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Enol ether cleavage

Therefore several reactions were subjected to various antibody catalyses, e. g., ester and enol ether cleavage, transesteiification, ketone reduction. Cope rearrangement, ring closure via epoxide opening, or Diels-Alder cycloaddition [74, 75]. An exceptional reaction is the antibody-catalyzed Robinson annulation of triketone 28 to the Wieland-Miescher ketone 29 on a preparative scale. Surprisingly, even the alkylation of diketone 27 with methyl vinyl ketone was catalyzed by the same antibody, but at moderate rates (Scheme 15) [76]. [Pg.886]

Salutaridinol 26, as drawn in Figure 5, contains the correct configuration for an allylic syn displacement to undergo ring closure and form thebaine. Thebaine, after enol ether cleavage, yields neopinone 27 which has been shown to exist in a chemical equilibrium with codeinone 28 in aqueous solution as well as under the conditions of plant metabolism.33 Codeinone NADP oxidoreductase in the presence of NADPH... [Pg.55]

Borowitz has encountered perhaps predictable difficulties in the attempted extension of his synthesis of macrocyclic ketolactones preparation of the requisite enol ethers, simple in the bicyclo[4,4,0) series, presented considerable difficulty in the bicyclo[5,5,0] series. A variant of such an oxidative enol ether cleavage has been reported, where oximinolactones are formed... [Pg.135]

The hydrogenolyaia of cyclopropane rings (C—C bond cleavage) has been described on p, 105. In syntheses of complex molecules reductive cleavage of alcohols, epoxides, and enol ethers of 5-keto esters are the most important examples, and some selectivity rules will be given. Primary alcohols are converted into tosylates much faster than secondary alcohols. The tosylate group is substituted by hydrogen upon treatment with LiAlH (W. Zorbach, 1961). Epoxides are also easily opened by LiAlH. The hydride ion attacks the less hindered carbon atom of the epoxide (H.B. Henhest, 1956). The reduction of sterically hindered enol ethers of 9-keto esters with lithium in ammonia leads to the a,/S-unsaturated ester and subsequently to the saturated ester in reasonable yields (R.M. Coates, 1970). Tributyltin hydride reduces halides to hydrocarbons stereoselectively in a free-radical chain reaction (L.W. Menapace, 1964) and reacts only slowly with C 0 and C—C double bonds (W.T. Brady, 1970 H.G. Kuivila, 1968). [Pg.114]

Me3SiI, CH2CI2, 25°, 15 min, 85-95% yield.Under these cleavage conditions i,3-dithiolanes, alkyl and trimethylsilyl enol ethers, and enol acetates are stable. 1,3-Dioxolanes give complex mixtures. Alcohols, epoxides, trityl, r-butyl, and benzyl ethers and esters are reactive. Most other ethers and esters, amines, amides, ketones, olefins, acetylenes, and halides are expected to be stable. [Pg.180]

The Simmons-Smith cyclopropanation method has also found application for the a-methylation of ketones via an intermediate cyclopropane. The starting ketone—e.g. cyclohexanone 9—is first converted into an enol ether 10. Cyclopropanation of 10 leads to an alkoxynorcarane 11, which on regioselective hydrolytic cleavage of the three-membered ring leads to the semiketal 12 as intermediate, and finally yields the a-methylated ketone 13 ... [Pg.260]

The synthetic problem is now reduced to cyclopentanone 16. This substance possesses two stereocenters, one of which is quaternary, and its constitution permits a productive retrosynthetic maneuver. Retrosynthetic disassembly of 16 by cleavage of the indicated bond furnishes compounds 17 and 18 as potential precursors. In the synthetic direction, a diastereoselective alkylation of the thermodynamic (more substituted) enolate derived from 18 with alkyl iodide 17 could afford intermediate 16. While trimethylsilyl enol ether 18 could arise through silylation of the enolate oxygen produced by a Michael addition of a divinyl cuprate reagent to 2-methylcyclopentenone (19), iodide 17 can be traced to the simple and readily available building blocks 7 and 20. The application of this basic plan to a synthesis of racemic estrone [( >1] is described below. [Pg.162]

An important stage in the synthesis has been reached. It was anticipated that cleavage of the trimethylsilyl enol ether in 18 using the procedure of Binkley and Heathcock18 would regiospecifically furnish the thermodynamic (more substituted) cyclopentanone enolate, a nucleophilic species that could then be alkylated with iodo-diyne 17. To secure what is to become the trans CD ring junction of the steroid nucleus, the diastereoisomer in which the vinyl and methyl substituents have a cis relationship must be formed. In the... [Pg.162]

This procedure illustrates a new three-step reaction sequence for the one-carbon ring expansion of cyclic ketones to the homologous tt,/3-unsaturated ketones. The key step in the sequence is the iron(III) chloride-induced cleavage of the central bond of trimethyl-silyloxycyclopropanes which me obtained by cyclopropanation of trimethylsilyl enol ethers. The procedure for the preparation of 1-trimethylsilyloxycyclohexene from cyclohexanone described in Part A is that of House, Czuba, Gall, and Olmstead. ... [Pg.60]

Schafer reported that the electrochemical oxidation of silyl enol ethers results in the homo-coupling products. 1,4-diketones (Scheme 25) [59], A mechanism involving the dimerization of initially formed cation radical species seems to be reasonable. Another possible mechanism involves the decomposition of the cation radical by Si-O bond cleavage to give the radical species which dimerizes to form the 1,4-diketone. In the case of the anodic oxidation of allylsilanes and benzylsilanes, the radical intermediate is immediately oxidized to give the cationic species, because oxidation potentials of allyl radicals and benzyl radicals are relatively low. But in the case of a-oxoalkyl radicals, the oxidation to the cationic species seems to be retarded. Presumably, the oxidation potential of such radicals becomes more positive because of the electron-withdrawing effect of the carbonyl group. Therefore, the dimerization seems to take place preferentially. [Pg.76]


See other pages where Enol ether cleavage is mentioned: [Pg.87]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.385]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.428]    [Pg.438]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.475]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.481]    [Pg.548]    [Pg.754]    [Pg.775]    [Pg.777]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.826]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.1329]    [Pg.1663]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.867]    [Pg.1183]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.219]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.1182 ]




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Cleavage of enol ethers

Enol ethers reductive cleavage

Ethers cleavage

Ketones, reductive cleavage silyl enol ethers

Silyl enol ethers cleavage

Silyl enol ethers via oxidative cleavage

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