2,3,4,6-Tetra-O-acetyl-a-D-mannopyranosyl bromide

CAS No. 13242-53-0
Synonyms Acetobromomannose / Acetobromo-α-D-mannose
FormulaC14H19BrO9
Mol Weight410.02
PackagingCustom packs
SpecificationNo spec file.

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2,3,4,6-Tetra-O-acetyl-α-D-mannopyranosyl bromide (often called acetobromo-α-D-mannose) is a protected, activated glycosyl bromide used as a powerful mannosyl donor in synthetic carbohydrate chemistry. It is derived from D-mannose, with all four ring hydroxyls converted to acetates and bromine introduced at the anomeric carbon in the α-configuration, giving a highly reactive but isolable intermediate for constructing mannosides and complex oligosaccharides. The compound is typically supplied as a pale yellow to beige waxy solid or powder, sometimes stabilized with a small percentage of CaCO₃ to limit hydrolysis. With molecular formula C14H19BrO9 and molecular weight about 411.2 g/mol, it dissolves in organic solvents such as chloroform or methanol and is handled under cool, dry, inert conditions. It is synthesized from mannose via peracetylation to the penta‑O-acetate followed by bromination at C1, then purified and qualified by NMR and HPLC. As a key mannosyl donor, it is widely used to prepare α‑ or β‑mannosides, mannosylated glycoconjugates, glycomimetics, and as a model substrate in organometallic oxidative‑addition studies, with typical shelf life of 1–2 years when refrigerated and protected from moisture.​IUPAC Name

  • [(2R,3R,4S,5S,6R)-3,4,5-triacetyloxy-6-bromooxan-2-yl]methyl acetate​

Appearance

  • Pale yellow to beige waxy solid or powder; sometimes described as pale‑yellow syrup or yellow–beige solid.​

Source

  • Prepared from D-mannose via:
    • Peracetylation to 1,2,3,4,6‑penta‑O-acetyl-α-D-mannopyranose.
    • Selective bromination at the anomeric position using HBr/acetic acid or similar reagents to give the tetra‑O‑acetyl mannosyl bromide.​

Molecular Weight and Structure

  • Molecular formula: C14H19BrO9​
  • Molecular weight: 411.2 g/mol​
  • Structure: α‑D‑mannopyranose ring with acetyl esters at O2, O3, O4, O6 and bromine at C1; formally a tetraacetate mannosyl bromide.​

Sugar Specificity

  • Retains the stereochemistry of α-D-mannopyranose at all ring centers, functioning as an α‑mannosyl donor.​
  • Used to introduce mannosyl residues into oligosaccharides and glycoconjugates with controlled stereochemistry.

Biological Activity

  • Not used as a direct drug; its role is as a synthetic glycosyl donor.
  • Employed to generate mannosylated ligands for lectins, glycosidases, and for mechanistic organometallic studies (e.g., oxidative addition to Ir complexes showing retentive vs invertive pathways).​

Purity and Microbial Contamination

  • Commercial specifications typically indicate ≥95–98% purity, often stabilized with 1–4% CaCO₃ to limit decomposition.​
  • Entirely synthetic, low‑water organic solid; microbial contamination is negligible when stored dry and under inert atmosphere.​

Identity and Quality Control

  • Identity confirmed by 11H/1313C NMR, showing characteristic acetyl methyl signals and anomeric region, plus MS (m/z ≈ 411).​
  • Suppliers provide COA with assay, melting point (approx. 60–61 °C), sometimes density and IR data, and often specify “refrigerator, under inert atmosphere” as storage condition.​

Shelf Life and Storage

  • Recommended to store at 2–8 °C, dry, preferably under inert gas and protected from moisture and light.​
  • Under these conditions, typically stable for at least 1–2 years; CaCO₃ stabilization further improves shelf life by scavenging HBr and acid.​

Application

  • Glycosyl donor for synthesis of α‑ and β‑mannosides in oligosaccharide and glycoconjugate assembly under Lewis acid catalysis.​
  • Used to prepare mannosyl building blocks and modified carbohydrates for glycobiology and vaccine or drug‑delivery research.
  • Model substrate in organometallic oxidative‑addition studies of glycosyl bromides to transition‑metal complexes.​

Key Characteristics

  • Activated α-D-mannosyl bromide fully protected as tetraacetate (powerful mannosyl donor).​
  • CAS 13242‑53‑0; MF C14H19BrO9; MW 411.2 g/mol.​
  • Pale yellow/beige waxy solid; soluble in organic solvents; often supplied with 1–4% CaCO₃ stabilizer.​
  • Widely used in synthetic glycochemistry for constructing mannosylated architectures.
  • Requires cool, dry, inert storage; good stability and purity when handled correctly.​

Citations

  • PubChem entry for α-D-mannopyranosyl bromide, 2,3,4,6-tetraacetate (structure, names, identifiers).​
  • ChemicalBook product data for 2,3,4,6-Tetra-O-acetyl-α-D-mannopyranosyl bromide (formula, MW, synonyms, properties).​
  • Chemdad technical sheet including melting point, storage, and basic properties.​
  • Sigma‑Aldrich / AstaTech listing showing CAS, formula, and stabilization with CaCO₃.​
  • CymitQuimica catalog entry for α-D-mannopyranosyl bromide, 2,3,4,6-tetraacetate (synonyms, classification).​
  • Chemical-suppliers.eu / CSP listing summarizing structure and property overview.​
  • PubChem entry for α-D-glucopyranosyl bromide, tetraacetate as closely related acetobromo sugar data.​
  • ChemicalBook entry for 2,3,4,6-Tetra-O-acetyl-α-D-glucopyranosyl bromide (use as glycosyl donor, comparison).​
  • Figshare/oxidative addition study showing acetobromo-α-D-mannose behavior in Ir complexes.​
  • General supplier overviews of acetobromo sugars used as glycosyl bromide donors (glucose/galactose analogs).​

2. MSDS

3. Tech Data Sheets/Manuals

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