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Porphyrins with exocyclic rings. Part 22: Synthesis of deoxophylloerythroetioporphyrin (DPEP), three ring homologues, and five related nonpolar bacteriopetroporphyrins using a western ring closure and an improved b-bilene methodology
Authors:Timothy D Lash  Wei Li  Desiree M Quizon-Colquitt
Institution:Department of Chemistry, Illinois State University, Normal, IL 61790-4160, United States
Abstract:Dipyrrolic intermediates incorporating five-membered carbocyclic rings are easily prepared from cyclopentab]pyrroles, and this unit represents the southern half of the DPEP-type geoporphyrins found in organic-rich sediments such as oil shales and petroleum. Related dipyrroles with six-, seven- or eight-membered carbocyclic rings were shown to give b-bilenes when reacted with dipyrrylmethane carbaldehydes under mildly acidic conditions. Following deprotection of the terminal ester groups, cyclization with TFA-CH(OMe)3 gave a series of ring homologues of deoxophylloerythroetioporphyrin (DPEP). The b-bilenes generated from the five-membered ring dipyrroles proved to be rather unstable and had to be used directly without purification. Cyclization gave DPEP contaminated with an etioporphyrin by-product, but these could be separated as the nickel(II) derivatives by flash chromatography. This approach gave superior yields of DPEP compared to previously reported methods. In addition, the methodology could be extended to the synthesis of related petroporphyrins, and a series of five molecular fossils derived from bacteriochlorophylls d were synthesized by this approach.
Keywords:Petroporphyrins  Porphyrin synthesis  Cyclopenta[b]pyrroles  b-Bilenes  Pyrrole chemistry
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