We synthesized an adduct between cysteine and bromoacetylpyridine, which is commercially available as the hydrobromide salt. The adduct is a ketone with a sulfide at the alpha-carbon (see attached). We typically add two equivalents of a base, although we have not settled on the best base. The product has bromide salt as one impurity. I suspect that we have unreacted bromoacetylpyridine or its derivative as one impurity on the basis of H-1 NMR. Our typical means of purifying amino acid derivatives is Dowex-50 using water followed by ammonia, but this standard method has not produced good results for our compound. Sometimes compounds with aromatic rings are retained on Dowex, presumably via hydrophobic interactions with the polystyrene beads.
We are trying reversed phase HPLC on C-18, starting at 3% acetonitrile and running a gradient, although I believe that we have two isocratic holds in the protocol ATM. We see a mixture in the presence of TFA, but we are not 100% certain which peak is which, lacking a pure product to use as a standard. We are considering using triethylamine as the base in the synthesis and also as an ion-pair reagent in RP HPLC, although its water solubility is not great. I know just enough about ion pairing and buffering in RP HPLC to be dangerous.
Does anything come to mind as a good separation strategy? We have several C-18 columns, which makes this approach a bit more attractive. We only need to purify a few milligrams for NMR, and then we can write this up (phew!). Ideally any buffer or ion-pair reagent present in excess should be volatile (or easily removable at least).