AROMATIC COMPOUNDS WITH SULFUR CONTAINING LIGANDS

Information

  • Patent Application
  • 20130165630
  • Publication Number
    20130165630
  • Date Filed
    February 08, 2013
    11 years ago
  • Date Published
    June 27, 2013
    11 years ago
Abstract
Compounds useful as nutritional supplements, antioxidants, heavy metal chelators and/or as intermediates for producing other related compounds with like uses have a formula:
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates generally to novel aromatic compounds useful as nutritional supplements, antioxidants, heavy metal chelators and/or also as intermediates for producing other useful compounds of this type.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Free radicals are unstable oxygen-containing molecules that negatively interact with other molecules in the body, in a process called oxidation. High levels of free radicals and oxidation can lead to oxidative stress. Moderate oxidative stress can trigger apoptosis: a genetically determined process of cell self destruction marked by fragmentation of nuclear DNA. More intensive oxidative stress may cause widespread necrosis or cell death.


The body naturally fights oxidation by producing glutathione (GSH). Glutathione is a tripeptide composed of three amino acid residues: glutamic acid, cysteine and glycine. Glutathione is found in all cells in the body, including the bile, the epithial lining fluid of the lungs and in the blood. Glutathione is the smallest intracellular protein thiol molecule in the cells (that is: a molecule containing an —SH or sulfhydryl group). This characteristic emphasizes its potent antioxidant action and supports a multi-faceted thiol exchange system which regulates cell activity. Glutathione is responsible for three crucial protective functions. Without it, cells disintegrate from unrestrained oxidation, the body would have little resistance to metabolic acids and the liver would shrivel up from the eventual accumulation of acidic toxins.


As noted above, the body naturally fights oxidation by producing glutathione. Once glutathione stabilizes a free radical it becomes oxidized and is usually excreted from the body. Thus, the body must replace glutathione as it is used. It should be appreciated that high levels of oxidative stress can prevent the body from recovering its normal function. The present invention relates to novel compounds useful as antioxidant dietary supplements that help maintain a healthy glutathione level allowing the body to maintain its own natural detoxifying capacity even when subjected to high levels of oxidative stress over an extended period of time.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In accordance with the objects and advantages of the present invention, novel aromatic compounds are provided incorporating sulfur containing ligands. The chemical compounds comprise:




embedded image


embedded image


R3=ethyl or methyl, R4=hydrogen, glutathione, cysteine, alpha dihidrolipoic acid, aptamine, thiolphosphate, 5′thioladenosine, L-homocysteine, co-enzyme A, 2-mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol, iodoacetate, bromoacetate, fluoroacetate or chloroacetate and n=2-4.


Other aspects of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in this art from the following description wherein there is shown and described exemplary embodiments of this invention. As it will be realized, the invention is capable of further embodiments and its several details are capable of modification in various, obvious aspects all without departing from the invention. Accordingly, the drawings and descriptions will be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive.







DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

As noted above, the present invention relates to novel aromatic compounds, incorporating sulfur containing ligands that are useful as nutritional supplements, antioxidants, heavy metal chelators and as intermediates for the synthesis of other related useful compounds. The chemical compounds of the present invention may be broadly described as comprising:




embedded image


embedded image


R3=ethyl or methyl, R4=hydrogen, glutathione, cysteine, alpha dihidrolipoic acid, aptamine, thiolphosphate, 5′thioladenosine, L-homocysteine, co-enzyme A, 2-mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol, iodoacetate, bromoacetate, fluoroacetate or chloroacetate and n=2-4.


The compounds of the present invention exhibit a number of unique properties that make them attractive for use in methods of (a) supplementing a diet, (b) removing heavy metals and other toxins and (c) ameliorating oxidative stress in mammals. Generally the compounds exhibit low toxicity. The compounds are also generally lipid soluble and, accordingly, after entering the plasma the compounds can enter cells of all tissues, cross the blood/brain barrier and enter the bone marrow. This is important because the damage caused by heavy metals and the oxidative stress produced by hydroxyl free radicals and other free radicals of the reactive oxygen species mostly occur in the intercellular space. In contrast, most dietary antioxidants are water soluble and cannot enter into cells effectively nor can they cross the blood/brain barrier.


It is expected that pharmaceutical compositions may be prepared by combining a pharmaceutically effective amount of a compound of the present invention with an appropriate excipient. Such compositions should be effective via various types of administration including, but not limited to, oral administration, transdermal administration, nasal administration, administration by suppository, intravenous administration and the like.


