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Allylic enantioselective

Using a BINOL auxiliary with allylindium and indium metal, hydrazones have been allylated enantioselectively,92 to give homoallylic amines in up to 97% ee. [Pg.12]

In the last few years, the groups of Hayashi, Okamoto, Tomioka, Mauduit and Sawamura also contributed to the development of eopper-catalyzed allylic enantioselective alkylations using chiral NHC ligands. A summary of such a type of transformation involving either Zn, Al, B, Mg or Li metallic species is given in Scheme 11.3. " ... [Pg.451]

The first practical method for asymmetric epoxidation of primary and secondary allylic alcohols was developed by K.B. Sharpless in 1980 (T. Katsuki, 1980 K.B. Sharpless, 1983 A, B, 1986 see also D. Hoppe, 1982). Tartaric esters, e.g., DET and DIPT" ( = diethyl and diisopropyl ( + )- or (— )-tartrates), are applied as chiral auxiliaries, titanium tetrakis(2-pro-panolate) as a catalyst and tert-butyl hydroperoxide (= TBHP, Bu OOH) as the oxidant. If the reaction mixture is kept absolutely dry, catalytic amounts of the dialkyl tartrate-titanium(IV) complex are suflicient, which largely facilitates work-up procedures (Y. Gao, 1987). Depending on the tartrate enantiomer used, either one of the 2,3-epoxy alcohols may be obtained with high enantioselectivity. The titanium probably binds to the diol grouping of one tartrate molecule and to the hydroxy groups of the bulky hydroperoxide and of the allylic alcohol... [Pg.124]

The wM-diacetate 363 can be transformed into either enantiomer of the 4-substituted 2-cyclohexen-l-ol 364 via the enzymatic hydrolysis. By changing the relative reactivity of the allylic leaving groups (acetate and the more reactive carbonate), either enantiomer of 4-substituted cyclohexenyl acetate is accessible by choice. Then the enantioselective synthesis of (7 )- and (S)-5-substituted 1,3-cyclohexadienes 365 and 367 can be achieved. The Pd(II)-cat-alyzed acetoxylactonization of the diene acids affords the lactones 366 and 368 of different stereochemistry[310]. The tropane alkaloid skeletons 370 and 371 have been constructed based on this chemoselective Pd-catalyzed reactions of 6-benzyloxy-l,3-cycloheptadiene (369)[311]. [Pg.70]

Silyl ethers serve as preeursors of nucleophiles and liberate a nucleophilic alkoxide by desilylation with a chloride anion generated from CCI4 under the reaction conditions described before[124]. Rapid intramolecular stereoselective reaction of an alcohol with a vinyloxirane has been observed in dichloro-methane when an alkoxide is generated by desilylation of the silyl ether 340 with TBAF. The cis- and tru/u-pyranopyran systems 341 and 342 can be prepared selectively from the trans- and c/.y-epoxides 340, respectively. The reaction is applicable to the preparation of 1,2-diol systems[209]. The method is useful for the enantioselective synthesis of the AB ring fragment of gambier-toxin[210]. Similarly, tributyltin alkoxides as nucleophiles are used for the preparation of allyl alkyl ethers[211]. [Pg.336]

In 1980, Katsuki and Sharpless communicated that the epoxidation of a variety of allylic alcohols was achieved in exceptionally high enantioselectivity with a catalyst derived from titanium(IV) isopropoxide and chiral diethyl tartrate. This seminal contribution described an asymmetric catalytic system that not only provided the product epoxide in remarkable enantioselectivity, but showed the immediate generality of the reaction by examining 5 of the 8 possible substitution patterns of allylic alcohols all of which were epoxidized in >90% ee. Shortly thereafter. Sharpless and others began to illustrate the... [Pg.50]

In general, 2-substituted allylic alcohols are epoxidized in good enantioselectivity. Like glycidol, however, the product epoxides are susceptible to ring opening via nucleophilic attack at the C-3 position. Results of the AE reaction on 2-methyl-2-propene-l-ol followed by derivatization of the resulting epoxy alcohol are shown in Table 1.6.1. Other examples are shown below. [Pg.54]

As with i -substituted allyl alcohols, 2,i -substituted allyl alcohols are epoxidized in excellent enantioselectivity. Examples of AE reactions of this class of substrate are shown below. Epoxide 23 was utilized to prepare chiral allene oxides, which were ring opened with TBAF to provide chiral a-fluoroketones. Epoxide 24 was used to prepare 5,8-disubstituted indolizidines and epoxide 25 was utilized in the formal synthesis of macrosphelide A. Epoxide 26 represents an AE reaction on the very electron deficient 2-cyanoallylic alcohols and epoxide 27 was an intermediate in the total synthesis of (+)-varantmycin. [Pg.56]

