When nucleoside chemistry met hypervalent iodine reagents

ARKIVOC. 2018;2018(Pt II):252-279. doi: 10.24820/ark.5550190.p010.281. Epub 2017 Dec 21.

Abstract

There has been increasing use of hypervalent iodine reagents in the field of nucleoside chemistry. Applications span: (a) synthesis of nucleoside analogues with sulfur and seleno sugar surrogates, (b) synthesis of unusual carbocyclic and ether ring-containing nucleosides, (c) introduction of sulfur and selenium into pyrimidine bases of nucleosides and analogues, (d) synthesis of isoxazole and isoxazoline ring-containing nucleoside analogues, (e) involvement of purine ring nitrogen atoms for remote C-H bond oxidation, and (f) metal-catalyzed and uncatalyzed synthesis of benzimidazolyl purine nucleoside analogues by intramolecular C-N bond formation. This review offers a perspective on developments involving the use of hypervalent iodine reagents in the field of nucleoside chemistry that have appeared in the literature in the 2003-2017 time frame.

Keywords: C-H bond activation; C-N bond formation; hypervalent iodine; nucleoside analogs; nucleosides.