The following synthesis and examples are presented to further illustrate the invention, but it is not to be considered as limited thereto. In the examples, S-Cys refers to cysteine having a structural formula: —SCH2CH(NH2)COOH GS refers to glutathione having a structural formula:




embedded image


Example 1

Compounds 1-9


Starting Material: Indole-1,3-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester. Aldrich Catalog number R 163023. M.W: 261.28


Compound 1:


Indole-1,3-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester (2.61 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 1.




embedded image


Compound 2:


Compound 1 (0.325 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 2. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 3:


Compound 1 (0.325 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 3. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 4:


Indole-1,3 dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester (2.61 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 4.




embedded image


Compound 5:


Compound 4 (0.469 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 5. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 6:


Compound 4 (0.469 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 6. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 7:


Indole-1,3 dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester (2.61 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 7




embedded image


Compound 8:


Compound 7 (0.441 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 8. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 9:


Compound 7 (0.441 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 9. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 10-18


Starting Material: 2,2′-bipyridine-3,3′-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 457191. M.W: 244.20


Compound 10:


2,2′-bipyridine-3,3′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 10




embedded image


Compound 11:


Compound 10 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 11. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 12:


Compound 10 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 12. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 13:


2,2′-bipyridine-3,3′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 13




embedded image


Compound 14:


Compound 13 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 14. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 15:


Compound 13 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 15. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 16:


2,2′bipyridine-3,3′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 16.




embedded image


Compound 17:


Compound 16 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 17. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 18:


Compound 16 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 18. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 19-27


Starting Material: 2,2′-bipyridine-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 457191. M.W: 244.20


Compound 19:


2,2′-bipyridine-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 19.




embedded image


Compound 20:


Compound 19 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 20. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 21:


Compound 19 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 21. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 22:


2,2′-bipyridine-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 22.




embedded image


Compound 23:


Compound 22 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 23. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 24:


Compound 22 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 24. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 25:


2,2′bipyridine-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 25.




embedded image


Compound 26:


Compound 25 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 26. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 27:


Compound 25 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 27. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 28-36


Starting Material: 2,2′-bipyridine-6,6′-dicarboxylic acid J&K Scientific, Ltd. Product No. 28775 M.W: 244.20


Compound 28:


2,2′-bipyridine-6,6′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 28.




embedded image


Compound 29:


Compound 28 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 29. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 30:


Compound 28 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 30. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 31:


2,2′-bipyridine-6,6′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 31.




embedded image


Compound 32:


Compound 31 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 32. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 33:


Compound 31 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 33. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 34:


2,2′-bipyridine-6,6′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 34.




embedded image


Compound 35:


Compound 34 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 35. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 36:


Compound 34 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 36. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 37-45


Starting Material: 2,2′-biquinoline-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 457191. M.W: 244.20


Compound 37:


2,2′-biquinoline-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 12 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 37.




embedded image


Compound 38:


Compound 37 (0.462 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 38. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 39:


Compound 37 (0.462 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 39. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 40:


2,2′-biquinoline-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 12 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 40.




embedded image


Compound 41:


Compound 40 (0.606 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 41. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 42:


Compound 40 (0.606 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 42. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 43:


2,2′-biquinoline-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 12 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 43.




embedded image


Compound 44:


Compound 43 (0.578 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 44. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 45:


Compound 43 (0.578 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 45. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds: 46-54


Starting Material: 3,4-dihydroxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester. Aldrich Catalog number 553174. M.W: 260.26


Compound 46:


3,4-dihydroxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester. (2.60 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 46.




embedded image


Compound 47:


Compound 46 (0.322 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 47. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 48:


Compound 46 (0.322 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 48. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 49:


3,4-dihydroxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester. (2.60 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 49




embedded image


Compound 50:


Compound 49 (0.466 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 50. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 51:


Compound 49 (0.466 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 51. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 52:


3,4-dihydroxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid diethyl ester. (2.60 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 52




embedded image


Compound 53:


Compound 52 (0.438 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 53. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 54:


Compound 52 (0.438 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 54. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds: 55-63


Starting Material: 3,4-dihydroxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number 553174. M.W: 187.10


Compound 55:


3,4-dihydroxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (1.87 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 55.




embedded image


Compound 56:


