Phosphoramidite

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Phosphoramidite: general structure

A phosphoramidite (RO)2PNR2 is a monoamide of a

phosphite diester. The key feature of phosphoramidites is their markedly high reactivity towards nucleophiles catalyzed by weak acids e.c., triethylammonium chloride or 1H-tetrazole
. In these reactions, the incoming nucleophile replaces the NR2 moiety.

Applications

Nucleoside phosphoramidites

Phosphoramidites derived from protected nucleosides are referred to as nucleoside phosphoramidites and are widely used in chemical synthesis of DNA, RNA, and other nucleic acids and their analogs.

As ligands

Certain phosphoramidites are also used as

BINOL and can be synthesised by reaction of BINOL with phosphorus trichloride to the chlorophosphite and then reaction with simple secondary amines.[2] This type of ligand was first used in 1996 in an asymmetric copper-catalysed addition of dialkylzincs to enones.[3][4]

See also

References