Checked by W. G. Dauben and J. H. E. Fenyes..
1. Procedure
A solution of
42 g. (1.05 moles) of sodium hydroxide in 360 ml. of water is placed in a
1-l. three-necked, round-bottomed flask fitted with a
mechanical stirrer and a
thermometer and is cooled to −5° in an
ice-salt bath. The stirrer is started, and
43 g. (0.263 mole) of bromine is added from a
separatory funnel at such a rate that the temperature remains below 0° (addition time about 5 minutes). The ice-cold solution is diluted with
240 ml. of dioxane (Note
1) that has previously been cooled to 13–14° (Note
2). This solution is kept at 0° until required.
A solution of
28.8 g. (0.08 mole) of 3β-acetoxy-5-pregnen-20-one (pregnenolone acetate) (Note
3) in
1.1 l. of dioxane (Note
1) is diluted with 320 ml. of water and placed in a
5-l. three-necked, round-bottomed flask fitted with a mechanical stirrer and a thermometer (Note
4). The stirrer is started and the mixture is cooled in ice. When the internal temperature has fallen to 8°, the cold
hypobromite solution is added in a steady stream. The temperature of the reaction mixture is maintained below 10° throughout the reaction. A white precipitate begins to form after 10 minutes, and the solution becomes colorless during 1 hour. The mixture is stirred for an additional 2 hours, and then the excess
sodium hypobromite is destroyed by the addition of a solution of
10 g. of anhydrous sodium sulfite in 100 l. of water (Note
5).
The stirrer and thermometer are removed and the flask is fitted with a condenser for reflux. The mixture is heated under reflux for 15 minutes, and the solution, while still hot (90°), is acidified by the cautious addition of
50 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid (Note
6). The clear yellow solution is kept at 5° for 24 hours. The crystalline precipitate is collected by suction filtration, washed with water, and dried at 100° at atmospheric pressure. The yield of
3β-hydroxyetienic acid, m.p.
274–276°, is
18–20 g. An additional
3–5 g. of product can be obtained by subjecting the filtrate to steam distillation until a white precipitate is formed. The
etienic acid collected from the cooled solution melts at
268–272°. The total yield is
23–24 g. (
91–95%).
The
3β-hydroxyetienic acid is placed in a
500-ml. round-bottomed flask fitted with a condenser protected with a drying tube and is dissolved with warming in
150 ml. of dry pyridine. After the solution has cooled to room temperature,
20 ml. of acetic anhydride is added; a white crystalline precipitate starts to form immediately. After the mixture has stood for 18–24 hours, it is treated with 20 ml. of water and boiled until the precipitate has dissolved (Note
7). The clear solution is diluted with 70 ml. of water and allowed to cool. The crystalline product is collected by suction filtration, washed with water, and dried in a vacuum
oven at 105°/20 mm. The yield of
3β-acetoxyetienic acid, m.p.
235–238°, is
23–24 g. Recrystallization from
glacial acetic acid gives a purer product, m.p.
238–240°. The yield is
16–18 g. (
55–63% based on the amount of
pregnenolone acetate used).
2. Notes
1.
Dioxane as supplied by Matheson-Coleman Bell Co. was used without purification.
4. It is advisable to carry out any operation involving
dioxane in a fume
hood.
5. Although this amount of
sodium sulfite is sufficient to destroy the excess
sodium hypobromite, the solution may still give a positive test with starch-iodide paper because of the presence of peroxides in the
dioxane used. It is not necessary to destroy these peroxides before proceeding.
6. The solution should be swirled gently during the addition of the
hydrochloric acid. Since this operation causes the
dioxane to boil, it must be carried out in a fume
hood.
7. The anhydride of
etienic acid is hydrolyzed in this process to give the soluble acid. Prolonged boiling should be avoided to prevent extensive attack on the less readily hydrolyzed
acetate group.
3. Discussion
3β-Hydroxy-Δ5-etiocholenic acid has been prepared from
pregnenolone acetate by the action of
sodium hypoiodite;
2 by oxidation of the
furfurylidene derivative;
3 and by oxidation of the
benzylidene derivative of the 5,6-dibromide followed by debromination.
4 The side chain of
3β-hydroxy-Δ5-bisnorcholenic acid has been systematically degraded to give the
etienic acid.
5 Two syntheteic approaches have involved, respectively, the replacement of the halogen in
17-chloro-3-acetoxy-Δ5-androstene by an alkali metal followed by treatment with
carbon dioxide6 and the conversion of dehydroandrosterone
acetate to its cyanohydrin, which then was successively dehydrated, hydrolyzed, and selectively hydrogenated to furnish
3β-hydroxyetienic acid.
7,8.
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