Compound 55 (0.30 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 56. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 57:


Compound 55 (0.30 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 57. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 58:


3,4-dihydroxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (1.87 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 58.




embedded image


Compound 59:


Compound 58 (0.449 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 59. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 60:


Compound 58 (0.449 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 60. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 61:


3,4-dihydroxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (1.87 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 61.




embedded image


Compound 62:


Compound 61 (0.42 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 62. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 63:


Compound 61 (0.42 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 63. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 64-72


Starting Material: 3,4-Ethylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number 637203. M.W: 223.50


Compound 64:


3,4-Ethylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.23 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 64.




embedded image


Compound 65:


Compound 64 (0.331 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 65. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 66:


Compound 64 (0.331 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 66. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 67:


3,4-Ethylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.23 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 67.




embedded image


Compound 68:


Compound 67 (0.475 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 68. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 69:


Compound 67 (0.475 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 69. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 70:


3,4-Ethylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.23 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 70.




embedded image


Compound 71:


Compound 70 (0.447 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 71. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 72:


Compound 70 (0.447 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 72. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 73-81


Starting Material: 3,4-Propylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number 660477. M.W: 244.22


Compound 73:


3,4-Propylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 73.




embedded image


Compound 74:


Compound 73 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 74. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 75:


Compound 73 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 75. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 76:


3,4-Propylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 76.




embedded image


Compound 77:


Compound 76 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 77. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 78:


Compound 76 (0.4478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 78. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 79:


3,4-Propylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 79.




embedded image


Compound 80:


Compound 79 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 80. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 81:


Compound 79 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 81. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 82-90


Starting Material: 3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid. CAS number 108347-23.5 M.W: 230.20


Compound 82:


3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.30 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 82.




embedded image


Compound 83:


Compound 82 (0.348 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 83. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 84:


Compound 82 (0.348 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 84. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 85:


3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.30 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 85.




embedded image


Compound 86:


Compound 85 (0.492 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 86. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 87:


Compound 85 (0.492 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 87. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 88:


3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.30 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 88.




embedded image


Compound 89:


Compound 88 (0.464 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 89. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 90:


Compound 88 (0.464 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 90. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 91-99


Starting Material: 3,4-Propylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number 637432. M.W: 227.17


Compound 91:


3,4-propylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.27 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 91.




embedded image


Compound 92:


Compound 91 (0.345 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 92. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 93:


Compound 91 (0.345 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 93. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 94:


3,4-Propylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.27 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 94.




embedded image


Compound 95:


Compound 94 (0.489 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 95. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 96:


Compound 94 (0.489 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 96. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 97:


3,4-Propylenedioxypyrrole-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.27 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 97.




embedded image


Compound 98:


Compound 97 (0.461 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 98. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 99:


Compound 97 (0.461 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 99. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 100-108


Starting Material: Biphenyl-2,2′-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 126691. M.W: 242.23


Compound 100:


Biphenyl-2,2′-dicarboxylic acid (2.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 100.




embedded image


Compound 101:


Compound 100 (0.360 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 101. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 102:


Compound 100 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 102. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 103:


2 Biphenyl-2,2′-dicarboxylic acid (2.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 103.




embedded image


Compound 104:


Compound 103 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 104. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 105:


Compound 103 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 105. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 106:


Biphenyl-2,2′-dicarboxylic acid (2.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 106.




embedded image


Compound 107:


Compound 106 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 107. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 108:


Compound 106 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 108. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 109-117


Starting Material: Chelidonic acid or 4-oxo-4H-pyran-2,6-dicarboxylic acid. Fluka Catalog number 22500. M.W: 184.10


Compound 109:


Chelidonic acid (1.84 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 109.




embedded image


Compound 110:


Compound 109 (0.300 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 110. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 111:


Compound 109 (0.300 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound III. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 112:


Chelidonic acid (1.84 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 112.




embedded image


Compound 113:


Compound 112 (0.444 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 113. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 114:


Compound 112 (0.444 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 114. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 115:


Chelidonic acid (1.84 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 115.




embedded image


Compound 116:


Compound 115 (0.416 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 116. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 117:


Compound 115. (0.416 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 117. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 118-126


Starting Material: Terephthaloyl dichloride. Aldrich Cat #120871 Mol wt: 203.02


Compound 118:


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and chloroform (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved terephthaloyl dichloride (2.03 g, 10 mmol) dissolved in 20 ml chloroform is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 118.




