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Enol ether ozonolysis

Synthesis of 7 -amino acid-oxazole fragment 68 of calyculins A and B from D-erythronol-actone 58 has been reported by conversion to 59," which was subjected to oxidation reaction to afford the hemiaminal 60 (Scheme 9) Acetylation of 60 furnished 61, which was converted to ketone 62 in 88% yield. Conversion of 62 to a silyl enol ether, ozonolysis with reductive workup and O-methylation of the resultant alcohol 63 furnished 7 -lactam 64. Treatment of 64 with CAN led to 65 (60%), which was reacted with (CHj)2 A1 derivative of 66 to provide 67 (62%), which upon removal of the silyl group provided 68. [Pg.98]

A section on cardenolides would not be complete without mentioning the total synthesis of (+)-digitoxinin by Stork and his co-workers. Protected Wieland-Miescher ketone 66 was converted into compound 67 via formation of the trimethylsilyl enol ether ozonolysis of the enol ether gave a mixture of hydroxyketones, which was reduced to the corresponding diol and then cleaved with sodium periodate to yield dialdehyde intermediate 67. Compound 67 was then elaborated into Diels-Alder precursor 68 in two steps. After completion of the Diels-Alder reaction, four additional steps led to the preparation of intermediate 69, which was ideally set up for a vinyl radical cyclization. Key intermediate 70 was then elegantly converted into (+)-digitoxinin (71). [Pg.567]

The most recent, and probably most elegant, process for the asymmetric synthesis of (+)-estrone appHes a tandem Claisen rearrangement and intramolecular ene-reaction (Eig. 23). StereochemicaHy pure (185) is synthesized from (2R)-l,2-0-isopropyhdene-3-butanone in an overall yield of 86% in four chemical steps. Heating a toluene solution of (185), enol ether (187), and 2,6-dimethylphenol to 180°C in a sealed tube for 60 h produces (190) in 76% yield after purification. Ozonolysis of (190) followed by base-catalyzed epimerization of the C8a-hydrogen to a C8P-hydrogen (again similar to conversion of (175) to (176)) produces (184) in 46% yield from (190). Aldehyde (184) was converted to 9,11-dehydroestrone methyl ether (177) as discussed above. The overall yield of 9,11-dehydroestrone methyl ether (177) was 17% in five steps from 6-methoxy-l-tetralone (186) and (185) (201). [Pg.436]

The 2,2 -bis(phenylthiomethyl) dispiroketal (dispoke) derivative is cleaved by oxidation to the sulfone, followed by treatment with LiN(TMS)2. The related bromo and iodo derivatives are cleaved reductively with LDBB (lithium 4,4 -di- -butylbiphenylide) or by elimination with the P4- -butylphosphazene base and acid hydrolysis of the enol ether. The 2,2-diphenyl dispiroketal is cleaved with FeCl3 (CH2CI2, rt, overnight)." The dimethyl dispiroketal is cleaved with TFA, and the allyl derivative is cleaved by ozonolysis followed by elimination. ... [Pg.236]

An alternative approach to the synthesis of isocoumarins which probably proceeds through the intermediacy of 2-carboxybenzyl ketones is based on the oxidative cleavage of indan-1-ones (76JCS(P1)1438). Although ozonolysis of the silyl enol ether (505) leads to the 2-hydroxy-2-methylindan-l-one (506), periodate oxidation of which gives the isocoumarin, a more convenient and direct route involves ozonolysis of the enol trifluoroacetate (Scheme 182). This synthesis is especially attractive for the preparation of isotopically labelled isocoumarins, since the precursors of the indanones, arylpropanoic acids or acrylophenones, are readily available bearing labels at specific sites. [Pg.833]

The most common procedure is ozonolysis at -78 °C (P.S. Bailey, 1978) in methanol or methylene chloride in the presence of dimethyl sulfide or pyridine, which reduce the intermediate ozonides to aldehydes. Unsubstituted cydohexene derivatives give 1,6-dialdehydes, enol ethers or esters yield carboxylic acid derivatives. Oxygen-substituted C—C bonds in cyclohexene derivatives, which may also be obtained by Birch reduction of alkoxyarenes (see p. 103f.), are often more rapidly oxidized than non-substituted bonds (E.J. Corey, 1968 D G. Stork, 1968 A,B). Catechol derivatives may also be directly cleaved to afford conjugated hexa-dienedioic acid derivatives (R.B. Woodward, 1963). Highly regioselective cleavage of the more electron-rich double bond is achieved in the ozonization of dienes (W. KnOll, 1975). [Pg.87]

Unsaturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compounds. The phenylthioalkylation of silyl enol ethers of carbonyl compounds (9, 521-522) can be extended to the synthesis of unsaturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compounds. In a typical reaction the enol silyl ether of a ketone is alkylated with the unsaturated chloride 1 under ZnBr2 catalysis to give a homoallyl sulfide. Ozonolysis of the methylene group is accompanied by oxidation of the phenylthio group sulfoxide elimination results in an unsaturated 1,5-aldehydo ketone (equation I). Alkylation with 2 results in a methyl ketone (equation II). [Pg.643]

S. Hillers, A. Niklaus, and O. Reiser, Ozonolysis of cyclic enol ethers an efficient strategy to aldol and homoaldol compounds, J. Org. Chem., 58 (1993) 3169-3171. [Pg.283]

Three methods were used for making tri- or tetra-substituted 1,2,4-trioxolanes in the investigations of the reaction between these secondary ozonides and Lewis acids co-ozonolysis of oximes and ketones (method A), co-ozonolysis of enol ethers and ketones (method B), and ozonolysis of alkenes (method C, Scheme 10 and Table 5) <2000J(P1)3006>. [Pg.204]

In an extension of this reaction, various carbonyl oxides could be generated by the ozonolysis at — 70 °C of enol ethers 106 in diethyl ether in the presence of acyl cyanides (Scheme 33 and Table 13) <1996J(P1)871>. [Pg.219]

Enol ethers of 1,2- and 1,3-diketones afford on ozonolysis products that are not in full agreement with the Criegee mechanism, because in some cases products of the Baeyer-Villiger rearrangement are formed. The main product in the ozonolysis of the enol ether 180 is a mixture of spiranic stereoisomers 181 involving a lactone and a 1,2,4-trioxolane ring (Scheme 62) <2004HCA2025>. [Pg.236]

Alkyl-4-ketoglutaric acids 265, potential substrates of transaminases that are important for the nervous system, can be synthesized (from an enol ether 263 that was not isolated) by a Claisen-Johnson rearrangement affording a 2-ethylidene-4-methylglutarate 264 whose ozonolysis in CH2Cl2 at — 78 °G followed by reduction with dimethyl sulfide provided the final product (Scheme 81) <1999TL6577>. [Pg.246]

Heathcock has reported an anomalous case of ozonolysis of a silyl enol ether. Usually these substrates undergo facile oxidative cleavage in the same manner as alkoies. However, in this instance the a-silyloxy ketone (61) was obtained in quantitative yield. The inteimediacy of a silyloxy epoxide was suggested. A more recent leport has indicated that a similar process is competitive with the simple cleavage reaction, (63a) versus (63b), in the ozonolysis of the steroidal enol ether (62). [Pg.166]

The example depicted below indicates preferential cleavage of the electron-rich enol ether double bond over the trisubstituted one by the electrophilic ozone. Thus, Birch reduction of methoxy-substituted benzenes followed by ozonolysis of the resultant enol ethers provides a powerful route to functionally substituted (Z)... [Pg.189]

The same year, Gerlach described a synthesis of optically active 1 from (/ )- ,3-butanediol (7) (Scheme 1.2). The diastereomeric esters produced from (-) camphorsulfonyl chloride and racemic 1,3-butanediol were fractionally recrystallized and then hydrolized to afford enantiomerically pure 7. Tosylation of the primary alcohol, displacement with sodium iodide, and conversion to the phosphonium salt 8 proceeded in 58% yield. Methyl-8-oxo-octanoate (10), the ozonolysis product of the enol ether of cyclooctanone (9), was subjected to Wittig condensation with the dilithio anion of 8 to give 11 as a mixture of olefin isomers in 32% yield. The ratio, initially 68 32 (E-.Z), was easily enriched further to 83 17 (E Z) by photolysis in the presence of diphenyl disulfide. The synthesis was then completed by hydrolysis of the ester to the seco acid, conversion to the 2-thiopyridyl ester, and silver-mediated ring closure to afford 1 (70%). Gerlach s synthesis, while producing the optically active natural product, still did not address the problem posed by the olefin geometry. [Pg.4]


See other pages where Enol ether ozonolysis is mentioned: [Pg.1240]    [Pg.1240]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.1526]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.1531]    [Pg.611]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.286]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.286]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.1182]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.352]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.773]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.436]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.68]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.190 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.806 , Pg.939 ]




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Ozonolysis

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