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Asymmetric Aminocatalysis of the Aldol Reaction

Aminocatalysis is a biomimetic strategy used by enzymes such as class I aldolases. Application of aminocatalysis in an asymmetric aldol reaction was reported in the early 1970s. Proline (19) efficiently promoted an intramolecular direct aldol reaction to afford Wieland-Miescher ketone in 93% ee [17,18]. More than 25 years later, in 2000, List, Barbas, and co-workers reported that proline (19) is also effective for intermolecular direct aldol reactions of acetone (le) and various aldehydes 3. Notably, the reaction proceeded smoothly in anhydrous DMSO at an ambient temperature to afford aldol adducts in good yield and in modest to excellent enantioselectivity (up to >99% ee, Scheme 9) [19-22]. The chemical yields and selectivity of proline catalysis are comparable to the best metallic catalysts, although high catalyst loading (30 mol %) is required. Proline (19)... [Pg.139]

List B. Asymmetric aminocatalysis. Synlett 2001 1675-1686. Notz W, Tanaka F, Barbas III CF. Enamine-based organocatalysis with proline and diamines the development of direct catalytic asymmetric aldol, Mannich, Michael, and Diels-Alder reactions. Acc. Chem. Res. 2004 37 580-591. [Pg.2137]

Even though the use of (S)-proline (1) for the synthesis of the Wieland-Miescher ketone, a transformation now known as the Hajos-Parrish-Eder-Sauer-Wiechert reaetion, was reported in the early 1970s, aminocatalysis - namely the catalysis promoted by the use of chiral second-aiy amines - was rediscovered only thirty years later. The renaissance of aminocatalysis was prompted by two independent reports by List et al. on the asymmetric intermolecular aldol addition catalysed by (S)-proline (1) and by MacMillan et al. on the asymmetric Diels-Alder cycloaddition catalj ed by a phenylalanine-derived imidazolidinone 2. These two reactions represented the archetypical examples of asymmetric carbonyl compound activation, via enamine (Figure ll.lA) and iminium-ion (Figure 11.IB), respectively. [Pg.262]

The term aminocatalysis has been coined [4] to designate reactions catalyzed by secondary and primary amines, taking place via enamine and iminium ion intermediates. The field of asymmetric aminocatalysis, initiated both by Hajos and Parrish [5] and by Eder, Sauer, and Wiechert [6] in 1971, has experienced a tremendous renaissance in the past decade [7], triggered by the simultaneous discovery of proline-catalyzed intermolecular aldol [8] and Mannich [9] reactions and of asymmetric Diels-Alder reactions catalyzed by chiral imidazolidinones [10]. Asymmetric enamine and iminium catalysis have been influential in creating the field of asymmetric organocatalysis [11], and probably for this reason aminocatalytic processes have been the object of the majority of mechanistic smdies in organocatalysis. [Pg.12]

As detailed in Sections 42.2 and 42.3, both covalent and non-covalent organocatalytic activation modes have provided efficient strategies to design asymmetric MCRs. A quite recent study by Zhou and list has demonstrated the feasibility of combining asymmetric Bronsted acid catalysis with aminocatalysis to design even more sophisticated reaction sequences toward the synthesis of useful complex molecules. Specifically, they developed a highly enantioselective approach to pharmaceutically relevant 3-substituted cyclohexylamines from 2,6-diketones 223 via an aldolization/dehydration/conjugate reduction/reductive amination domino... [Pg.1325]


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