Abstract

For the recognition of all but the simplest naturally occurring molecules, electrochemical sensors based on ferrocene will certainly require chiral centers. To advance the necessary chemistry, this work describes the synthesis and properties of ferrocene derivatives of enantiomerically pure amino acids, peptides, and other chiral amines. Ferrocene aldehyde is condensed with amino acid esters to yield the corresponding Schiff bases 2, which are reduced by NaBH4 in methanol to the ferrocene methyl amino acids 3. An X-ray single-crystal analysis was carried out on the phenylalanine derivative 3a (monoclinic space group P2(1), a = 10.301(1) A, b = 9.647(1) A, c = 18.479(2) A, beta = 102.98(2) degrees, Z = 4). Further peptide chemistry at the C terminus proceeds smoothly as demonstrated by the synthesis of the ferrocene labeled dipeptide Fc-CH2-Phe-Gly-OCH3 5 (Fc = ferrocenyl ((eta-C5H4)Fe(eta-C5H5))). We also report the synthesis of the C,N-bis-ferrocene labeled tripeptide Phe-Ala-Leu and its electrochemical characterization. Starting from the enantiomerically pure ferrocene derivative 9, which was synthesized from ferrocene aldehyde and L-1-amino-ethylbenzene, two diastereomers 10 were obtained by peptide coupling with N-Boc protected D- and L-alanine. There was, however, only very little diastereomeric induction if 0.5 equiv of a racemic mixture of alanine were used. This suggests that amino acid activation rather than coupling is the rate-determining step. A combination of NOESY (nuclear Overhauser effect spectroscopy) spectra and molecular modeling furnished detailed insights into the solution structures of 3, 9, and 10 and was used to rationalize their different reactivity.

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