A set of 1,3-propanediamine derivatives connected to carbohydrates (5) has been prepared in four steps from peracetylated sugar and 1,3-dibromo-2-propanol in 60-73% yields. D-Glucose, D-mannose, D-galactose, D-xylose, D-ribose, and maltose are utilized as sugar molecules in this work. The diamine moiety was connected to the C1 carbon of the glycopyranose ring via an O-glycoside bond. All of the anomeric configurations and sugar puckering conformations, except in the D-maltose derivative, were determined by X-ray crystallography of the diazido or dibromo precursors. While glycosidation of peracetylated galactopyranose with 1,3-dibromo-2-propanol in the presence of boron trifluoride afforded both anomers, the neighboring group participation of the 2-acetoxy group yielded a single anomer for the other substrates. This method has been used to synthesize a library of sugar-pendant diamines including an OH-protected derivative (6), and an N,N'-diisopropyl-substituted derivative (7). A similar series of reactions using 2,3-dibromo-1-propanol gave ethylenediamine-type derivatives (11), and bis(bromomethyl)bis(hydroxymethyl)methane (12) gave bisglucose-pendant derivatives (16).
meso-Tetraphenylporphyrin having hexa-maltosyl and decyl chain was synthesized via dipyrromethane coupling. Its singlet oxygen producing ability and phototoxicity against the HeLa cell were estimated.
Chirality has been introduced to a metalloporphyrin by a new approach that involves coordination to the metal of a pendant arm, with the preferred conformation adopted by the resulting chelate ring causing the meso-phenyl group to which the arm is attached to twist and thereby introduce chirality to the remote, open face of the metalloporphyrin.
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