embedded image


Compound 119:


Compound 118 (0.284 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 129. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 120:


Compound 118 (0.284 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 120. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 121


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and chloroform (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved terephthaloyl dichloride (2.03 g, 10 mmol) dissolved in 20 ml chloroform is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 121.




embedded image


Compound 122:


Compound 121 (0.428 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 122. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 123:


Compound 121 (0.469 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 123. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 124:


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved terephthaloyl dichloride (2.03 g, 10 mmol) dissolved in 20 ml chloroform is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 124.




embedded image


Compound 125:


Compound 124 (0.400 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 125. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 126:


Compound 124 (0.400 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 126. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 127-135


Starting Material: Homophthalic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: P-63603. M.W: 180.16


Compound 127:


Homophthalic acid (1.80 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 127.




embedded image


Compound 128:


Compound 127 (0.298 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 128. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 129:


Compound 127 (0.298 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 129. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 130:


Homophthalic acid (1.80 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 130.




embedded image


Compound 131:


Compound 130 (0.442 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 131. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 132:


Compound 130 (0.442 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 132. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 133:


Homophthalic acid (1.80 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 133.




embedded image


Compound 134:


Compound 133 (0.414 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 134. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 135:


Compound 133 (0.414 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 135. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds: 136-144


Starting Material: 1-Benzyl-1H-pyrazole-3,5-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: S 457000. M.W: 342.35


Compound 136:


1-Benzyl-1H-pyrazole-3,5-dicarboxylic acid (3.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 136.




embedded image


Compound 137:


Compound 136 (0.38 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 137. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 138:


Compound 136 (0.38 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 138. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 139:


1-Benzyl-1H-pyrazole-3,5-dicarboxylic acid (3.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 139.




embedded image


Compound 140:


Compound 139 (0.524 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 140. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 141:


Compound 139 (0.524 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 141. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 142:


1-Benzyl-1H-pyrazole-3,5-dicarboxylic acid (3.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 142.




embedded image


Compound 143:


Compound 142 (0.496 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 143. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 144:


Compound 142 (0.42 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 144. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 145-153


Starting Material: 4-phenyl-pyridine-2,5-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 3-95889. M.W: 243.22


Compound 145:


4-phenyl-pyridine-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.43 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 145.




embedded image


Compound 146:


Compound 145 (0.361 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 146. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 147:


Compound 145 (0.361 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 147. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 148:


4-phenyl-pyridine-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.43 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 148.




embedded image


Compound 149:


Compound 148 (0.505 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 149. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 150:


Compound 148 (0.505 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 150. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 151:


4-phenyl-pyridine-2,5-dicarboxylic acid (2.43 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 151.




embedded image


Compound 152:


Compound 151 (0.477 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 152. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 153:


Compound 151 (0.477 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 153. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds: 154-162


Starting Material: Thiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester. Aldrich Catalog number R 416584. M.W: 200.215


Compound 154:


Thiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (2.00 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 154.




embedded image


Compound 155:


Compound 154 (0.29 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 155. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 156:


Compound 154 (0.29 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 156. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 157:


Thiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (2.00 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 157.




embedded image


Compound 158:


Compound 157 (0.434 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 158. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 159:


Compound 157 (0.434 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 159. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 160:


Thiophene-2,5-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (2.00 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 160.




embedded image


Compound 161:


Compound 160 (0.40 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 161. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 162:


Compound 160 (0.40 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 162. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds: 163-171


Starting Material: 3-Methyl thiophene-2,4-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester. Aldrich Catalog number R 432628. M.W: 214.24


Compound 163:


3-Methyl thiophene-2,4-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (2.14 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 163.




embedded image


Compound 164:


Compound 163 (0.30 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 164. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 165:


Compound 163 (0.30 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 165. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 166:


3-Methyl thiophene-2,4-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (2.14 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 166.




embedded image


Compound 167:


Compound 166 (0.448 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 167. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 168:


Compound 166 (0.448 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 168. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 169:


3-Methyl thiophene-2,4-dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (2.14 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 169.




embedded image


Compound 170:


Compound 169 (0.42 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 170. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 171:


Compound 169 (0.42 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 171. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 172-180


Starting Material: Dimethyl-2,6-napthalene dicarboxylic acid. Fluka Catalog number: 70230. M.W: 244.24


Compound 172:


