STUDIES IN URETHANES: VII REACTIONS OF ACYL DIURETHANES WITH AMMONIA AND PRIMARY AMINES. STABILIZING EFFECT OF THE PHENYL RADICAL IN PHENYLMALONYL- AND PHENYLSUCCINYL-DIURETHANE

1942 ◽  
Vol 20b (11) ◽  
pp. 240-245
Author(s):  
S. Basterfield ◽  
A. J. Dyck

In previous studies it has been shown that the mechanism of decomposition of acyl diurethanes by ammonia and amines is correlated to some extent with the strength of the acid from which the acyl radical is derived and of the base used as ammonolytic reagent. In the oxalic acid series a diurea was obtained from succinyl-diurethane and aniline, but not from oxalyl- or malonyl-diurethane. Succinyl-diurethane gave no diurea with stronger bases.It is shown in the present study that phenylmalonyl-diurethane yields with aniline a diurea which undergoes rapid decomposition on being heated with aniline at 150 °C. Phenylsuccinyl-diurethane gives with aniline a diurea that is much more stable than the one obtained from succinyl-diurethane, as judged by the rate of decomposition on heating with aniline at 150°. No definite evidence of diurea formation was obtained with bases stronger than aniline.

RSC Advances ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (71) ◽  
pp. 67281-67289 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Khalafi-Nezhad ◽  
Mohsen Shekouhy ◽  
Hashem Sharghi ◽  
Jasem Aboonajmi ◽  
Abdolkarim Zare

A new more atom-efficient multi-component approach for the synthesis of tetrasubstituted imidazoles via the one-pot condensation of nitriles, primary amines and benzoin has been described.


1931 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 361-371
Author(s):  
Steward Basterfield ◽  
C. Vernon Wilson ◽  
Margaret E. Greig

Previous studies have shown that oxalyl-, malonyl- and phthalyldi-urethanes are decomposed readily by ammonia and primary amines with the loss of one or both urethane groups and the production of the amides of the dibasic acids, or of urethane-amides, and ureido-amides. Acyldi-ureas were not formed as might have been expected.The present study deals mainly with the preparation and properties of succinyl-, glutaryl-, and adipyldi-urethanes. While with ammonia and ethylamine these yield amides, with aniline they give the acyldi-(phenylureas), which are decomposed by further action of the base into acylanilides, and diphenylurea. The mode of decomposition is strongly influenced by the nature of the acyl radical as well as that of the reacting base. The results may be provisionally generalized in the statement that, with a given base, the tendency of a di-urethane to yield the acid amide is more pronounced the stronger the acid from which the radical is derived, while with a given di-urethane the tendency to amide formation is more pronounced the stronger the reacting base. The formation of acyldi-ureas becomes evident when the di-urethane contains the radical of an acid with an ionization constant of the order of 10−6 or less.


2006 ◽  
Vol 188 (16) ◽  
pp. 5831-5838 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna K. Chikova ◽  
Roel M. Schaaper

ABSTRACT The Hot (homolog of theta) protein of bacteriophage P1 can substitute for the Escherichia coli DNA polymerase III θ subunit, as evidenced by its stabilizing effect on certain dnaQ mutants that carry an unstable polymerase III ε proofreading subunit (antimutator effect). Here, we show that Hot can also cause an increase in the mutability of various E. coli strains (mutator effect). The hot mutator effect differs from the one caused by the lack of θ. Experiments using chimeric θ/Hot proteins containing various domains of Hot and θ along with a series of point mutants show that both N- and C-terminal parts of each protein are important for stabilizing the ε subunit. In contrast, the N-terminal part of Hot appears uniquely responsible for its mutator activity.


