Issue 10, 2020

Competing pathways for photoremovable protecting groups: the effects of solvent, oxygen and encapsulation

Abstract

Extending the applications of Photoremovable Protecting Groups (PPGs) to “cage” phenols has generally met with unusually complex PPG byproducts. In this study, we demonstrate that the p–hydroxyphenacyl (pHP) cage for both simple and complex phenolics, including tyrosine, dispenses free phenols. With the simpler unsubstituted phenols, the reaction is governed by their Brønsted Leaving Group ability. On the other hand, the byproducts of the cage vary with these phenols. For the more acidic phenols the cage byproduct follows the Favorskii rearrangement to form p-hydroxyphenylacetic acid whereas for the weaker phenols other reactions such as reduction and hydrolysis begin to emerge. When the photolysis is conducted in octa acid (OA) containers, non-Favorskii, unrearranged fragments of the cage and other byproducts arise.

Graphical abstract: Competing pathways for photoremovable protecting groups: the effects of solvent, oxygen and encapsulation

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Feb 2020
Accepted
30 Jul 2020
First published
11 Aug 2020

Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2020,19, 1364-1372

Author version available

Competing pathways for photoremovable protecting groups: the effects of solvent, oxygen and encapsulation

T. Field, J. Peterson, C. Ma, P. Jagadesan, J. P. Da Silva, M. Rubina, V. Ramamurthy and R. S. Givens, Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2020, 19, 1364 DOI: 10.1039/D0PP00067A

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