Characterization of Elusive Reaction Intermediates Using Infrared Ion Spectroscopy: Application to the Experimental Characterization of Glycosyl Cations

Conspectus A detailed understanding of the reaction mechanism(s) leading to stereoselective product formation is crucial to understanding and predicting product formation and driving the development of new synthetic methodology. One way to improve our understanding of reaction mechanisms is to chara...

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Veröffentlicht in:Accounts of chemical research 2022-06, Vol.55 (12), p.1669-1679
Hauptverfasser: Braak, Floor ter, Elferink, Hidde, Houthuijs, Kas J., Oomens, Jos, Martens, Jonathan, Boltje, Thomas J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Conspectus A detailed understanding of the reaction mechanism(s) leading to stereoselective product formation is crucial to understanding and predicting product formation and driving the development of new synthetic methodology. One way to improve our understanding of reaction mechanisms is to characterize the reaction intermediates involved in product formation. Because these intermediates are reactive, they are often unstable and therefore difficult to characterize using experimental techniques. For example, glycosylation reactions are critical steps in the chemical synthesis of oligosaccharides and need to be stereoselective to provide the desired α- or β-diastereomer. It remains challenging to predict and control the stereochemical outcome of glycosylation reactions, and their reaction mechanisms remain a hotly debated topic. In most cases, glycosylation reactions take place via reaction mechanisms in the continuum between SN1- and SN2-like pathways. SN2-like pathways proceeding via the displacement of a contact ion pair are relatively well understood because the reaction intermediates involved can be characterized by low-temperature NMR spectroscopy. In contrast, the SN1-like pathways proceeding via the solvent-separated ion pair, also known as the glycosyl cation, are poorly understood. SN1-like pathways are more challenging to investigate because the glycosyl cation intermediates involved are highly reactive. The highly reactive nature of glycosyl cations complicates their characterization because they have a short lifetime and rapidly equilibrate with the corresponding contact ion pair. To overcome this hurdle and enable the study of glycosyl cation stability and structure, they can be generated in a mass spectrometer in the absence of a solvent and counterion in the gas phase. The ease of formation, stability, and fragmentation of glycosyl cations have been studied using mass spectrometry (MS). However, MS alone provides little information about the structure of glycosyl cations. By combining mass spectrometry (MS) with infrared ion spectroscopy (IRIS), the determination of the gas-phase structures of glycosyl cations has been achieved. IRIS enables the recording of gas-phase infrared spectra of glycosyl cations, which can be assigned by matching to reference spectra predicted from quantum chemically calculated vibrational spectra. Here, we review the experimental setups that enable IRIS of glycosyl cations and discuss the various glycosyl cations
ISSN:0001-4842
1520-4898
DOI:10.1021/acs.accounts.2c00040