17 research outputs found
A General and Highly Selective Chelate-Controlled Intermolecular Oxidative Heck Reaction
A novel chelate-controlled intermolecular oxidative Heck reaction is reported that proceeds with a wide range of nonresonance stabilized α-olefin substrates and organoboron reagents to afford internal olefin products in good yields and outstanding regio- and E:Z stereoselectivities. Pd−H isomerization, common in many Heck reactions, is not observed under these mild, oxidative conditions. This is evidenced by outstanding E:Z selectivities (>20:1 in all cases examined), no erosion in optical purity for proximal stereogenic centers, and a tolerance for unprotected alcohols. Remarkably, a single metal/ligand combination, Pd/bis-sulfoxide complex 1, catalyzes this reaction over a broad range of coupling partners. Given the high selectivities and broad scope, we anticipate this intermolecular Heck reaction will find heightened use in complex molecule synthesis
Simple Reagents for Direct Halonium-Induced Polyene Cyclizations
Although there are many reagent combinations that can initiate polyene cyclizations, simple electrophilic halogen sources have not yet proven broadly effective as promoters of such processes. Herein is described a readily prepared and stable class of reagents capable of effecting such transformations for a wide range of electron-rich and -deficient terpenes derived from geraniol, farnesol, and nerol, thereby enabling the effective synthesis of a diverse array of complex chlorine-, bromine-, and iodine-containing polycyclic frameworks. Efforts to date have led to the first racemic laboratory total synthesis and structural revision of the anti-HIV natural product peyssonol A as well as an efficient and concise inaugural total synthesis of peyssonoic acid A. They have also permitted formal racemic total syntheses of aplysin-20, loliolide, K-76, and stemodin to be achieved through routes that are typically shorter, higher-yielding, and more environmentally conscious than previous efforts. Preliminary attempts to use chiral forms of the reagent class for enantioselective alkene halogenation are also described
A General and Highly Selective Chelate-Controlled Intermolecular Oxidative Heck Reaction
A novel chelate-controlled intermolecular oxidative Heck reaction is reported that proceeds with a wide range of nonresonance stabilized α-olefin substrates and organoboron reagents to afford internal olefin products in good yields and outstanding regio- and E:Z stereoselectivities. Pd−H isomerization, common in many Heck reactions, is not observed under these mild, oxidative conditions. This is evidenced by outstanding E:Z selectivities (>20:1 in all cases examined), no erosion in optical purity for proximal stereogenic centers, and a tolerance for unprotected alcohols. Remarkably, a single metal/ligand combination, Pd/bis-sulfoxide complex 1, catalyzes this reaction over a broad range of coupling partners. Given the high selectivities and broad scope, we anticipate this intermolecular Heck reaction will find heightened use in complex molecule synthesis
Simple Reagents for Direct Halonium-Induced Polyene Cyclizations
Although there are many reagent combinations that can initiate polyene cyclizations, simple electrophilic halogen sources have not yet proven broadly effective as promoters of such processes. Herein is described a readily prepared and stable class of reagents capable of effecting such transformations for a wide range of electron-rich and -deficient terpenes derived from geraniol, farnesol, and nerol, thereby enabling the effective synthesis of a diverse array of complex chlorine-, bromine-, and iodine-containing polycyclic frameworks. Efforts to date have led to the first racemic laboratory total synthesis and structural revision of the anti-HIV natural product peyssonol A as well as an efficient and concise inaugural total synthesis of peyssonoic acid A. They have also permitted formal racemic total syntheses of aplysin-20, loliolide, K-76, and stemodin to be achieved through routes that are typically shorter, higher-yielding, and more environmentally conscious than previous efforts. Preliminary attempts to use chiral forms of the reagent class for enantioselective alkene halogenation are also described
Simple Reagents for Direct Halonium-Induced Polyene Cyclizations
Although there are many reagent combinations that can initiate polyene cyclizations, simple electrophilic halogen sources have not yet proven broadly effective as promoters of such processes. Herein is described a readily prepared and stable class of reagents capable of effecting such transformations for a wide range of electron-rich and -deficient terpenes derived from geraniol, farnesol, and nerol, thereby enabling the effective synthesis of a diverse array of complex chlorine-, bromine-, and iodine-containing polycyclic frameworks. Efforts to date have led to the first racemic laboratory total synthesis and structural revision of the anti-HIV natural product peyssonol A as well as an efficient and concise inaugural total synthesis of peyssonoic acid A. They have also permitted formal racemic total syntheses of aplysin-20, loliolide, K-76, and stemodin to be achieved through routes that are typically shorter, higher-yielding, and more environmentally conscious than previous efforts. Preliminary attempts to use chiral forms of the reagent class for enantioselective alkene halogenation are also described
