22. Carboxylic Acid Derivatives: NAS
Lactones, Lactams and Cyclization Reactions
- Multiple ChoiceWhat is the name of a cyclic ester?
- Multiple ChoicePredict the major, organic product for the following reaction.
- Textbook Question
What product do you expect to obtain from each of the following reactions?
a.
- Textbook Question
Propose a mechanism that accouts for the formation of the product.
- Textbook Question
Propose a mechanism for each of the following reactions:
b.
- Textbook Question
In the presence of a trace of acid, δ-hydroxyvaleric acid forms a cyclic ester (lactone).
(a) Give the structure of the lactone, called δ-valerolactone.
(b) Propose a mechanism for the formation of δ-valerolactone.
- Textbook Question
Predict the products and propose mechanisms for the following reactions.
(c)
- Textbook Question
Show how you would accomplish the following synthetic transformations. You may use any necessary reagents.
(c) pyrrolidine → N-acetylpyrrolidine
(d) γ-aminobutyric acid → pyrrolidine
- Textbook Question
Show how you would accomplish the following syntheses in good yields.
(e)
(f)
- Textbook Question
Macrolide antibiotics all have large rings (macrocycle) in which an ester makes the ring; a cyclic ester is termed a lactone. One example is erythromycin A, first isolated from soil bacteria in the 1950s. Over time, some pathogenic bacteria have developed resistance to erythromycin by evolving an enzymatic mechanism to cleave the macrocycle at the ketone. To counter this resistance, chemists modified the erythromycin structure to replace the ketone with an amine that the bacteria could not detoxify. This modified antibiotic, azithromycin, trade name Zithromax®, is one of the most prescribed drugs in the world for respiratory infections.
(a) Identify the lactone group in each structure that merits the classification as macrolides.
(b) Two groups are circled. What type of functional group are they? Explain.
- Textbook Question
When ethyl 4-hydroxybutyrate is heated in the presence of a trace of a basic catalyst (sodium acetate), one of the products is a lactone. Propose a mechanism for formation of this lactone.
- Textbook Question
Propose mechanisms for the following reactions.
(f)
- Textbook Question
Show how you would add a Grignard reagent to an ester or a nitrile to synthesize
(b) heptan-4-ol.
- Textbook Question
Explain this curious result. What does this reaction tell you about the relative reactivity of esters and ketones?
- Textbook Question
Macrolide antibiotics, including erythromycin and azithromycin (Zithromax®), contain a large ring lactone. One of the largest ever reported is Gargantulide A, the structure of which was determined by the research group of Prof. William Gerwick of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (Organic Letters, 2015, 17, 1377–1380). Isolated from a Streptomyces bacterium, it kills pathogenic bacteria like MRSA and Clostridium difficile, but it proved too toxic to the test animals to continue further testing.
(a) Identify the lactone that makes this a macrolide structure.
(b) How many rings does this structure contain? How many atoms are in the largest ring?