A Glycosylation Mechanism Case Study: Unraveling the Mechanism of Stereospecific Self-promoted N -Glycosylations

23 October 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

In this study, the mechanism of self-promoted N-glycosylations is extensively investigated through kinetic experiments, computational studies, and nucleophilic competition experiments. Based on the findings, the mechanism is proposed to be initiated by proton transfer from the acidic sulfonyl carbamate to the trichloroacetimidate, upon formation of an associated contact ion pair. This ion pair then collapses in an SN 1-like fashion, forming an oxocarbeniumion-like intermediate. According to the proposed mechanism, stereospecificity arises from the associated nature of all intermediates formed throughout the reaction. During the mechanistic study, it was also found that the sulfonyl carbamates have catalytic properties if a competing nucleophile is present.

Keywords

Carbohydrates
Glycosylation mechanism
Self-promoted
N-glycosylations
Kinetics

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Information
Description
The supporting information contains experimental and computational details.
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Raw spectral data
Description
The raw spectral data from the four in-situ IR-experiments.
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