Organoselenium chemistry

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Template:Short description Organoselenium chemistry is the science exploring the properties and reactivity of organoselenium compounds, chemical compounds containing carbon-to-selenium chemical bonds.[1][2][3] Selenium belongs with oxygen and sulfur to the group 16 elements or chalcogens, and similarities in chemistry are to be expected. Organoselenium compounds are found at trace levels in ambient waters, soils and sediments.[4]

Selenium can exist with oxidation state −2, +2, +4, +6. Se(II) is the dominant form in organoselenium chemistry. Down the group 16 column, the bond strength becomes increasingly weaker (234 kJ/mol for the Template:Chem2 bond and 272 kJ/mol for the Template:Chem2 bond) and the bond lengths longer (Template:Chem2 198 pm, Template:Chem2 181 pm and Template:Chem2 141 pm). Selenium compounds are more nucleophilic than the corresponding sulfur compounds and also more acidic. The pKa values of Template:Chem2 are 16 for oxygen, 7 for sulfur and 3.8 for selenium. In contrast to sulfoxides, the corresponding selenoxides are unstable in the presence of β-protons and this property is utilized in many organic reactions of selenium, notably in selenoxide oxidations and in selenoxide eliminations.

The first organoselenium compound to be isolated was diethyl selenide in 1836.[5][6]

Structural classification of organoselenium compounds

File:Organoselenium compounds.png
Structures of some organoselenium compounds

Organoselenium compounds in nature

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Selenium, in the form of organoselenium compounds, is an essential micronutrient whose absence from the diet causes cardiac muscle and skeletal dysfunction. Organoselenium compounds are required for cellular defense against oxidative damage and for the correct functioning of the immune system. They may also play a role in prevention of premature aging and cancer. The source of Se used in biosynthesis is selenophosphate.

Glutathione oxidase is an enzyme with a selenol at its active site. Organoselenium compounds have been found in higher plants. For example, upon analysis of garlic using the technique of high-performance liquid chromatography combined with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (HPLC-ICP-MS), it was found that γ-glutamyl-Se-methylselenocysteine was the major Se-containing component, along with lesser amounts of Se-methylselenocysteine. Trace quantities of dimethyl selenide and allyl methyl selenide are found in human breath after consuming raw garlic.[14]

Selenocysteine and selenomethionine

Selenocysteine, called the twenty-first amino acid, is essential for ribosome-directed protein synthesis in some organisms.[15] More than 25 selenium-containing proteins (selenoproteins) are now known.[16] Most selenium-dependent enzymes contain selenocysteine, which is related to cysteine analog but with selenium replacing sulfur. This amino acid is encoded in a special manner by DNA. Selenosulfides are also proposed as biochemical intermediates.

Selenomethionine is a selenide-containing amino acid that also occurs naturally, but is generated by post-transcriptional modification.

Organoselenium chemistry in organic synthesis

Organoselenium compounds are specialized but useful collection of reagents useful in organic synthesis, although they are generally excluded from processes useful to pharmaceuticals owing to regulatory issues. Their usefulness hinges on certain attributes, including

  • the weakness of the Template:Chem2 bond and
  • the easy oxidation of divalent selenium compounds.

Contrary to theoretical productions, selenium stablizes geminal carbanions slightly less than the corresponding sulfur compounds. Moreover, selenium is so nucleophilic that alkyl halides preferentially alkylate the selenium in many selenoether anions, before the halide collapses the resulting ylide in a nucleophilic substitution. Nevertheless, propargylic selenoether anions alkylate without deselenation, and then oxidize to α-selenoenones.Template:Sfn

Vinylic selenides

Vinylic selenides are organoselenium compounds that play a role in organic synthesis, especially in the development of convenient stereoselective routes to functionalized alkenes.[17] Although various methods are mentioned for the preparation of vinylic selenides, a more useful procedure has centered on the nucleophilic or electrophilic organoselenium addition to terminal or internal alkynes.[18][19][20][21] For example, the nucleophilic addition of selenophenol to alkynes affords, preferentially, the Z-vinylic selenides after longer reaction times at room temperature. The reaction is faster at a high temperature; however, the mixture of Z- and E-vinylic selenides was obtained in an almost 1:1 ratio.[22] On the other hand, the adducts depend on the nature of the substituents at the triple bond. Conversely, vinylic selenides can be prepared by palladium-catalyzed hydroselenation of alkynes to afford the Markovnikov adduct in good yields. There are some limitations associated with the methodologies to prepare vinylic selenides illustrated above; the procedures described employ diorganoyl diselenides or selenophenol as starting materials, which are volatile and unstable and have an unpleasant odor. Also, the preparation of these compounds is complex.

