Scott McN. Sieburth

.SMS in Byblos.

Professor, Organic and Medicinal Chemistry

B.S., 1977, Worcester Polytechnic Instittute; Ph.D., 1983, Harvard University
FMC Corporation, Agricultural Chemical Group, Senior Research Chemist 1982-1989
State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1989-2001

Department of Chemistry
Temple University
1901 N. 13th Street

Philadelphia, PA  19122

Voice: 215-204-7916   Fax: 215-204-1532
scott.sieburth@temple.edu


from Hermann Sudermann's The Mad Professor
translated by I. Leighton & O. P. Schinnerer

 

 

GROUP WEBPAGE

the Philadelphia Organic Chemists' Club (POCC) Webpage

the other Sieburth faculty web pages, photo of Scott and Phil Lesh

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BIOREGULATORY SMALL MOLECULES AND NEW SYNTHETIC METHODS

Organosilanes and higher-order cycloadditions.

Organosilanes.


Silicon is carbon's nearest neighbor, a position that has spawned great interest in biologically active organosilanes.  Organosilanes have no intrinsic toxicity, and do not occur naturally. We have prepared the first silanediol-based polypeptide analogs, with the expectation that the silicon group will be a stable mimic of an unstable hydrated amide carbonyl, bind to the protease active site, and thereby inhibit proteolytic enzymes. Our silanediol-based structures inhibit angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and the HIV protease at low nanomolar concentrations. These enzymes are important targets for control of hypertension and AIDS. more....


Development of efficient methodology to prepare these novel structures is a key component of this program. alpha -Aminosilanes, central to these structures, are not conveniently prepared by standard reactions. We have described two convergent approaches assembling readily available components, hydrosilylation of N-alkenyl urethanes and rearrrangment of N -silyl carbamates. The latter is the first useful nitrogen analog of the reverse-Brook rearrangement. In some cases, the reaction can also be performed with high enantioselectivity.
 

Cycloaddition. 


2-Pyridone photodimerization transforms two achiral aromatics into a tricyclic cyclooctadiene with four stereogenic centers and functionality at every carbon Usually the trans isomer dominates the product. We seek to develop the synthetic potential of this reaction and have investigated both intramolecular and selectve cycloadditions of 2-pyridone mixtures, as well as cross cycloaddition with furan, naphthalene and 1,3-dienes. Our interest in this reaction stems, in part, from the overlap of the terpenoid carbon skeleton of the product with many complex natural products such as taxol, fusicoccin, ophiobolin, and variecolin.

Pyridone photodimerization yields two head-to-tail products

Intramolecular cycloaddition of pyridones with a four or three-carbon tether yields a single diastereomeric product in each case. Further elaboration leads to regio- and stereospecific functionalization consistent with oxidation of the target molecules. more.....

The cyclooctadiene product can also be converted to polyquinanes. In the case of the head-to-head pyridone product, treatment of the cis-[4 + 4] product with chlorine yields a single pentacyclic product with eight stereogenic center. more....

SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

complete publication list.....


Last modified: June 2003     Temple Chemistry Home