4.4 Review

exo-glycal chemistry: General aspects and synthetic applications for biochemical use

Journal

CURRENT TOPICS IN MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 5, Issue 14, Pages 1431-1457

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/156802605774642980

Keywords

exo-glycal; C-glycoside; addition; elimination; glycosylation; quaternary carbon; inhibitor; rearrangement

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It is well known that carbohydrates play an indispensable role in a variety of essential biological activities, such as cell-cell adhesion, bacteria and virus infections, and tumor metastasis. Among an increasing number of sugars and sugar mimetics that have been designed and synthesized for the purpose of drug discovery, C-glycosides are considered to be one of the best choices on account of their stability and resemblance as they differ from normal glycosides only in glycosidic linkages. exo-Glycals are unsaturated sugars that have a double bond attached to the anomeric center outside the sugar ring. These carbohydrate molecules are useful for the synthesis of C-glycosides and compounds containing quaternary carbons, provided that the olefin can be properly reduced or functionalized. This review places special emphasis on two aspects of exo-glycals including general methods of preparation and synthetic applications for making biologically important molecules. The first half discusses the methods of addition/elimination and Rarr burg-Backlund rearrangement that offer many beneficial features including a wide range of double bond substitutions, limited reaction steps, easy operation and good overall yields. The rest of the article demonstrates a number of synthetic studies using exoglycals as the starting materials. The target molecules can be categorized into three groups, namely C-glycosides, enzyme inhibitors and bioactive natural products.

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