Transacylation in Ferrocenoyl-Purines. NMR and Computational Study of the Isomerization Mechanism

J Org Chem. 2019 Oct 4;84(19):12471-12480. doi: 10.1021/acs.joc.9b01944. Epub 2019 Sep 12.

Abstract

In the reaction of purines with ferrocenoyl chloride in dimethylformamide (DMF), a regioselective acylation occurred. The two products have been isolated and, according to detailed NMR analysis, identified as N7- and N9-ferrocenoylated isomers. In a more polar solvent, for example, in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), the two isomers interconvert to each other. The N7/N9 isomerization was followed by 1H NMR spectroscopy, until dynamic equilibrium was reached. Both kinetics and thermodynamics of the transacylation process are governed by a C6-substituent on the purine ring (R = NH2, Me, NHBz, OBz). The observed rate constant for the N7/N9-isomerization in the adenine system (R = NH2) is kobs = 0.3668 h-1, whereas the corresponding process in the C6-benzyloxypurine is 56 times slower. By use of density functional theory calculations and molecular dynamics simulations, several reaction pathways were considered and explored. Only the reaction mechanism involving DMSO as a nucleophilic reactant is in harmony with the experimental kinetic data. The calculated barrier (ΔG = 107.9 kJ/mol; at the M06L/6-311+G(d,p)/SDD level of theory) for this SN2-like reaction in the adenine system agrees well with the experimental value of 102.7 kJ/mol. No isomerization was detected in other organic solvents, for example, acetonitrile, N,N-dimethylformamide, or acetone, which indicated the exceptional nucleophilicity of DMSO. Our results raise a warning when treating or dissolving acylated purines in DMSO as they are prone to isomerization. We observed that the N7/N9-group transfer was specific not only for the organometallic moiety only, but for other acyl groups in purines as well. The relevance of this isomerization may be expected for a series of nucleobases and heterocyclic systems in general.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't