Synlett ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 (10) ◽  
pp. 1573-1576
Author(s):  
Nicholas Tomkinson ◽  
Timothy Gibbs ◽  
Michael Boomhoff

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Alexander Hunt-Painter

<p>This thesis investigated the development and application of methodology for the synthesis of iminosugars. The first portion of this thesis (Chapters 2 and 3) explored the scope of previously established protecting-group-free Vasella-reductive-amination and I2-mediated carbamate annulation methodology initially developed within the Stocker-Timmer group for the synthesis of pyrrolidines and piperidines from aldose sugars. In this thesis, the Vasella-reductive-amination methodology was extended to include the use of ketose sugars as starting materials, thereby allowing for the synthesis of primary amines directly from in situ formed ketones under protecting-group-free conditions. The scope of the carbamate annulation was then explored, whereby it was determined that both steric and electronic effects appear to affect transition state energies during the annulation reaction. Here, formation of pyrrolidines with the 2,5-trans and 3,4-cis relationships are favoured, however, in circumstances were conflicting electronic- and steric-effects are present, steric-effects dominate thereby favouring the formation of the 2,5-trans product. Using a combination of this Vasella-reductive-amination and carbamate annulation methodology, 2,5-dideoxy-2,5-imino-L-iditol was thus synthesised in 6 steps and 18% overall yield from D-fructose. Next, the same methodology was applied to the synthesis of the promising molecular chaperone 2,5-dideoxy-2,5-imino-D-altritol. Thus, 2,5-dideoxy-2,5-imino-D-altritol was synthesised over 7 steps and in 22% yield from D-tagatose, which is the most efficient synthesis of this iminosugar to date.  The second part of this thesis (Chapters 4 and 5) focused on the optimisation and development of synthetic methodology that would allow for the highly efficient synthesis of a variety of iminosugars including piperidines and azepanes. To this end, modifications to existing synthetic methodology allowed for the rapid synthesis of a variety of iodoglycosides, which are important synthons. Next, reductive amination/cyclisation methodology that allowed for the direct transformation of methyl iodoglycosides or isopropylidene-protected iodoglycosides into iminosugars was developed. As such, the piperidines 1-Deoxynojirimycin, 1-Deoxymannojirimycin (DMJ), L-1-Deoxygalactojirimycin (L-DGJ), and (3R,4r,5S)-piperidine-3,4,5-triol were prepared in 4 steps and good overall yields (44%, 62%, 67%, and 53%, respectively). In the case of DMJ and (3R,4r,5S)-piperidine-3,4,5-triol, these are the most efficient syntheses of these materials to date. Factors influencing the stereochemical outcome of the reductive amination reaction were also explored, and evidence suggests that the reduction occurs from the least sterically hindered face of an intermediate cyclic imine, whereby the preferred conformation of the imine is the one which places the largest number of substituents in the pseudo-equatorial position. Using analogous methodology, the azepane (3S,4R,5S,6R)-azepane-3,4,5,6-tetraol was also prepared in 4 steps and good yield (53%).</p>


Author(s):  
Roque Corral ◽  
Carlos Lopez ◽  
Carlos Vasco

Part I of this paper compares the aerodynamic damping of a modern LPT airfoil to the one obtained when pairs of blades are forced to vibrate as a rigid body to mimic the dynamics of welded-pair assemblies. The stabilizing effect of this configuration is shown by means of two-dimensional linear simulations using the Panovsky and Kielb (PK) method. A plausible physical mechanism for the added damping of the welded-pair configuration is outlined. The modal characteristics of three bladed-disc models that differ just in the boundary conditions of the tip-shroud are also compared. These models are representatives of cantilever, interlock and welded-pair designs of low pressure turbine (LPT) rotating parts. The differences in terms of frequency and mode-shape of the three models are sketched. Finally their relative merits from a flutter point of view are discussed making use solely of the two-dimensional aerodynamic damping characteristics.


