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Polyamino acids, epoxidation catalysis

An a-substituted system (Entry 28) has also been epoxidised in good yield and with moderate stereoselectivity. Although the absolute stereochemistry of the resulting epoxide has yet to be determined, this is the first example of such an enone undergoing asymmetric epoxidation using polyamino acid catalysis. [Pg.132]

In the metal-free epoxidation of enones and enoates, practically useful yields and enantioselectivity have been achieved by using catalysts based on chiral electrophilic ketones, peptides, and chiral phase-transfer agents. (E)-configured acyclic enones are comparatively easy substrates that can be converted to enantiomeri-cally highly enriched epoxides by all three methods. Currently, chiral ketones/ dioxiranes constitute the only catalyst system that enables asymmetric and metal-free epoxidation of (E)-enoates. There seems to be no metal-free method for efficient asymmetric epoxidation of achiral (Z)-enones. Exocyclic (E)-enones have been epoxidized with excellent ee using either phase-transfer catalysis or polyamino acids. In contrast, generation of enantiopure epoxides from normal endocyclic... [Pg.302]

Another important asymmetric epoxidation of a conjugated systems is the reaction of alkenes with polyleucine, DBU and urea H2O2, giving an epoxy-carbonyl compound with good enantioselectivity. The hydroperoxide anion epoxidation of conjugated carbonyl compounds with a polyamino acid, such as poly-L-alanine or poly-L-leucine is known as the Julia—Colonna epoxidation Epoxidation of conjugated ketones to give nonracemic epoxy-ketones was done with aq. NaOCl and a Cinchona alkaloid derivative as catalyst. A triphasic phase-transfer catalysis protocol has also been developed. p-Peptides have been used as catalysts in this reaction. ... [Pg.1176]

This epoxidation proceeds by conjugate addition of hydroperoxide anion followed by cyclisation of the resulting enolate in similar fashion to the Wietz-Scheffer process. It is proposed that the polyamino acid, present as an a—helix, forms a simple active site near the N-terminus within which the epoxidation occurs, and that catalysis arises from stabilisation of the intermediate enolate by interaction with an oxy-anion hole formed within this active site. [Pg.98]

Some other very important events in the historic development of asymmetric organocatalysis appeared between 1980 and the late 1990s, such as the development of the enantioselective alkylation of enolates using cinchona-alkaloid-based quaternary ammonium salts under phase-transfer conditions or the use of chiral Bronsted acids by Inoue or Jacobsen for the asymmetric hydro-cyanation of aldehydes and imines respectively. These initial reports acted as the launching point for a very rich chemistry that was extensively developed in the following years, such as the enantioselective catalysis by H-bonding activation or the asymmetric phase-transfer catalysis. The same would apply to the development of enantioselective versions of the Morita-Baylis-Hillman reaction,to the use of polyamino acids for the epoxidation of enones, also known as the Julia epoxidation or to the chemistry by Denmark in the phosphor-amide-catalyzed aldol reaction. ... [Pg.7]


See other pages where Polyamino acids, epoxidation catalysis is mentioned: [Pg.1484]    [Pg.1484]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.500]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.1476]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.296]    [Pg.657]    [Pg.1583]   


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Catalysis epoxidation

Catalysis, acid, epoxide

Epoxidation acids

Epoxidations catalysis

Epoxides acids

Polyamino acids

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