Selenoxide oxidations

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Selenium dioxide is useful in organic oxidation. Specifically, Template:Chem2 will convert an allylic methylene group into the corresponding alcohol. A number of other reagents bring about this reaction.

Scheme 1. Selenium dioxide oxidation
Scheme 1. Selenium dioxide oxidation

In terms of reaction mechanism, Template:Chem2 and the allylic substrate react via pericyclic process beginning with an ene reaction that activates the Template:Chem2 bond. The second step is a [2,3] sigmatropic reaction. Oxidations involving selenium dioxide are often carried out with catalytic amounts of the selenium compound and in presence of a sacrificial catalyst or co-oxidant such as hydrogen peroxide.

Template:Chem2-based oxidations sometimes afford carbonyl compounds such as ketones,[23] β-Pinene[24] and cyclohexanone oxidation to 1,2-cyclohexanedione.[25] Oxidation of ketones having α-methylene groups affords diketones. This type of oxidation with selenium oxide is called Riley oxidation.[26]

Selenoxide eliminations

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In presence of a β-hydrogen, a selenide will give an elimination reaction after oxidation, to leave behind an alkene and a SeO-selenoperoxol. The SeO-selenoperoxol is highly reactive and is not isolated as such. In the elimination reaction, all five participating reaction centers are coplanar and, therefore, the reaction stereochemistry is syn. Oxidizing agents used are hydrogen peroxide, ozone or MCPBA. This reaction type is often used with ketones leading to enones. An example is acetylcyclohexanone elimination with benzeneselenylchloride and sodium hydride.[27]

Scheme 2. Selenoxide elimination of carbonyl compounds
Scheme 2. Selenoxide elimination of carbonyl compounds

The Grieco elimination is a similar selenoxide elimination using o-nitrophenylselenocyanate and tributylphosphine to cause the elimination of the elements of Template:Chem2.

References

Template:Reflist Template:ChemicalBondsToCarbon Template:Authority control

  1. A. Krief, L. Hevesi, Organoselenium Chemistry I. Functional Group Transformations., Springer, Berlin, 1988 Template:ISBN
  2. S. Patai, Z. Rappoport (Eds.), The Chemistry of Organic Selenium and Tellurium Compounds, John. Wiley and Sons, Chichester, Vol. 1, 1986 Template:ISBN
  3. Paulmier, C. Selenium Reagents and Intermediates in Organic Synthesis; Baldwin, J. E., Ed.; Pergamon Books Ltd.: New York, 1986 Template:ISBN
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  7. Organic Syntheses, Coll. Vol. 3, p. 771 (1955); Vol. 24, p. 89 (1944) Online Article.
  8. Organic Syntheses, Coll. Vol. 6, p. 533 (1988); Vol. 59, p. 141 (1979) Article
  9. Chemistry of hypervalent compounds (1999) Kin-ya Akiba Template:ISBN
  10. Link Developments in the chemistry of selenaheterocyclic compounds of practical importance in synthesis and medicinal biology Arkivoc 2006 (JE-1901MR) Jacek Młochowski, Krystian Kloc, Rafał Lisiak, Piotr Potaczek, and Halina Wójtowicz
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  23. Organic Syntheses Coll. Vol. 9, p. 396 (1998); Vol. 71, p. 181 (1993) Online article Template:Webarchive
  24. Organic Syntheses Coll. Vol. 6, p. 946 (1988); Vol. 56, p. 25 (1977). Online article Template:Webarchive
  25. Organic Syntheses, Coll. Vol. 4, p. 229 (1963); Vol. 32, p. 35 (1952). Online article Template:Webarchive
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  27. Organic Syntheses Coll. Vol. 6, p. 23 (1988); Vol. 59, p. 58 (1979) Online Article