Cephalosporin C (I), the amine (11), and derived cephalosporanic acids (111; R1 = H) are converted into new derivatives by replacing the acetoxygroup with various sulphur, nitrogen, and carbon nucleophiles.7-Aminocephalosporanic acid ( 11) is produced by the action of thiourea on 7-chloroacetamidocephalosporanic acid or spontaneously from 4'-chlorobutanamido-or 5'-chloropentanamidocephalosporanic acids as a result of intramolecular displacement.CONVERSION of the antibiotic cephalosporin C (I) into 7-aminocephalosporanic acid (11) and subsequent acylation to give a series of 7-acylaminocephalosporanic acids (111 ; R1 = H) have been de~cribed.l-~ We have converted such acids into their methyl esters (111; R1 = Me), lactones (IV), and I-oxides (VIII; Y = OAC).~ The stereochemistry of the oxides has not been studied. Hale, Newton, and Abraham described 5 the transformation of cephalosporin C (I) into the pyridinium betaine (VI; X = C,H5N+) and showed that a range of substituted pyridines formed similar derivatives (C, compounds) by replacing the acetoxy-group. The formation of a Bunte salt ( I X ; Y = S,O,Na R = [CH,],*CH(NH,)*CO,H), when cephalosporin C is treated with sodium thiosulphate was proposed 6 to account for the resulting increase in antibacterial activity. We have studied the substitution of the acetoxy-group in salts of 7-acylaminocephalosporanic acids (I11 ; R1 = H) by azide, NN-dimethyldithiocarbamate, thiobenzoate, and
The combined action of bases and acid anhydrides on 7-acylamidocephalosporanic acids, and the action of bases on their esters, set up equilibria in which the corresponding A2-isomers predominate. The isomerisation represents a prototropic shift probably favoured by the sulphur atom in the dihydrothiazine ring. The acetoxy-group in the A2-compounds can be replaced by nucleophiles.Treatment of methyl 3-acetoxymethyl-7~-phenylacetamidoceph-3-em-4-carboxylate 1 [-oxide with a base res u I ts i n d eca rboxy I a t i o n . Attempts to prepare 7 pp he n y I a ceta m i d o ce p h -2 -em -45car boxy I i c acid 1 toxi d e resulted in formation of its A3-isomer and some carbon dioxide.
Reductive hydrolytic fission of violacein gives, in high yield, a colourless acid, CzoHlaOaNz, which on the basis of chemical and spectroscopic evidence is formulated as a y-(5-hydroxy-3-indolyl)-a-oxindolyl-y-oxobutyric acid (VII). IN earlier papers of this series it has been argued that violacein, the pigment of Chromobacterium violaceurn, contains a 5-hydroxyindole nucleus, an oxindole nucleus, and probably a hydroxypyrrole residue. The present communication is concerned with the structure of a colourless acidic degradation product, C,,H,,O,N,, obtained from violacein by the action of alkali in the presence of zinc. If, as now seems likely, the molecular formula of violacein proves to be of the type C2~-N, (see Part I11 *), then only one carbon atom and one nitrogen atom are lost in the formation of this C,,-acid, a conclusion which is consistent with the high yield of the acid and with the simultaneous production of ammonia, identified as toluene-9-sulphonamide, during the degradation.The behaviour of the C,,-acid with methylating agents showed that it is a phenolic acid containing two other weakly acidic replaceable hydrogen atoms. Thus with diazomethane the acid gave a phenolic methyl ester (a monomethyl derivative) which, rather surprisingly, was also formed by the action of methyl iodide and potassium carbonate in boiling acetone. With methyl sulphate and an excess of alkali the C,,-acid gave an acidic trimethyl derivative containing one methoxyl group, whilst the use of an excess of methyl sulphate, so that the reaction mixture finally became acidic, yielded a neutral tetramethyl derivative with two methoxyl groups. The latter compound is clearly the methyl ester of the trimethyl derivative, from which it was prepared by methyl iodide-potassium carbonate. The position of the methyl groups in the trimethyl derivative is established by the oxidation with potassium permanganate to l-methylisatin (I; R = H) and 5-methoxy-l-*
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