography.

23

Et3N was not suitable for the tosylation of 3′-aminoaceto-phenone (Table [1] , sulfonamide 14) as it resulted in an inseparable mixture of 14 and its bistosylated derivative. However, employing pyridine as a base led to exclusive monotosylation.

24

Substrate 8 (Table [1] , entry 3) required TFAA (3 equiv) and Et3N for complete acetylation.

25

Reductive cleavage of the tosyl group at 23 °C led to significantly reduced yields of trifluoroacetamide.