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Org. Synth. 1973, 53, 25
DOI: 10.15227/orgsyn.053.0025
tert-BUTOXYCARBONYL-L-PROLINE
[1,2-Pyrrolidinedicarboxylic acid, 1-(1,1-dimethylethyl) ester, (S)-]
Submitted by Ulf Ragnarsson1, Sune M. Karlsson, Bengt E. Sandberg, and Lars-Eric Larsson.
Checked by S. Wang and A. Brossi.
1. Procedure
A 1-l. Erlenmeyer flask (Note 1) equipped with a magnetic stirrer, and a thermometer is charged with 115 g. (1.00 mole) of L-proline (Note 2) and 500 ml. of dimethyl sulfoxide (Note 3). To the stirred suspension are added simultaneously, over 5 minutes, 115 g. (1.00 mole) of 1,1,3,3-tetramethylguanidine (Note 4) and 214 g. (1.10 moles) of tert-butyl phenyl carbonate (Note 5). The proline dissolves completely within a few minutes in an exothermic reaction, the temperature of which reaches a maximum of 50–52° after 10–15 minutes. After stirring for 3 hours, the clear reaction mixture is transferred to a 6-l. separatory funnel and shaken with 2.2 l. of water and 1.8 l. of diethyl ether (Note 6). The aqueous layer, after being washed with 500 ml. of ether, is acidified to pH 3.0 by the addition of 10% sulfuric acid (Note 7), which generally causes partial crystallization of the product. The acidic solution, including the solid, is extracted with three 600-ml. portions of a mixture of equal volumes of ethyl acetate and ether. The combined extracts are washed with three 25-ml. portions of water, dried over magnesium sulfate, filtered, and evaporated with a rotary evaporator at a bath temperature not exceeding 40°. After drying in a vacuum oven at 50°, the crude product weighs 202 g., m.p. 129–132°. It is recrystallized from 300 ml. of hot ethyl acetate, and clarified by filtration and the addition of 1 l. of petroleum ether (40–60°), yielding, after drying under vacuum at 50°, 179–193 g. (83–90%) of tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-proline, m.p. 132–134°, [α]D25 −59.84° to −61.6° (c = 1, glacial acetic acid) (Note 8),(Note 9), and (Note 10).
2. Notes
1. A three-necked flask equipped with a U-tube may also be used for the reaction.
2. The submitters used L-proline obtained from Tanabe Seiyaku Company, Ltd., Osaka, Japan, and checked its purity by the method of Manning and Moore.2 The L-proline used by the checkers was obtained from Ajinomoto Company, New York.
3. Dimethyl sulfoxide, Fisher Scientific Company, was used without further purification.
4. 1,1,3,3-Tetramethylguanidine, b.p. 159–160°, was used without further purification. The submitters obtained their material from Schuchardt, Munich, Germany, and the checkers obtained theirs from Pfaltz and Bauer, New York.
5. tert-Butyl phenyl carbonate furnished by Ega-Chemie KG, Steinheim, Germany, was used by the submitters. The checkers used material obtained from Aldrich Chemical Company, Inc.
6. The pH of the aqueous layer was 7.2. If the pH, as measured with a pH meter, is not between 7 and 8, it should be adjusted to within these limits by the addition of either 10% sulfuric acid or 1,1,3,3-tetramethylguanidine. The submitters worked up the reaction by the following alternate, but less convenient, method. The reaction mixture was poured into 1.25 l. of 1 M sodium hydrogen carbonate solution, 500 ml. of ether, and sufficient water (ca. 1 l.) to give two clear phases. The pH, which was 8.9, was adjusted to 8.0 by the addition, with stirring, of solid potassium hydrogen sulfate.
7. 10% Sulfuric acid (1.l M) was prepared by diluting 25 ml. of concentrated sulfuric acid with 398 ml. of water. The submitters used solid potassium hydrogen sulfate for acidification to pH 3.0.
8. An additional 5 g. of product, m.p. 127–129°, may be obtained from the mother liquor
9. Some reported yields, melting points, and rotations are: 55%, 136–137°, and [α]D25 −60.2° (2.011 in acetic acid)3; 96%, 134–136°, [α]57818–25 −68.5° (c = 1, acetic acid)4; 95%, 132–134°, [α]578 −62.5° (acetic acid)5; 90%, 133–135°, [α]D25 −60.4° (c = 2.2 in acetic acid)6; 93%, 134–135°, no rotation reported.7
10. 1H NMR (dimethyl sulfoxide-d6): δ 1.38 (s, 9H, 3CH3), 1.92 (m, 4H, 2CH2), 3.31 (t, 2H, CH2N), 4.05 (t, 1H, CHN), 12.3 (s, 1H, CO2H). Analysis calculated for C10H17NO4: C, 55.80; H, 7.96; N, 6.51. Found: C, 55.81; H, 7.95; N, 6.44.
3. Discussion
Since their introduction by McKay and Albertson,8 and Anderson and McGregor,3 tert-butoxycarbonyl amino acids have been prepared by several different methods. The simplest procedure6 requires working with large quantities of phosgene. Another very good method,5 but one that has not found wide application, involves the use of tert-butoxycarbonylfluoride, which is not commercially available. At the present the most useful reagent has been tert-butoxycarbonylazide, for which good procedures9,10 are available; the excellent method of Schnabel4 and one more recently reported7 are based on this reagent. Of the procedures for the preparation of tert-butoxycarbonylazide, one,9 which is readily adaptable for large-scale operations, involves three steps and the other,10 a two-step process, is more suitable for small-scale work.
Our procedure11 represents a simplification in that tert-butyl phenyl carbonate, which is used as a starting material, is the first intermediate in the three-step synthesis9 of tert-butoxycarbonylazide. This reagent is easy to prepare in quantity and is commercially available in bulk (Note 5). Further, 1,1,3,3-tetramethylguanidine is inexpensive and the experimental operations are extremely simple.
Proline dissolves readily in dimethyl sulfoxide. Some other amino which are less soluble require longer reaction times and, in some instances, other solvents.11 These details and the scope of the reaction are illustrated in Table I.
TABLE I
OTHER BOCa AMINO ACIDS SYNTHESIZED BY THIS PROCEDURE

