Abstract
The origin of biomolecular homochirality continues to be one of the most fascinating aspects of prebiotic chemistry. Various amplification strategies for chiral compounds to enhance a small chiral preference have been reported, but none of these involves phosphorylation, one of nature's essential chemical reactions. Here we present a simple and robust concept of phosphorylation-based chiral amplification of amines and amino acids in water. By exploiting the difference in solubility of a racemic phosphoramidate and its enantiopure form, we achieved enantioenrichment in solution. Starting with near racemic, phenylethylamine-based phosphoramidates, ee's of up to 95 % are reached in a single amplification step. Particularly noteworthy is the enantioenrichment of phosphorylated amino acids and their derivatives, which might point to a potential role of phosphorus en-route to prebiotic homochirality.
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Dašková, V., Buter, J., Schoonen, A. K., Lutz, M., de Vries, F., & Feringa, B. L. (2021). Chiral Amplification of Phosphoramidates of Amines and Amino Acids in Water. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 60(20), 11120–11126. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202014955
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