Greetings everybody, I am an senior biochemistry undergraduate working on a project which consists of protecting uridine at the 5 prime position with TBDMS-Cl. I have resulted in low yields so far (55%) even though the literature reports 97%. Any advice you all can offer would be greatly appreciated.
1. 100 mg's of uridine was co-evaporated twice with pyridine and then once with toluene (strangely, even though I use toluene, the pyridine odor is still there)
2. To a solution of uridine (100 mg, 0.410 mmol) dissolved in 2 mL of anhydrous pyridine, there was added 4 equiv. of imidazole (111.6 mg,
1.64 mmol) and 2 equiv's of TBDMS-Cl (123.59 mg, 0.820 mmol) at 0 °C under Ar atmosphere. The reaction mixture was stirred
at room temperature over night then treated with methanol (100 microliters). After stirring at room temperature for 1 hour, the solvent was removed under reduced pressure. The residue was purified by silica gel column chromatography (DCM/MeOH).
TLC shows that there is still a lot of starting material left over (uridine). I even collect three test tubes full of this stuff after c.c and I get anywhere from 50-55% yield of my product. Could it be possible that the TBDMS-Cl has been hydrolyzed?