Compound

Solvent

Temperature, °

Time, Hr.

Yield, %

Remarks


Boc-Alab

DMSOc

25

40

58

Boc-Alab

DMSOc

40

40

79

Boc-Asnd

DMSOc

25

66

70

2 equiv. TMGe

Boc-Aspf

DMSOc

25

18

89

2 equiv. TMG

Boc-Cys(Bzl)g

DMSOc

25

40

62

CHA salth

Boc-Cys (Bzl)g

DMSOc

40

40

78

CHA salt

Boc-Glni

DMSOc

50

48

62

2 equiv. TMG, DCHA salt,j continuous extraction with ethyl acetate

Boc-Gluk

DMSOc

25

2.5

80

2 equiv. TMG

Boc-Ilel

DMSOc

40

72

72

Boc-Leum

DMSOc

25

48

73

Calc. as hemihydrate

Boc-Metn

DMSOc

25

24

86

81% solid +5% DCHA salt

Boc-Pheo

DMSOc

25

40

81

DCHA salt

Boc-Pheo

DMSOc

25

96

88

DCHA salt

Boc-Pheo

DMSOc

40

18

81

DCHA salt

Boc-Pheo

DMSOc

25

48

59

DCHA salt

Boc-Pheo

D—Wq

25

48

5

DCHA salt

Boc-Pror

DMSOc

25

2.5

90

Boc-Pror

DMFp

25

2.5

92

Boc-Pror

D—Wq

25

21

84

Boc-Thrs

DMSOc

25

67

66

DCHA salt

Boc-Valt

DMSOc

25

71

77

2 equiv. TMG, 65% solid +12% DCHA salt


atert-Butoxycarbonyl. bL-Alanine. cDimethylsulfoxide. dL-Aspargine. e1,1,3,3-Tetramethylguanidine. fL-Aspartic acid. gS-Benzyl-L-cysteine. hCyclohexylamine. iL-Glutamine. jDicyclohexylamine. kL-Glutamic acid. lL-Isoleucine. mL-Leucine. nL-Methionine. oL-Phenylalanine. pDimethylformamide. qDioxane-water 1:1. rL-Prolone. sL-Threonine. tL-Valine.

