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1.
J Org Chem ; 87(13): 8437-8444, 2022 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35679839

ABSTRACT

An organocatalyzed, formal (3+3) cycloaddition reaction is described for the practical synthesis of substituted pyridines. Starting from readily available enamines and enal/ynal/enone substrates, the protocol affords tri- or tetrasubstituted pyridine scaffolds bearing various functional groups. This method was demonstrated on a 50 g scale, enabling the synthesis of 2-isopropyl-4-methylpyridin-3-amine, a raw material used for the manufacture of sotorasib. Mechanistic analysis using two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometry revealed the transformation proceeds through the reversible formation of a stable reaction off-cycle species that precedes pyridine formation. In situ reaction progress kinetic analysis and control NMR studies were employed to better understand the role of FeCl3 and pyrrolidine hydrochloride in promoting the reaction.


Subject(s)
Aldehydes , Ketones , Aldehydes/chemistry , Catalysis , Cycloaddition Reaction , Ketones/chemistry , Kinetics , Pyridines/chemistry
2.
Chem Soc Rev ; 50(19): 10733-10742, 2021 Oct 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34382626

ABSTRACT

Construction of new carbon-carbon bonds is the cornerstone of organic chemistry. Organometallic reagents are amongst the most robust and versatile nucleophiles for this purpose. Polarization of the metal-carbon bonds in these reagents facilitates their reactions with a vast array of electrophiles to achieve chemical diversification. The dependence on stoichiometric quantities of metals and often organic halides as feedstock precursors, which in turn produces copious amounts of metal halide waste, is the key limitation of the classical organometallic reactions. Inspired by the classical Wolff-Kishner reduction converting carbonyl groups in aldehydes or ketones into methylene derivatives, our group has recently developed strategies to couple various alcohols, aldehydes, and ketones with a broad range of both hard and soft carbon electrophiles in the presence of catalytic amounts of transition metals, via the hydrazone derivatives: i.e., as organometallic reagent surrogates. This Tutorial Review describes the chronological development of this concept in our research group, detailing its creation in the context of a deoxygenation reaction and evolution to a more general carbon-carbon bond-forming strategy. The latter is demonstrated by the employment of carbonyl-derived alkyl carbanions in various transition-metal catalyzed chemical transformations, including 1,2-carbonyl/imine addition, conjugate addition, carboxylation, olefination, cross-coupling, allylation, alkylation and hydroalkylation.

3.
Org Lett ; 21(11): 4370-4373, 2019 06 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31099584

ABSTRACT

A highly regio- and enantioselective synthesis of 1,2-diamine derivatives from γ-substituted allylic pivalamides using copper-catalyzed hydroamination is reported. The N-pivaloyl group is essential, in both facilitating the hydrocupration step and suppressing an unproductive ß-elimination from the alkylcopper intermediate. This approach enables an efficient construction of chiral differentially protected vicinal diamines under mild conditions with broad functional group tolerance.


Subject(s)
Copper/chemistry , Diamines/chemical synthesis , Amination , Catalysis , Diamines/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Stereoisomerism
4.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 58(11): 3407-3411, 2019 03 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30659729

ABSTRACT

Herein, we report a practical two-step synthetic route to α-arylpyrrolidines through Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling and enantioselective copper-catalyzed intramolecular hydroamination reactions. The excellent stereoselectivity and broad scope for the transformation of substrates with pharmaceutically relevant heteroarenes render this method a practical and versatile approach for pyrrolidine synthesis. Additionally, this intramolecular hydroamination strategy facilitates the asymmetric synthesis of tetrahydroisoquinolines and medium-ring dibenzo-fused nitrogen heterocycles.


