Muriel Sebban
University of Rouen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Muriel Sebban.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013
Sunyoung Lee; Sonia Diab; Pierre Queval; Muriel Sebban; Isabelle Chataigner; Serge R. Piettre
Non-stabilized azomethine ylide 4a reacts smoothly at room temperature with a variety of uncomplexed aromatic heterocycles and carbocycles on the condition that the ring contains at least one or two electron-withdrawing substituents, respectively. Aromatic substrates, including pyridine and benzene derivatives, participate as 2π components in [3+2] cycloaddition reactions and interact with one, two, or three equivalent(s) of the ylide, depending on their structure and substitution pattern. Thus, this process affords highly functionalized polycyclic structures that contain between one and three pyrrolidinyl ring(s) in useful yields. These results indicate that the site selectivity of the cycloaddition reactions strongly depends on both the nature and the positions of the substituents. In most cases, the second 1,3-dipolar reaction occurs on the opposite face to the one that contains the first pyrrolidinyl ring. DFT calculations on model compounds indicate that a concerted mechanism features a low activation barrier.
Organic Letters | 2015
Christophe Berini; Muriel Sebban; Hassan Oulyadi; Morgane Sanselme; Vincent Levacher; Jean-François Brière
An unprecedented multicomponent organocatalyzed Knoevenagel-aza-Michael-cyclocondensation reaction between Meldrums acid, hydroxylamines, and aldehydes afforded a straightforward entry to a large array of racemic and syn-diastereoenriched isoxazolidinones as synthetically useful scaffolds. This process revealed a markedly facile aza-Michael-cyclocondensation sequence as a key domino reaction between RCO2NHOH and transient alkylidene Meldrums acid upon Brønsted base catalysis.
Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2012
Jana Sopkova-de Oliveira Santos; Anne Sophie Voisin-Chiret; Grégory Burzicki; Laure Sebaoun; Muriel Sebban; Jean-François Lohier; Rémi Legay; Hassan Oulyadi; Ronan Bureau; Sylvain Rault
Protein-protein interactions are central to many biological processes, from intracellular communication to cytoskeleton assembly, and therefore represent an important class of targets for new therapeutics. The most common secondary structure in natural proteins is an α-helix. Small molecules seem to be attractive candidates for stabilizing or disrupting protein-protein interactions based on α-helices. In our study, we assessed the ability of oligopyridyl scaffolds to mimic the α-helical twist. The theoretical as well as experimental studies (X-ray diffraction and NMR) on conformations of bipyridines in the function of substituent and pyridine nitrogen positions were carried out. Furthermore, the experimental techniques showed that the conformations observed in bipyridines are maintained within a longer oligopyridyl scaffold (quaterpyridines). The alignment of the synthesized quaterpyridine with two methyl substituents showed that it is an α-helix foldamer; their methyl groups overlap very well with side chain positions, i and i + 3, of an ideal α-helix.
Organic Letters | 2015
Gaëlle Milanole; Floris Andriessen; Gérald Lemonnier; Muriel Sebban; Gaël Coadou; Samuel Couve-Bonnaire; Jean-François Bonfanti; Philippe Jubault; Xavier Pannecoucke
Synthesis of fluorocyclopropyl building blocks, which constitute the core of various therapeutic agents against the hepatitis C virus, is described. The relevant methyl α-amino-β-fluoro-β-vinylcyclopropanecarboxylate has been used as a key intermediate for the total synthesis of a fluorinated analogue of Simeprevir (TMC 435), a HCV NS3/4A protease inhibitor.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2015
Emilie Cossoul; Marie Hubert-Roux; Muriel Sebban; Florence Churlaud; Hassan Oulyadi; Carlos Afonso
Recently, the interest of the coupling between atmospheric solid analysis probe (ASAP) and ion mobility-mass spectrometry has been revealed in the field of polymers. This method associates a direct ionization technique with a bi-dimensional separation method. Poly(ether ether ketones) (PEEK) belong to the family of the poly(aryl ether ketones) (PAEK) which are high performance aromatic polymers usually used in aerospace, electronics and nuclear industries. PEEK are important commercial thermoplastics with excellent chemical resistance and good mechanical properties. Because of their low solubility, few structural characterization studies of PEEK have been reported. In mass spectrometry, only MALDI-TOF analyses for polymer synthesis monitoring have been described with the use of strong acids such as sulfuric acid. This work demonstrates that ASAP is particularly efficient for analysis of PEEK in a solvent free approach with the production of intact small oligomers (n≤2). Five types of PEEK oligomers with different end-groups were evidenced. With MALDI-TOF, the same end-groups with almost the same relative abundance were obtained which support the hypothesis that the oligomers detected in ASAP are intact small oligomers and not fragments or pyrolysis products. This is particularly interesting as generally the ASAP analysis of polymers yields pyrolysis products with the loss of end-group information. The end-groups assignments have been confirmed by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) experiments on the M(+) molecular ions, which allowed highlighting some specific neutral or radical losses as well as two diagnostic product ions. Thus, ASAP-IM/MS/MS proves to be a fast and efficient alternative way to characterize low solubility polymers such as PEEK.
Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling | 2013
Serge Perato; Jade Fogha; Muriel Sebban; Anne Sophie Voisin-Chiret; Jana Sopkova-de Oliveira Santos; Hassan Oulyadi; Sylvain Rault
With the aim to find new protein-protein inhibitors, a three part methodology was applied to oligophenylpyridines. Theoretical ring twist angle predictions have been validated by X-ray diffraction and molecular dynamics simulations with NMR constraints. Careful choice of substituent and nitrogen positions in oligophenylpyridyl foldamer units opens the way to conformational control of the side chain distribution of this α-helix mimic.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016
Romain Bénéteau; Anne Boussonnière; Jean‐Christophe Rouaud; Jacques Lebreton; Jérôme Graton; Denis Jacquemin; Muriel Sebban; Hassan Oulyadi; Ghanem Hamdoun; Amber N. Hancock; Carl H. Schiesser; Fabrice Dénès
α-Bromo aluminium acetals are suitable substrates for Ueno-Stork-like radical cyclisations affording γ-lactols and acid-sensitive methylene-γ-lactols in high yields. The mechanistic study herein sets the scope and limitation of this reaction. The influence of the halide (or chalcogenide) atom X (X=Cl, Br, I, SPh, SePh) in the precursors α-haloesters, as well as influence of the solvent and temperature was studied. The structure of the aluminium acetal intermediates resulting from the reduction of the corresponding α-haloesters has been investigated by low-temperature (13) C-INEPT diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy (DOSY) experiments and quantum calculations, providing new insights into the structures of these thermally labile intermediates. Oxygen-bridged dimeric structures with a planar Al2 O2 ring are proposed for the least hindered aluminium acetals, while monomeric structures seem to prevail for the most hindered species. A comparison against the radical cyclisation of aluminium acetals derived from allyl and propargyl alcohols with the parent Ueno-Stork has been made at the BHandHLYP/6-311++G(d,p) level of theory, highlighting mechanistic similarities and differences.
Chemical Communications | 2014
Ghanem Hamdoun; Muriel Sebban; E. Cossoul; Anne Harrison-Marchand; Jacques Maddaluno; Hassan Oulyadi
Carbohydrate Research | 2011
Bruno Linclau; Samuel Golten; Mark E. Light; Muriel Sebban; Hassan Oulyadi
Organometallics | 2015
Ghanem Hamdoun; Muriel Sebban; Vincent Tognetti; Anne Harrison-Marchand; Laurent Joubert; Jacques Maddaluno; Hassan Oulyadi