Dimethyl-2,6-napthalene dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 172.




embedded image


Compound 173:


Compound 172 (0.334 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 173. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 174:


Compound 172 (0.334 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 174. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 175: Dimethyl-2,6-napthalene dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 175.




embedded image


Compound 176:


Compound 175 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 176. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 177:


Compound 175 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 177. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 178:


Dimethyl-2,6-napthalene dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 178.




embedded image


Compound 179:


Compound 178 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 179. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 180:


Compound 178 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 180. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 181-189


Starting Material: 4,4′-sulfonyldibenzoic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 163295. M.W: 306.29


Compound 181:


4,4′-sulfonyldibenzoic acid (3.06 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 181.




embedded image


Compound 182:


Compound 181 (0.424 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 182. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 183:


Compound 181 (0.424 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 183. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 184:


4,4′-sulfonyldibenzoic acid (3.06 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 184.




embedded image


Compound 185:


Compound 184 (0.568 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 185. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 186:


Compound 184 (0.568 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 186. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 187:


4,4′-sulfonyldibenzoic acid (3.06 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 187.




embedded image


Compound 188:


Compound 187 (0.54 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 188. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 189:


Compound 187 (0.54 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 189. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 190-198


Starting Material: Biphenyl-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 225266. M.W: 242.23


Compound 190:


Biphenyl-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 190.




embedded image


Compound 191:


Compound 190 (0.360 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 191. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 192:


Compound 190 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 192. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 193:


Biphenyl-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 193.




embedded image


Compound 194:


Compound 193 (0.504 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 194. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 195:


Compound 193 (0.504 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 195 The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 196:


Biphenyl-4,4′-dicarboxylic acid (2.42 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. 2 drops of DMF is added as a catalyst. The system is flushed with nitrogen and refluxed for 24 hours. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 196.




embedded image


Compound 197:


Compound 196 (0.476 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 197. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 198:


Compound 196 (0.476 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 198. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 199-207


Starting Material: 2,2′-imidobenzoic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 308935. M.W: 257.24


Compound 199:


2,2′-imidobenzoic acid (2.57 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 199.




embedded image


Compound 200:


Compound 199 (0.375 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 200. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 201:


Compound 199 (0.375 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 201. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 202:


2,2′-imidobenzoic acid (2.57 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 202.




embedded image


Compound 203:


Compound 202 (0.519 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 203. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 204:


Compound 202 (0.519 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 204. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 205:


2,2′-imidobenzoic acid (2.57 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 205.




embedded image


Compound 206:


Compound 205 (0.491 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 206. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 207:


Compound 205 (0.491 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 207. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 208-216


Starting Material: 2,2′-bipyridine-5,5′-dicarboxylic acid. Aldrich Catalog number: 517763. M.W: 244.20


Compound 208:


2,2′-bipyridine-5,5′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 208.




embedded image


Compound 209:


Compound 208 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 209. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 210:


Compound 208 (0.362 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 210. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 211:


2,2′-bipyridine-5,5′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 211.




embedded image


Compound 212:


Compound 211 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 212. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 213:


Compound 211 (0.506 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 213. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 214:


2,2′bipyridine-5,5′-dicarboxylic acid (2.44 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 214.




embedded image


Compound 215:


Compound 214 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 215. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 216:


Compound 214 (0.478 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 216. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compounds 217-225


Starting Material: 1,1-Doxo-2,6-diphenyl thiomorpholine-3,5 dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester. Aldrich Catalog number: S-246719. M.W: 403.457


Compound 217:


1,1-Doxo-2,6-diphenyl thiomorpholine-3,5 dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (4.03 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


Cysteamine hydrochloride (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the cysteamine hydrochloride has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 217.




embedded image


Compound 218:


Compound 217 (0.493 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 218. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 219:


Compound 217 (0.493 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 219. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 220:


1,1-Doxo-2,6-diphenyl thiomorpholine-3,5 dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (4.03 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester (2.825 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride ethyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding d.i water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 220.




embedded image


Compound 221:


Compound 220 (0.637 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 221. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 222:


Compound 220 (0.637 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 222. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 223:


1,1-Doxo-2,6-diphenyl thiomorpholine-3,5 dicarboxylic acid dimethyl ester (4.03 g, 10 mmol) is taken in a 100 ml round bottomed flask. Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to the flask. Oxalyl chloride (2.52 gm, 20 mmol) is added to the flask. The system is flushed with nitrogen and stirred for 24 hours. The reaction mixture may be warmed or refluxed if the progress is slow. The progress is monitored using thin layer chromatography. The resulting acid chloride is used in the next step.


