Enzyme-catalyzed enantiomeric resolution of N-Boc-proline as the key-step in an expeditious route towards RAMP

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Abstract

For the preparation of both enantiomers of N-carbamoyl-2-methoxymethylpyrrolidine, the precursors of Enders' chiral auxiliaries, SAMP and RAMP, enzyme-catalyzed kinetic resolution of racemic N-carbamoyl, N-Boc, N-Cbz proline esters and prolinols were examined. B. licheniformis protease (subtilisin) preferentially hydrolyzed the (R)-carbamoylproline ester with an enantiomeric ratio (E) of 10. To a hydrophobic N-Cbz proline ester, subtilisin showed lower selectivity (E=2.8), and in contrast, a purified protease (isozyme A) from the earthworm showed the preference of (S)-enantiomer (E=13.6). In a practical sense, C. antarctica lipase B (Chirazyme L-2) was effective for the hydrolysis of both N-Boc and N-Cbz derivatives with E >100. The e.e. of (R)-N-carbamoyl-2-methoxymethylpyrrolidine was raised to be >99.9% by recrystallization at the N-Boc-prolinol stage, which was derived from the (R)-N-Boc-proline methyl ester (98.7% e.e.) through a preparative-scale enzyme-catalyzed resolution (49% yield) of the racemic substrate. © 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Kurokawa, M., Shindo, T., Suzuki, M., Nakajima, N., Ishihara, K., & Sugai, T. (2003). Enzyme-catalyzed enantiomeric resolution of N-Boc-proline as the key-step in an expeditious route towards RAMP. Tetrahedron Asymmetry, 14(10), 1323–1333. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0957-4166(03)00210-6

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