Hi there. First post so I'll introduce myself. I'm Jim, an honours student working on an open science project involving the synthesis (and subsequent evaluation) of potential anti-malarial drug candidates. Link to our work
here.
I'm trying to remove a proton from the thienopyrimidine compound. The reaction shown below:
I've tried n-BuLi at -78, -40 and -15, and sec-BuLi in these conditions also. In all reactions 3 equiv of BuLi was used. All reactions were quenched with D
2O, and all reactions show that the only proton being removed belongs to the primary amine.
I'm trying to rule out possibilities, such as the starting material being tainted with water (the HNMR indicates that there's water present, but not in unusual quantities). I might do a recrystallisation and see if that eliminates that problem. I've also synthesised a version of this compound where the primary amine is replaced by morpholine.
My question is, what other possibilities might be leading to the right proton not coming off? What conditions do you guys know of that would lead to the removal of this proton? The ultimate reaction that this is leading towards is the replacement of the α-thiophene proton with iodine, followed by a Suzuki coupling.
Should the abstraction of this proton not be possible I suppose that I'll have to do the BuLi step before introducing that amine, I suppose.