Abstract

Biomass-derived cysteine was used as a sustainable sulfur source for the synthesis of rare sulfur-containing amino acids, such as L-ergothioneine (4), which might be a new vitamin, and various L- or D-2-thiohistidine compounds. Key in this simple, one-pot two-step procedure in water is a bromine-induced regioselective introduction of cysteine followed by a novel thermal cleavage reaction in the presence of thiols, a safer alternative to hazardous red phosphorus. Besides avoiding hazardous sulfur reagents, the new protecting-group-free approach reduces drastically the total number of steps, compared to described procedures. The main drawback, i.e. handling of liquid bromine as an activating and oxidizing reagent in water, was addressed by evaluating four alternative methods using in situ generation of bromine or HOBr, and first encouraging results are described.

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