Halogen-directed chemical sialylation: Pseudo-stereodivergent access to marine ganglioside epitopes

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Abstract

Sialic acids are conspicuous structural components of the complex gangliosides that regulate cellular processes. Their importance in molecular recognition manifests itself in drug design (e.g. Tamiflu®) and continues to stimulate the development of effective chemical sialylation strategies to complement chemoenzymatic technologies. Stereodivergent approaches that enable the α- or β-anomer to be generated at will are particularly powerful to attenuate hydrogen bond networks and interrogate function. Herein, we demonstrate that site-selective halogenation (F and Br) at C3 of the N-glycolyl units common to marine Neu2,6Glu epitopes enables pseudo-stereodivergent sialylation. α-Selective sialylation results from fluorination, whereas traceless bromine-guided sialylation generates the β-adduct. This concept is validated in the synthesis of HLG-1 and Hp-s1 analogues.

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Hayashi, T., Axer, A., Kehr, G., Bergander, K., & Gilmour, R. (2020). Halogen-directed chemical sialylation: Pseudo-stereodivergent access to marine ganglioside epitopes. Chemical Science, 11(25), 6527–6531. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0sc01219j

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