Simple Reagents for Direct Halonium-Induced Polyene Cyclizations
Although there are many reagent combinations that can initiate polyene cyclizations, simple electrophilic halogen sources have not yet proven broadly effective as promoters of such processes. Herein is described a readily prepared and stable class of reagents capable of effecting such transformations for a wide range of electron-rich and -deficient terpenes derived from geraniol, farnesol, and nerol, thereby enabling the effective synthesis of a diverse array of complex chlorine-, bromine-, and iodine-containing polycyclic frameworks. Efforts to date have led to the first racemic laboratory total synthesis and structural revision of the anti-HIV natural product peyssonol A as well as an efficient and concise inaugural total synthesis of peyssonoic acid A. They have also permitted formal racemic total syntheses of aplysin-20, loliolide, K-76, and stemodin to be achieved through routes that are typically shorter, higher-yielding, and more environmentally conscious than previous efforts. Preliminary attempts to use chiral forms of the reagent class for enantioselective alkene halogenation are also described
Simple Reagents for Direct Halonium-Induced Polyene Cyclizations
Although there are many reagent combinations that can initiate polyene cyclizations, simple electrophilic halogen sources have not yet proven broadly effective as promoters of such processes. Herein is described a readily prepared and stable class of reagents capable of effecting such transformations for a wide range of electron-rich and -deficient terpenes derived from geraniol, farnesol, and nerol, thereby enabling the effective synthesis of a diverse array of complex chlorine-, bromine-, and iodine-containing polycyclic frameworks. Efforts to date have led to the first racemic laboratory total synthesis and structural revision of the anti-HIV natural product peyssonol A as well as an efficient and concise inaugural total synthesis of peyssonoic acid A. They have also permitted formal racemic total syntheses of aplysin-20, loliolide, K-76, and stemodin to be achieved through routes that are typically shorter, higher-yielding, and more environmentally conscious than previous efforts. Preliminary attempts to use chiral forms of the reagent class for enantioselective alkene halogenation are also described
Simple Reagents for Direct Halonium-Induced Polyene Cyclizations
Although there are many reagent combinations that can initiate polyene cyclizations, simple electrophilic halogen sources have not yet proven broadly effective as promoters of such processes. Herein is described a readily prepared and stable class of reagents capable of effecting such transformations for a wide range of electron-rich and -deficient terpenes derived from geraniol, farnesol, and nerol, thereby enabling the effective synthesis of a diverse array of complex chlorine-, bromine-, and iodine-containing polycyclic frameworks. Efforts to date have led to the first racemic laboratory total synthesis and structural revision of the anti-HIV natural product peyssonol A as well as an efficient and concise inaugural total synthesis of peyssonoic acid A. They have also permitted formal racemic total syntheses of aplysin-20, loliolide, K-76, and stemodin to be achieved through routes that are typically shorter, higher-yielding, and more environmentally conscious than previous efforts. Preliminary attempts to use chiral forms of the reagent class for enantioselective alkene halogenation are also described
A General Strategy for the Stereocontrolled Preparation of Diverse 8- and 9-Membered <i>Laurencia</i>-Type Bromoethers
A unique procedure to effect a ring-expanding bromoetherification process is described, wherein tetrahydrofurans and tetrahydropyrans are smoothly transformed into 8- and 9-membered bromoethers in a regio- and stereocontrolled manner through the use of BDSB (bromodiethylsulfonium bromopentachloroantimonate). These products resemble the cores of the Laurencia C15 acetogenins. In light of the generality and effectiveness of the approach, this work provides a unique strategy for their laboratory preparation and may implicate a possible biosynthesis pathway
A General Strategy for the Stereocontrolled Preparation of Diverse 8- and 9-Membered <i>Laurencia</i>-Type Bromoethers
A unique procedure to effect a ring-expanding bromoetherification process is described, wherein tetrahydrofurans and tetrahydropyrans are smoothly transformed into 8- and 9-membered bromoethers in a regio- and stereocontrolled manner through the use of BDSB (bromodiethylsulfonium bromopentachloroantimonate). These products resemble the cores of the Laurencia C15 acetogenins. In light of the generality and effectiveness of the approach, this work provides a unique strategy for their laboratory preparation and may implicate a possible biosynthesis pathway