More recently, a few additional reagents have been found useful for the synthesis of Boc-amino acids. Among these are tert-butyl-4,6-dimethylpyrimidyl-2-thiol carbonate,12 di-tert-butyl dicarbonate,13 2-tert-butoxycarbonyloxyimino-2-phenylacetonitrile,14 and tert-butyl α-methoxyvinyl carbonate.15 With the advent of a relatively simple method for the preparation of carbonyl chloride fluoride16 tert-butoxycarbonylfluoride17 is now more readily available.

References and Notes
  1. Biokemiska Institutionen, Uppsala Universitet, Box 531, S-751 23 Uppsala, Sweden.
  2. J. M. Manning and S. Moore, J. Biol. Chem., 243, 5591 (1968).
  3. G. W. Anderson and A. C. McGregor, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 79, 6180 (1957).
  4. E. Schnabel, Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 702, 188 (1967).
  5. E. Schnabel, H. Herzog, P. Hoffmann, E. Klauke, and I. Ugi, in E. Bricas, Ed., "Peptides 1968," North-Holland, Amsterdam, 1968, p. 91.
  6. S. Sakakibara, I. Honda, K. Takada, M. Miyoshi, T. Ohnishi, and K. Okumura, Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn., 42, 809 (1969).
  7. A. Ali, F. Fahrenholz, and B. Weinstein, Angew. Chem., 84, 259 (1972) [Angew. Chem. Int Ed. Engl., 11, 289 (1972)].
  8. F. C. McKay and N. F. Albertson, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 79, 4686 (1957).
  9. L. A. Carpino, B. A. Carpino, P. J. Crowley, C. A. Giza, and P. H. Terry, Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. 5, 157 (1973).
  10. M. A. Insalaco and D. S. Tarbell, Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. 6, 207 (1988).
  11. U. Ragnarsson, S. M. Karlsson, and B. E. Sandberg, Acta Chem. Scand., 26, 2550 (1972).
  12. T. Nagasawa, K. Kuroiwa, K. Narita, and Y. Isowa, Bull. Soc. Chem. Jpn., 46, 1269 (1973).
  13. B. M. Pope, Y. Yamamoto, and D. S. Tarbell, Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. 6, 418 (1988).
  14. M. Itoh, D. Hagiwara, and T. Kamiya, Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. 6, 199 (1988).
  15. Y. Kita, J. Haruta, H. Yasuda, K. Fukunaga, Y. Shirouchi, and Y. Tamura, J. Org. Chem., 47, 2697 (1982).
  16. G. Siegemund, Angew. Chem., 85, 982 (1973) [Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. Engl., 12, 918 (1973)].
  17. L. Wackerle and I. Ugi, Synthesis, 598 (1975).

Appendix
Chemical Abstracts Nomenclature (Collective Index Number);
(Registry Number)

petroleum ether

sulfuric acid (7664-93-9)

acetic acid (64-19-7)

ethyl acetate (141-78-6)

ether,
diethyl ether (60-29-7)

sodium hydrogen carbonate (144-55-8)

alanine (56-41-7)

potassium hydrogen sulfate (7646-93-7)

phosgene (75-44-5)

Glutamic Acid (56-86-0)

magnesium sulfate (7487-88-9)

Methionine (63-68-3)

phenylalanine (63-91-2)

proline,
L-proline (147-85-3)

isoleucine (73-32-5)

leucine (61-90-5)

threonine (72-19-5)

valine (72-18-4)

aspartic acid (56-84-8)

dimethyl sulfoxide (67-68-5)

cysteine (52-90-4)

1,1,3,3-tetramethylguanidine (80-70-6)

Butoxycarbonyl

Glutamine

tert-butoxycarbonylazide (1070-19-5)

2-tert-Butoxycarbonyloxyimino-2-phenylacetonitrile (58632-95-4)

tert-Butyl phenyl carbonate (6627-89-0)

Di-tert-butyl dicarbonate (24424-99-5)

1,2-Pyrrolidinedicarboxylic acid, 1-(1,1-dimethylethyl) ester, (S)-,
tert-Butoxycarbonyl-L-proline (15761-39-4)

tert-butoxycarbonylfluoride

tert-butyl-4,6-dimethylpyrimidyl-2-thiol carbonate

tert-butyl α-methoxyvinyl carbonate