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Navigating Excess Complexity: Total Synthesis of Daphenylline
Retrosynthetic
analysis is a framework for designing
synthetic
routes to complex molecules that generally prioritizes disconnections
which reduce molecular complexity. However, strict adherence to this
principle can overlook pathways involving highly complex intermediates
that can be easily prepared through powerful bond-forming transformations.
Herein, we demonstrate this tactic of generating excess complexity,
followed by strategic bond-cleavage, as a highly effective approach
for the 11-step total synthesis of the Daphniphyllum alkaloid daphenylline. To implement this strategy, we accessed a
bicyclo[4.1.0]heptane core through a dearomative Buchner cycloaddition,
which enabled construction of the seven-membered ring after C–C
bond cleavage. Installation of the synthetically challenging quaternary
stereocenter methyl group was achieved through a thia-Paternò–Büchi
[2 + 2] photocycloaddition followed by stereospecific thietane reduction,
further illustrating how building excess complexity can enable desired
synthetic outcomes after strategic bond-breaking events. This strategy leveraging bond cleavage transformations
should serve as a complement to traditional bond-forming, complexity-generating
synthetic strategies