L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester (2.625 gm, 25 mmol) is dissolved in a 100 ml round bottomed flask and Methylene chloride (50 ml) is added to it and stirred. Triethylamine (3.1 gm, 30 mmol) is added to it drop by drop under constant stirring. Once all the L-cysteine hydrochloride methyl ester has dissolved the acid chloride generated in the earlier step is added to the reaction mixture drop wise. Triethylamine (5.15 gm, 50 mmol) is added to the mixture and the stirring continued for around 12 hours. The reaction progress is monitored using thin layered chromatography. The reaction is quenched by adding water (15 ml). The mixture is separated on a separatory column. The organic layer is collected and washed three times with d.i water (15 ml×3). The layer is evaporated to collect the crude product. The crude product is purified on a silica column to obtain compound 223.




embedded image


Compound 224:


Compound 223 (0.609 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture. Glutathione (0.76 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is Compound 224. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Compound 225:


Compound 223 (0.491 gm, 1 mmol) is dissolved in 10 ml of Dimethyl formamide and 5 ml of water is added to the mixture.


L-cysteine (0.50 gm) is added to the mixture and stirred till it dissolved. The reaction mixture is purged with nitrogen and stirred for 30 minutes. 1 ml of 5% Hydrogen peroxide is added to it and the reaction stirred for approximately 24 hours at room temperature with regular monitoring using thin layer chromatography. The reaction mixture loaded onto a DEAE cellulose column (2 cm×20 cm long) in the hydroxide form and washed with 200 ml of distilled water. Bound material is eluted using a 0-400 mM gradient of triethylammonium bicarbonate (TEAB) buffer with 10 ml fractions being collected. Elution of compound 2 containing product is monitored by a ultraviolet flow through device. Fractions collected containing the UV absorbance is evaporated to dryness over four co-evaporations with methanol/water to remove TEAB. The resulting material is compound 225. The purity is checked with thin layered chromatography on PEI cellulose matrix developed with 0.4M ammonium bicarbonate solution.




embedded image


Other Compounds


In the synthesis examples for compounds 2, 5, 8, 11, 14, 17, 20, 23, 26, 29, 32, 35, 38, 41, 44, 47, 50, 53, 56, 59, 62, 65, 68, 71, 74, 77, 80, 83, 86, 89, 92, 95, 98, 101, 104, 107, 110, 113, 116, 119, 122, 125, 128, 131, 134, 137, 140, 143, 146, 149, 152, 155, 158, 161, 164, 167, 170, 173, 176, 179, 182, 185, 188, 191, 194, 197, 200, 203, 206, 209, 212, 215, 218, 221 and 224 the glutathione is replaced with one of the following compounds: alphadihydrolipoic acid, cystamine, thiolphosphate, 5′thioladenosine, L-homocysteine, co-enzyme A, 2-mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol, iodoacetate, bromoacetate, fluoroacetate or chloroacetate.


The hydrogen peroxide causes oxidation of the two —SH groups on each compound to be oxidized to a disulfide linkage (—S—S—)

Claims
  • 1. A chemical compound comprising:
  • 2. The compound of claim 1 wherein R2=
  • 3. The compound of claim 2 wherein n=2.
  • 4. The compound of claim 3 wherein R4═H.
  • 5. The compound of claim 2 wherein n=3.
  • 6. The compound of claim 5 wherein R4═H.
  • 7. The compound of claim 2 wherein n=4.
  • 8. The compound of claim 7 wherein R4═H.
  • 9. The compound of claim 1 wherein R2=
  • 10. The compound of claim 9 wherein n=2.
  • 11. The compound of claim 10 wherein R4═H.
  • 12. The compound of claim 9 wherein n=3.
  • 13. The compound of claim 12 wherein R4═H.
  • 14. The compound of claim 9 wherein n=4.
  • 15. The compound of claim 14 wherein R4═H.
Parent Case Info

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/565,047 filed 2 Aug. 2012, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/731,415 filed on 25 Mar. 2010, the full disclosure of both is incorporated herein by reference.

Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 12731415 Mar 2010 US
Child 13565047 US
Continuation in Parts (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 13565047 Aug 2012 US
Child 13763057 US