Radiocarbon ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 248-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Gilot ◽  
N. Ancion ◽  
P. C. Capron

The following list covers most of the samples measured at the Louvain C14 laboratory since the last list (Louvain III).The method is essentially the same as the one used for the work described in the previous lists. A CH4 proportional counter, 0.6 L volume, operating at 3 atm pressure, is used. Equipment and counting techniques have been described in Louvain I. Dates are computed on the basis of the Libby half-life, 5570 yr, and the zero of the age scale is A.D. 1950. Ages are quoted with 1σ experimental error, which includes the counting variations of the sample as well as that of the background and the contemporary standard. As modern standard we now use NBS oxalic-acid standard or wood taken from A.D. 1870 to A.D. 1900 tree rings. No differences between the two standards have been observed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (10) ◽  
pp. 818-830
Author(s):  
Stella Manta ◽  
Nikolaos Kollatos ◽  
Christos Mitsos ◽  
Georgia-Anna Chatzieffraimidi ◽  
Ioannis Papanastasiou ◽  
...  

Pyrrole is a very important pharmacophoric moiety. It has been widely incorporated into the skeleton of antitumor, anti-inflammatory, antibacterial, antioxidant and antifungal active substances. Access to this key heterocycle by diverse routes is particularly attractive in terms of chemistry, and also from the environmental point of view. The present minireview summarizes the reported methods for the preparation of highly substituted pyrrole derivatives based on the one-pot multicomponent reaction of aldehydes, primary amines, and oxalacetate analogues as well as their biology.


1906 ◽  
Vol s2-50 (198) ◽  
pp. 333-376
Author(s):  
EDWIN S. GOODRICH

The chief observations described above may be summarised as follows : The development of the median dorsal fins is essentially similar to that of the paired fins. They arise as longitudinal folds, into which grow buds from the myotomes. Some fourteen or sixteen myotomes contribute to the fin each one muscle-bud. Concentration sets in almost from the first appearance of the buds; it is chiefly, if not entirely, due to the body growing faster than the fin. Along the greater part of the dorsal fin each muscle-bud becomes converted into one radial muscle. At the extreme ends of the fins the exact metameric origin of the muscles is difficult to trace and is somewhat obscured. Only here fusion of neighbouring segmental buds perhaps takes place. At certain stages slender strands of embryonic tissue connect the bases of the radial muscles; these are probably rudiments of the nerve-plexus. Neither the study of development nor of the adult structure affords any definite evidence that the primitive metamerism of the musculature is lost. Experiments seem to establish that the radial muscles remain haploneurous, retaining their primitive connection with the nerve belonging to that myotome from which they have been developed. The nerve- "plexus" of the fins is composed of intertwining sensory fibres, along or through which the motor fibres proceed to their destination without mixing with those of other segments. There is The chief observations described above may be summarised as follows : The development of the median dorsal fins is essentially similar to that of the paired fins. They arise as longitudinal folds, into which grow buds from the myotomes. Some fourteen or sixteen myotomes contribute to the fin each one muscle-bud. Concentration sets in almost from the first appearance of the buds; it is chiefly, if not entirely, due to the body growing faster than the fin. Along the greater part of the dorsal fin each muscle-bud becomes converted into one radial muscle. At the extreme ends of the fins the exact metameric origin of the muscles is difficult to trace and is somewhat obscured. Only here fusion of neighbouring segmental buds perhaps takes place. At certain stages slender strands of embryonic tissue connect the bases of the radial muscles; these are probably rudiments of the nerve-plexus. Neither the study of development nor of the adult structure affords any definite evidence that the primitive metamerism of the musculature is lost. Experiments seem to establish that the radial muscles remain haploneurous, retaining their primitive connection with the nerve belonging to that myotome from which they have been developed. The nerve- "plexus" of the fins is composed of intertwining sensory fibres, along or through which the motor fibres proceed to their destination without mixing with those of other segments. There is probably no real motor plexus, but the motor nerves may be gathered together into more or less longitudinal collectors, and become again sorted out on reaching the musculature. Such collectors are found at the base of the dorsal fins, compounded of some fourteen to sixteen segmental rami pterygiales. All the fins remain throughout development in approximately the same position. Apparent change of place may be brought about by concentration being greater in the one direction than in the other. This is especially the case with the dorsal fins, the anterior edge of which may undergo a relative shifting over some ten segments. The general bearing of these results has been sufficiently discussed in the Introduction (p. 334), and need not again be dealt with here. But it may be pointed out how completely they support the lateral fold theory of the origin of the paired fins.


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