Although the limited examples of AE reactions on 2,3Z-substituted allyl alcohols appear to give product epoxides in good enantioselectivity, the highly substituted nature of these olefins can have a deleterious effect on the reactivity. For example, Aiai has shown that the 2,3E-substituted allyl alcohol 30 can be epoxidized with either (-)-DET or (+)-DET in good yields and enantioselectivity. However, the configurational isomer 32 is completely unreactive using (-)-DET, even after a 34 h reaction time. [Pg.57]

Desymmetrization of meso-bis-allylic alcohols is an effective method for the preparation of chiral functionalized intermediates from meso-substrates. Schreiber et al has shown that divinyl carbonyl 58 is epoxidized in good enantioselectivity. However, because the product epoxy alcohols 59 and 60 also contain a reactive allylic alcohol that are diastereomeric in nature, a second epoxidation would occur at different rates and thus affect the observed ee for the first AE reaction and the overall de. Indeed, the major diastereomeric product epoxide 59 resulting from the first AE is less reactive in the second epoxidation. Thus, high de is easily obtainable since the second epoxidation removes the minor diastereomer. [Pg.60]

O Connor, S.P. Catalytic, Enantioselective Cyclopropanation of Allylic Alcohols PhD Thesis, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 1993. [Pg.150]

The first, and so far only, metal-catalyzed asymmetric 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reaction of nitrile oxides with alkenes was reported by Ukaji et al. [76, 77]. Upon treatment of allyl alcohol 45 with diethylzinc and (l ,J )-diisopropyltartrate, followed by the addition of diethylzinc and substituted hydroximoyl chlorides 46, the isoxazolidines 47 are formed with impressive enantioselectivities of up to 96% ee (Scheme 6.33) [76]. [Pg.235]

Dipolar cydoadditions are one of the most useful synthetic methods to make stereochemically defined five-membered heterocydes. Although a variety of dia-stereoselective 1,3-dipolar cydoadditions have been well developed, enantioselec-tive versions are still limited [29]. Nitrones are important 1,3-dipoles that have been the target of catalyzed enantioselective reactions [66]. Three different approaches to catalyzed enantioselective reactions have been taken (1) activation of electron-defident alkenes by a chiral Lewis acid [23-26, 32-34, 67], (2) activation of nitrones in the reaction with ketene acetals [30, 31], and (3) coordination of both nitrones and allylic alcohols on a chiral catalyst [20]. Among these approaches, the dipole/HOMO-controlled reactions of electron-deficient alkenes are especially promising because a variety of combinations between chiral Lewis acids and electron-deficient alkenes have been well investigated in the study of catalyzed enantioselective Diels-Alder reactions. Enantioselectivities in catalyzed nitrone cydoadditions sometimes exceed 90% ee, but the efficiency of catalytic loading remains insufficient. [Pg.268]

S ]2 -selective reactions between primary allylic substrates and otganocoppet reagents testiU in the creation of new Chirality in previously aChital molecules, and it is tempting to try to take advantage of this for the development of enantioselective allylic substitution reactions. [Pg.262]

It may be concluded from die different examples sliown here tiiat die enantio-selective copper-catalyzed allylic substitution reaction needs ftirdier improvemetiL High enantioselectivities can be obtained if diirality is present in tiie leaving group of die substrate, but widi external diiral ligands, enantioselectivities in excess of 9096 ee have only been obtained in one system, limited to die introduction of die sterically hindered neopeatyl group. [Pg.282]

The asymmetric epoxidation of an allylic alcohol 1 to yield a 2,3-epoxy alcohol 2 with high enantiomeric excess, has been developed by Sharpless and Katsuki. This enantioselective reaction is carried out in the presence of tetraisopropoxyti-tanium and an enantiomerically pure dialkyl tartrate—e.g. (-1-)- or (-)-diethyl tartrate (DET)—using tcrt-butyl hydroperoxide as the oxidizing agent. [Pg.254]

