In organic chemistry, thioesters are organosulfur compounds with the molecular structure . They are analogous to carboxylate esters () with the sulfur in the thioester replacing oxygen in the carboxylate ester, as implied by the thio- prefix. They are the product of esterification of a carboxylic acid () with a thiol (). In biochemistry, the best-known thioesters are derivatives of coenzyme A, e.g., acetyl-CoA.Matthys J. Janssen "Carboxylic Acids and Esters" in PATAI's Chemistry of Functional Groups: Carboxylic Acids and Esters, Saul Patai, Ed. John Wiley, 1969, New York: pp. 705–764. The R and R' represent organyl groups, or Hydrogen in the case of R.
Thioesters can be prepared by condensation of thiols and carboxylic acids in the presence of Desiccant:
Thioesters can be conveniently prepared from alcohols by the Mitsunobu reaction, using thioacetic acid.
They also arise via carbonylation of and in the presence of thiols.
In a related reaction, thioesters can be converted into esters. Thioacetate esters can also be cleaved with methanethiol in the presence of stoichiometric base, as illustrated in the preparation of pent-4-yne-1-thiol:
Thioesters enolize easily as the sulfur atom stabilizes the enol. But the enols are less nucleophilic than ketene acetals, and carbonyl α-substitution reactions occur more slowly.
A reaction unique to thioesters is the Fukuyama coupling, in which the thioester is coupled with an organozinc halide by a palladium catalyst to give a ketone.
Oxidation of the sulfur atom in thioesters () is postulated in the bioactivation of the antithrombotic prodrugs ticlopidine, clopidogrel, and prasugrel.
However, due to the high free energy change of thioester's hydrolysis and correspondingly their low equilibrium constants, it is unlikely that these compounds could have accumulated abiotically to any significant extent especially in hydrothermal vent conditions.
They can also be made by the reaction of Lawesson's reagent with esters or by treating with hydrogen sulfide.
Various thionoesters may be prepared through the transesterification of an existing methyl thionoester with an alcohol under base-catalyzed conditions.
and can be transformed to thionoesters under metal-catalyzed cross-coupling conditions.
Biochemistry
Thioesters and the origin of life
It is revealing that thioesters are obligatory intermediates in several key processes in which ATP is either used or regenerated. Thioesters are involved in the synthesis of all esters, including those found in complex . They also participate in the synthesis of a number of other cellular components, including , , , , , and others. In addition, thioesters are formed as key intermediates in several particularly ancient processes that result in the assembly of ATP. In both these instances, the thioester is closer than ATP to the process that uses or yields energy. In other words, thioesters could have actually played the role of ATP in a "thioester world" initially devoid of ATP. Eventually, these thioesters could have served to usher in ATP through its ability to support the formation of bonds between .
Thionoesters
See also
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