Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Mitsunobu conditions/reaction

The Mitsunobu conditions also can be used to effect a variety of other important and useful nucleophilic substitution reactions, such as conversion of alcohols to mixed phosphite esters.56 The active phosphitylating agent is believed to be a mixed phospho-ramidite. [Pg.228]

Mitsunobu conditions are effective for glycosylation of weak nitrogen nucleophiles, such as indoles. This reaction has been used in the synthesis of antitumor compounds. [Pg.231]

A similar strategy served to carry out the last step of an asymmetric synthesis of the alkaloid (—)-cryptopleurine 12. Compound 331, prepared from the known chiral starting material (l )-( )-4-(tributylstannyl)but-3-en-2-ol, underwent cross-metathesis to 332 in the presence of Grubbs second-generation catalyst. Catalytic hydrogenation of the double bond in 332 with simultaneous N-deprotection, followed by acetate saponification and cyclization under Mitsunobu conditions, gave the piperidine derivative 333, which was transformed into (—)-cryptopleurine by reaction with formaldehyde in the presence of acid (Scheme 73) <2004JOC3144>. [Pg.48]

Intermediate 331 was used in the reaction with ketone-derived sugars 133 (from D-glucose) or 270 (from D-fructose) and with the protected estrone 280 so that, after hydrolysis, diols 337-339"° " were obtained in 25-80% yield. Further cyclization of these diols under Mitsunobu-type reaction conditions (PPh3, DIAD, benzene reflux) gave the mixed heterocyclic sugars 340 and 341"°, and the steroid derivative 342", respectively, in 45-50% yield. [Pg.703]

Schkeryantz and Pearson (59) reported a total synthesis of ( )-crinane (298) using an intramolecular azide-alkene cycloaddition (Scheme 9.59). The allylic acetate 294 was first subjected to an Ireland-Claisen rearrangement followed by reduction to give alcohol 295, which was then converted into the azide 296 using Mitsunobu conditions. Intramolecular cycloaddition of the azide 296 in refluxing toluene followed by extrusion of nitrogen gave the imine 297 in quantitative yield. On reduction with sodium cyanoborohydride and subsequent reaction with... [Pg.660]

One of the early syntheses of orlistat (1) by Hoffmann-La Roche utilized the Mukaiyama aldol reaction as the key convergent step. Therefore, in the presence of TiCU, aldehyde 7 was condensed with ketene silyl acetal 8 containing a chiral auxiliary to assemble ester 9 as the major diastereomer in a 3 1 ratio. After removal of the amino alcohol chiral auxiliary via hydrolysis, the a-hydroxyl acid 10 was converted to P-lactone 11 through the intermediacy of the mixed anhydride. The benzyl ether on 11 was unmasked via hydrogenation and the (5)-7V-formylleucine side-chain was installed using the Mitsunobu conditions to fashion orlistat (1). [Pg.152]

In another purine library synthesis, Schultz and co-workers attached a 6-aminomethylaniline side chain to the PAL linker1718 via reductive amina-tion (Scheme 5). Alkylation at the 9-position was achieved using Mitsunobu conditions and an SwAr reaction was used to functionalize the 2-position with amines. The final cleavage of the aniline was achieved using 90%... [Pg.204]

P,y-Diamino analogues 49 of statine are prepared stereoselectively starting from the O-methyl hydroxamate derivative of N-protected statine. The reaction sequence involves the formation of a p-lactam intermediate obtained by internal cyclization under Mitsunobu conditions.184 Alternatively, direct amination of either a p-oxo ester 31 followed by reduction of the resulting enamine 50, 85 or by reduction of the corresponding ,p-unsaturated ester, 88 gives an enantiomeric mixture of the corresponding unprotected p-amine, which is protected by a carbamate prior to chromatographic separation (Scheme 20). [Pg.583]

Three different strategies are generally used for the attachment of carboxylic acids to resins as benzyl esters (a) acylation of resin-bound benzyl alcohols [38-40], (b) O-alkylation of carboxylates by resin-bound benzylic halides [4143], or (c) O-alkylation of carboxylic acids under Mitsunobu conditions [44,45] (Figure 3.3). These reactions are treated in detail in Section 13.4. [Pg.43]

As illustrated by the examples in Table 3.9, resin-bound 4-alkoxybenzylamides often require higher concentrations of TFA and longer reaction times than carboxylic acids esterified to Wang resin. For this reason, the more acid-sensitive di- or (trialkoxy-benzyl)amines [208] are generally preferred as backbone amide linkers. The required resin-bound, secondary benzylamines can readily be prepared by reductive amination of resin-bound benzaldehydes (Section 10.1.4 and Figure 3.17 [209]) or by A-alkyla-tion of primary amines with resin-bound benzyl halides or sulfonates (Section 10.1.1.1). Sufficiently acidic amides can also be A-alkylated by resin-bound benzyl alcohols under Mitsunobu conditions (see, e.g., [210] attachment to Sasrin of Fmoc cycloserine, an O-alkyl hydroxamic acid). [Pg.59]

Phenols attached to insoluble supports can be etherified either by treatment with alkyl halides and a base (Williamson ether synthesis) or by treatment with primary or secondary aliphatic alcohols, a phosphine, and an oxidant (typically DEAD Mitsu-nobu reaction). The second methodology is generally preferred, because more alcohols than alkyl halides are commercially available, and because Mitsunobu etherifications proceed quickly at room temperature with high chemoselectivity, as illustrated by Entry 3 in Table 7.11. Thus, neither amines nor C,H-acidic compounds are usually alkylated under Mitsunobu conditions as efficiently as phenols. The reaction proceeds smoothly with both electron-rich and electron-poor phenols. Both primary and secondary aliphatic alcohols can be used to O-alkylate phenols, but variable results have been reported with 2-(Boc-amino)ethanols [146,147]. [Pg.228]


See other pages where Mitsunobu conditions/reaction is mentioned: [Pg.103]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.238]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.931]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.528]    [Pg.573]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.527]    [Pg.566]    [Pg.578]    [Pg.590]    [Pg.777]    [Pg.932]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.516]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.666]    [Pg.2]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.115 , Pg.116 , Pg.183 ]




SEARCH



Mitsunobu

Mitsunobu reaction

Reaction condition

© 2024 chempedia.info