Subject(s)
Amines/chemistry , Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Copper/chemistry , Nitrogen/chemistry , Pyrrolidines/chemical synthesis , Tetrahydroisoquinolines/chemistry , Amination , Boronic Acids/chemistry , Catalysis , Epoxy Compounds/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Naphthalenes/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Stereoisomerism
5.
Org Lett ; 20(13): 3801-3805, 2018 07 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29911871

ABSTRACT

Earth-abundant and well-defined iron complexes are found to be cheap and effective catalysts for a series of " umpolung" nucleophilic additions of hydrazones. The new catalytic system not only maintains the broad substrate scope of an earlier expensive ruthenium system but also attains chemoselectivity of different kinds of carbonyl groups. Furthermore, the iron catalyst enables this reaction at ambient temperature.

6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 54(14): 1750-1753, 2018 Feb 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29379918

ABSTRACT

Traditional cross-couplings require stoichiometric organometallic reagents. A novel nickel-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction between aldehydes and aryl halides via hydrazone intermediates has been developed, merging the Wolff-Kishner reduction and the classical cross-coupling reactions. Aromatic aldehydes, aryl iodides and aryl bromides are especially effective in this new cross-coupling chemistry.

8.
Nat Chem ; 9(4): 374-378, 2017 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28338683

ABSTRACT

Nucleophilic addition reactions of organometallic reagents to carbonyl compounds for carbon-carbon bond construction have played a pivotal role in modern chemistry. However, this reaction's reliance on petroleum-derived chemical feedstocks and a stoichiometric quantity of metal have prompted the development of many carbanion equivalents and catalytic metal alternatives. Here, we show that naturally occurring carbonyls can be used as latent alkyl carbanion equivalents for additions to carbonyl compounds, via reductive polarity reversal. Such 'umpolung' reactivity is facilitated by a ruthenium catalyst and diphosphine ligand under mild conditions, delivering synthetically valuable secondary and tertiary alcohols in up to 98% yield. The unique chemoselectivity exhibited by carbonyl-derived carbanion equivalents is demonstrated by their tolerance to protic reaction media and good functional group compatibility. Enantioenriched tertiary alcohols can also be accessed with the aid of chiral ligands, albeit with moderate stereocontrol. Such carbonyl-derived carbanion equivalents are anticipated to find broad utility in chemical bond formation.

9.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 56(22): 6302-6306, 2017 05 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28211158

ABSTRACT

Conjugate addition of carbon nucleophiles to electron-deficient olefins is one of the most powerful methods for forming carbon-carbon bonds. Despite great achievements in controlling the selectivity, variation of the carbon nucleophiles remains largely underexplored, with this approach relying mostly on organometallic reagents. Herein, we report that naturally abundant carbonyls can act as latent carbon nucleophiles for conjugate additions through a ruthenium-catalyzed process, with water and nitrogen as innocuous byproducts. The key to our success is homogeneous ruthenium(II) catalysis, combined with phosphines as spectator ligands and hydrazine as the reducing agent. This chemistry allows the incorporation of highly functionalized alkyl fragments into a vast array of electron-deficient olefins under mild reaction conditions in a reaction complementary to the classical organometallic-reagent-based conjugate additions mediated or catalyzed by "soft" transition metals.

10.
Chem Sci ; 8(12): 8193-8197, 2017 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29568466

ABSTRACT

Natural availability of carbonyl groups offers reductive carbonyl coupling tremendous synthetic potential for efficient olefin synthesis, yet the catalytic carbonyl cross-coupling remains largely elusive. We report herein such a reaction, mediated by hydrazine under ruthenium(ii) catalysis. This method enables facile and selective cross-couplings of two unsymmetrical carbonyl compounds in either an intermolecular or intramolecular fashion. Moreover, this chemistry accommodates a variety of substrates, proceeds under mild reaction conditions with good functional group tolerance, and generates stoichiometric benign byproducts. Importantly, the coexistence of KO t Bu and bidentate phosphine dmpe is vital to this transformation.

11.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 56(22): 6260-6263, 2017 05 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28026143

ABSTRACT

One of the classical ways to synthesize amines involves the coupling of carbonyl compounds and imines, either through enolate chemistry or acyl-based carbanion equivalents. We herein report an alternative strategy that is based on the use of aldehydes as alkyl carbanion equivalents in a reductive coupling with aryl imines. A wide array of secondary amines can be synthesized in moderate to high yields. This reaction is mediated by hydrazine and catalyzed by ruthenium(II) complexes, and it tolerates various functional groups, such as esters, amides, and nitriles.

