Chiral boronic esters are a class of versatile building blocks.
We describe herein an asymmetric nickel-catalyzed borylative coupling
of terminal alkenes with nonactivated alkyl halides. The success of
this asymmetric reaction is ascribed to the application of a chiral
anionic bisoxazoline ligand. This study provides a three-component
strategy to access α- and β-stereogenic boronic esters
from easily accessible starting materials. This protocol is characterized
by mild reaction conditions, wide substrate scope and high regio-
and enantioselectivity. We also showcase the value of this method
in simplifying the synthesis of several drug molecules. Mechanistic
studies suggest that the generation of enantioenriched boronic esters
bearing an α-stereogenic center results from a stereoconvergent
process, while the enantioselectivity-controlling step in the generation
of boronic esters with a β-stereocenter is switched to the olefin
migratory insertion step due to coordination of an ester group