Abstract

Benzyl methyl sulfides substituted with methyl, chloro, cyano, bromo, methoxy, nitro and amino groups in the ortho or meta positions of the aromatic ring have been converted to ( S) sulfoxides by biotransformation using the fungal biocatalyst Helminthosporium species NRRL 4671. The enantiomeric excesses for meta-substituted examples were high in those cases where the substituent was of a polar nature, and comparable to those observed for the corresponding para-substituted substrates. With one exception ( o-amino), the ortho-substituted examples gave sulfoxides of lower enantiomeric purity. The role of a suitably located polar substituent on an aryl ring of the substrate in ensuring a high enantiomeric excess in sulfoxidation by Helminthosporium species has been confirmed by the biotransformations of 4-(methylthiomethyl)benzyl alcohol and 2-(4-nitrophenyl) ethyl methyl sulfide, which give sulfoxides of much higher optical purity than those obtained from the corresponding unsubstituted substrates.

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