12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(16): 5433-40, 2016 04 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27046095

ABSTRACT

A long-standing scientific challenge in the field of alcohol deoxygenation has been direct catalytic sp(3) C-O defunctionalization with high selectivity and efficiency, in the presence of other functionalities, such as free hydroxyl groups and amines widely present in biological molecules. Previously, the selectivity issue had been only addressed by classic multistep deoxygenation strategies with stoichiometric reagents. Herein, we propose a catalytic late-transition-metal-catalyzed redox design, on the basis of dehydrogenation/Wolff-Kishner (WK) reduction, to simultaneously tackle the challenges regarding step economy and selectivity. The early development of our hypothesis focuses on an iridium-catalyzed process efficient mainly with activated alcohols, which dictates harsh reaction conditions and thus limits its synthetic utility. Later, a significant advancement has been made on aliphatic primary alcohol deoxygenation by employing a ruthenium complex, with good functional group tolerance and exclusive selectivity under practical reaction conditions. Its synthetic utility is further illustrated by excellent efficiency as well as complete chemo- and regio-selectivity in both simple and complex molecular settings. Mechanistic discussion is also included with experimental supports. Overall, our current method successfully addresses the aforementioned challenges in the pertinent field, providing a practical redox-based approach to the direct sp(3) C-O defunctionalization of aliphatic primary alcohols.

13.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 54(46): 13739-42, 2015 Nov 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26404091

ABSTRACT

An umpolung Mannich-type reaction of secondary amides, aliphatic aldehydes, and electrophilic alkenes has been disclosed. This reaction features the one-pot formation of C-N and C-C bonds by a titanocene-catalyzed radical coupling of the condensation products, from secondary amides and aldehydes, with electrophilic alkenes. N-substituted γ-amido-acid derivatives and γ-amido ketones can be efficiently prepared by the current method. Extension to the reaction between ketoamides and electrophilic alkenes allows rapid assembly of piperidine skeletons with α-amino quaternary carbon centers. Its synthetic utility has been demonstrated by a facile construction of the tricyclic core of marine alkaloids such as cylindricine C and polycitorol A.


Subject(s)
Aldehydes/chemistry , Alkenes/chemistry , Amides/chemistry , Amides/chemical synthesis , Ketones/chemical synthesis , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Catalysis , Ketones/chemistry , Molecular Structure
15.
J Org Chem ; 75(12): 4230-43, 2010 Jun 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20507081

ABSTRACT

Full details of the convergent synthetic approach to awajanomycin, and the first total syntheses of the marine natural product (+)-awajanomycin (1) and its C-11 epimer 38 by an improved 13-step approach, are described. The key elements of the synthetic strategy resided in the use of (R)-18 as the chiral building block to construct the gamma-lactone-delta-lactam core 3 and cross-olefin metathesis as the key reaction to couple the latter with the allylic alcohol segment (R- or S-4). The efficient construction of the core 3 was realized by taking advantage of the inherent multiple reactivities of the chiral building block (R)-18. A highly diastereoselective one-pot transformation of 6 to 26 was achieved in a "one stone four birds" manner. On the other hand, enantioselective synthesis of both enantiomers of the segment 4 has been undertaken by an alternative and more efficient two-step procedure. Both awajanomycin (1) and 11-epi-awajanomycin 38 have been synthesized with overall yields of 3.8% and 3.6%, respectively. Quantum chemical calculations were undertaken to reveal the low reactivity of compound 27 toward methoxycarbonylation and to get an insight into the favored conformations of the intermediates 25-27. In addition, the geometry of the side product 39 arising from the homocoupling of the allylic alcohol moiety 4 was revised as E, and an unusual cyclopropanation reaction was discovered.


Subject(s)
Drug Discovery , Lactams/chemical synthesis , Quantum Theory , Lactams/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure , Oceans and Seas
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