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Prostaglandins nucleophile addition/electrophile

Nucleophilic additions to the carbon-carbon double bond of ketene dithioacetal monoxides have been reported [84-86]. These substrates are efficient Michael acceptors in the reaction with enamines, sodium enolates derived from P-dicarbonyl compounds, and lithium enolates from simple ester systems. Hydrolysis of the initiEil products then led to substituted 1,4-dicarbonyl systems [84]. Alternatively, the initial product carbanion could be quenched with electrophiles [85]. For example, the anion derived from dimethyl malonate (86) was added to the ketene dithioacetal monoxide (87). Regioselective electrophilic addition led to the product (88) in 97% overall yield (Scheme 5.28). The application of this methodology to the synthesis of rethrolones [87] and prostaglandin precursors [88] has been demonstrated. Recently, Walkup and Boatman noted the resistance of endocyclic ketene dithioacetals to nucleophilic attack [89]. [Pg.174]

Without question, the most significant advance in the use of sulfur-centered nucleophiles was made by Shibasaki, who discovered that 10 mol% of a novel gallium-lithium-bis(binaphthoxide) complex 5 could catalyze the addition of tert-butylthiol to various cyclic and acyclic meso-epoxides with excellent enantioselectiv-ities and in good yields (Scheme 7.11) [21], This work builds on Shibasaki s broader studies of heterobimetallic complexes, in which dual activation of both the electrophile and the nucleophile is invoked [22]. This method has been applied to an efficient asymmetric synthesis of the prostaglandin core through an oxidation/ elimination sequence (Scheme 7.12). [Pg.236]

A second major retrosynthetic disconnection of prostaglandins p2 and Ej (Fig. 12) leads to the cydopentenone [65]. The 1,4 addition to [65] of a nucleophile representing the lower side chain, followed by capture of the resulting ketone enolate with an electrophile representing the upper side... [Pg.199]


See other pages where Prostaglandins nucleophile addition/electrophile is mentioned: [Pg.239]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.867]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.667]    [Pg.667]    [Pg.119]   


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Electrophile nucleophile

Electrophilicity nucleophilicity

Nucleophiles electrophiles

Prostaglandin 1,4-addition

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