The disclosure, in 1982, that cationic, enantiopure BINAP-Rh(i) complexes can induce highly enantioselective isomerizations of allylic amines in THF or acetone, at or below room temperature, to afford optically active enamines in >95 % yield and >95 % ee, thus constituted a major breakthrough.67-68 This important discovery emerged from an impressive collaborative effort between chemists representing Osaka University, the Takasago Corporation, the Institute for Molecular Science at Okazaki, Japan, and Nagoya University. BINAP, 2,2 -bis(diphenylphosphino)-l,l -binaphthyl (Scheme 7), is a fully arylated, chiral diphosphine which was introduced in... [Pg.349]


See other pages where Allylic enantioselective is mentioned: [Pg.325]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.286]    [Pg.255]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.350]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.209 , Pg.211 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.17 ]




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13-Dipolar cycloaddition Enantioselective allylation

Alcohol Allylation, enantioselective

Alcohol Benzylic, enantioselective allylation

Aldehydes enantioselective allylation

Aldehydes enantioselective indium-mediated allylation

Alkylation enantioselective allylic

Allyl additions simple enantioselectivity

Allyl organometallic compounds enantioselective

Allylation, enantioselective

Allylation, enantioselective

Allylic alcohols catalytic enantioselective

Allylic alcohols, enantioselective epoxidation

Allylic alcohols, enantioselective oxirane

Allylic amination enantioselective

Allylic enantioselective epoxidation

Allylic enantioselective isomerization

Allylic substitutions enantioselective

Allylic substitutions enantioselective Tsuji allylation

Borane enantioselective allylation with

Borane hydration of alkenes enantioselective allylation with

Boronate allyl, enantioselective addition reactions

Butenolide, enantioselectic allylic

Catalytic enantioselective allylation

Chiral enantioselective Sakurai-Hosomi allylation

Chromium, allylic enantioselective addition reactions

Copper-based catalysts enantioselective allylic

Copper-catalyzed allylic substitution enantioselective

Enantioselective Additions of Optically Active Allylic Boron Reagents

Enantioselective Catalysis in Alkylations and Allylations of Enolates

Enantioselective Epoxidation of Allylic Alcohols

Enantioselective Palladium-Catalyzed Allylation Reactions

Enantioselective Reactions of Unsymmetrical Allylic Esters Catalyzed by Molybdenum, Ruthenium, Rhodium, and Iridium

Enantioselective Rhodium-Catalyzed Allylic Alkylations

Enantioselective Sakurai-Hosomi Allylation Reactions

Enantioselective allyl coupling

Enantioselective allylations

Enantioselective allylations

Enantioselective allylic alcohols

Enantioselective allylic alkylations

Enantioselective allylic alkylations additions

Enantioselective allylic substitutions esters

Enantioselective allylic substitutions forms

Enantioselective allylic substitutions kinetic resolution

Enantioselective allylic substitutions substrates

Enantioselective conjugate allylation

Enantioselective copper-catalyzed allylic

Enantioselective copper-catalyzed allylic nucleophiles

Enantioselective cyclopropanation of allylic alcohols using chiral catalysts

Enantioselective reactions allylic substitutions

Enantioselective reactions epoxidation of allylic alcohols

Enantioselective reduction allylic alcohol epoxidation

Enantioselective reduction allylic oxidation

Enantioselective synthesis Tsuji allylation

Enantioselective synthesis allylation

Enantioselective synthesis radical allylation

Enantioselectivity Pd-catalyzed allylic substitutions

Enantioselectivity allylation

Enantioselectivity allylation

Enantioselectivity allylic alkylation

Enantioselectivity allylic elimination

Enantioselectivity asymmetric allylation

Enantioselectivity in allylic alkylation

Enantioselectivity, coupling with allylic carbonates

Enone Enantioselective reduction to allylic

Imine enantioselective allylation

Imines enantioselective allylation

Iridium catalysts enantioselective allylic substitutions

Iridium-Catalyzed Enantioselective Allylation Reactions

Ketones enantioselective allylation

Lewis enantioselective allylation

Palladium catalysis enantioselective allylic alkylation

Palladium-catalyzed allylic substitution enantioselective

Pd-Catalyzed Enantioselective Allylation Reaction

Prochiral nucleophiles enantioselective allylation

Regioselectivity asymmetric allylation, enantioselective

Rhodium catalysts enantioselective allylic substitutions

Rhodium-Catalyzed Enantioselective Isomerization of Allylic Amines

Ruthenium catalysts enantioselective allylic substitutions

Selected Applications of the Catalytic Enantioselective Allylation Reaction in Natural Product Synthesis

Stereochemistry asymmetric allylation, enantioselective

Vinyl allyl ethers, enantioselective

Vinyl allyl ethers, enantioselective Claisen rearrangement

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