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A true reverse anomeric effect does exist after all: a hydrogen bonding stereocontrolling effect in 2-iminoaldoses

A true reverse anomeric effect does exist after all: a hydrogen bonding stereocontrolling effect in 2-iminoaldoses
A true reverse anomeric effect does exist after all: a hydrogen bonding stereocontrolling effect in 2-iminoaldoses

The reverse anomeric effect is usually associated with the equatorial preference of nitrogen substituents at the anomeric center. Once postulated as another anomeric effect with explanations ranging from electrostatic interactions to delocalization effects, it is now firmly considered to be essentially steric in nature. Through an extensive research on aryl imines from 2-amino-2-deoxyaldoses, spanning nearly two decades, we realized that such substances often show an anomalous anomeric behavior that cannot easily be rationalized on the basis of purely steric grounds. The apparent preference, or stabilization, of the β-anomer takes place to an extent that not only neutralizes but also overcomes the normal anomeric effect. Calculations indicate that there is no stereoelectronic effect opposing the anomeric effect, resulting from the repulsion between electron lone pairs on the imine nitrogen and the endocyclic oxygen. Such data and compelling structural evidence unravel why the exoanomeric effect is largely inhibited. We are now confident, as witnessed by 2-iminoaldoses, that elimination of the exo-anomeric effect in the α-anomer is due to the formation of an intramolecular hydrogen bond between the anomeric hydroxyl and the iminic nitrogen, thereby accounting for a true electronic effect. In addition, discrete solvation may help justify the observed preference for the β-anomer.

Conformation, Hydroxyls, nitrogen, noncovalent interactions, substituents
0022-3263
7877–7898
Matamoros, Esther
67ecaf15-3e62-46d8-b8fd-717f8e8c439a
Pérez, Esther M.S.
1ebe5954-6236-4586-80a2-2bde38783c70
Light, Mark E.
cf57314e-6856-491b-a8d2-2dffc452e161
Cintas, Pedro
29979233-8382-47a8-bde7-1faf4869308c
Martínez, R. Fernando
25456861-d6d7-4964-ac9c-54f5a1e5c2ba
Palacios, Juan C.
2c06e379-89b3-46b1-95c8-7f5057732f9f
Matamoros, Esther
67ecaf15-3e62-46d8-b8fd-717f8e8c439a
Pérez, Esther M.S.
1ebe5954-6236-4586-80a2-2bde38783c70
Light, Mark E.
cf57314e-6856-491b-a8d2-2dffc452e161
Cintas, Pedro
29979233-8382-47a8-bde7-1faf4869308c
Martínez, R. Fernando
25456861-d6d7-4964-ac9c-54f5a1e5c2ba
Palacios, Juan C.
2c06e379-89b3-46b1-95c8-7f5057732f9f

Matamoros, Esther, Pérez, Esther M.S., Light, Mark E., Cintas, Pedro, Martínez, R. Fernando and Palacios, Juan C. (2024) A true reverse anomeric effect does exist after all: a hydrogen bonding stereocontrolling effect in 2-iminoaldoses. Journal of Organic Chemistry, 89 (11), 7877–7898. (doi:10.1021/acs.joc.4c00562).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The reverse anomeric effect is usually associated with the equatorial preference of nitrogen substituents at the anomeric center. Once postulated as another anomeric effect with explanations ranging from electrostatic interactions to delocalization effects, it is now firmly considered to be essentially steric in nature. Through an extensive research on aryl imines from 2-amino-2-deoxyaldoses, spanning nearly two decades, we realized that such substances often show an anomalous anomeric behavior that cannot easily be rationalized on the basis of purely steric grounds. The apparent preference, or stabilization, of the β-anomer takes place to an extent that not only neutralizes but also overcomes the normal anomeric effect. Calculations indicate that there is no stereoelectronic effect opposing the anomeric effect, resulting from the repulsion between electron lone pairs on the imine nitrogen and the endocyclic oxygen. Such data and compelling structural evidence unravel why the exoanomeric effect is largely inhibited. We are now confident, as witnessed by 2-iminoaldoses, that elimination of the exo-anomeric effect in the α-anomer is due to the formation of an intramolecular hydrogen bond between the anomeric hydroxyl and the iminic nitrogen, thereby accounting for a true electronic effect. In addition, discrete solvation may help justify the observed preference for the β-anomer.

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Accepted/In Press date: 29 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 May 2024
Published date: 7 June 2024
Keywords: Conformation, Hydroxyls, nitrogen, noncovalent interactions, substituents

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491242
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491242
ISSN: 0022-3263
PURE UUID: 9965d967-40cf-454c-b54f-e20767681132
ORCID for Mark E. Light: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0585-0843

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Date deposited: 18 Jun 2024 16:41
Last modified: 21 Jun 2024 01:36

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Contributors

Author: Esther Matamoros
Author: Esther M.S. Pérez
Author: Mark E. Light ORCID iD
Author: Pedro Cintas
Author: R. Fernando Martínez
Author: Juan C. Palacios

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