- Metal-Free Deoxygenation of Chiral Nitroalkanes: An Easy Entry to α-Substituted Enantiomerically Enriched Nitriles
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A metal-free, mild and chemodivergent transformation involving nitroalkanes has been developed. Under optimized reaction conditions, in the presence of trichlorosilane and a tertiary amine, aliphatic nitroalkanes were selectively converted into amines or nitriles. Furthermore, when chiral β-substituted nitro compounds were reacted, the stereochemical integrity of the stereocenter was maintained and α-functionalized nitriles were obtained with no loss of enantiomeric excess. The methodology was successfully applied to the synthesis of chiral β-cyano esters, α-aryl alkylnitriles, and TBS-protected cyanohydrins, including direct precursors of four active pharmaceutical ingredients (ibuprofen, tembamide, aegeline and denopamine).
- Pirola, Margherita,Faverio, Chiara,Orlandi, Manuel,Benaglia, Maurizio
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p. 10247 - 10250
(2021/06/18)
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- Enantiomer Separation of Nitriles and Epoxides by Crystallization with Chiral Organic Salts: Chirality Switching Modulated by Achiral Acids
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Enantiomer separation of nitriles and epoxides by inclusion crystal formation with organic-salt type chiral hosts was achieved. The stereochemistry of the preferentially included nitrile could be switched only by changing the achiral carboxylic acid component. Crystallographic analysis of the inclusion crystals reveals that the hydrogen-bonding networks are controlled by the acidity of the phenol group of the acids, which results in chirality switching.
- Hirose, Takuji,Kodama, Koichi,Shimomura, Yuki
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p. 6552 - 6557
(2021/11/16)
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- Dual electrocatalysis enables enantioselective hydrocyanation of conjugated alkenes
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Chiral nitriles and their derivatives are prevalent in pharmaceuticals and bioactive compounds. Enantioselective alkene hydrocyanation represents a convenient and efficient approach for synthesizing these molecules. However, a generally applicable method featuring a broad substrate scope and high functional group tolerance remains elusive. Here, we address this long-standing synthetic problem using dual electrocatalysis. Using this strategy, we leverage electrochemistry to seamlessly combine two canonical radical reactions—cobalt-mediated hydrogen-atom transfer and copper-promoted radical cyanation—to accomplish highly enantioselective hydrocyanation without the need for stoichiometric oxidants. We also harness electrochemistry’s unique feature of precise potential control to optimize the chemoselectivity of challenging substrates. Computational analysis uncovers the origin of enantio-induction, for which the chiral catalyst imparts a combination of attractive and repulsive non-covalent interactions to direct the enantio-determining C–CN bond formation. This work demonstrates the power of electrochemistry in accessing new chemical space and providing solutions to pertinent challenges in synthetic chemistry. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
- Song, Lu,Fu, Niankai,Ernst, Brian G.,Lee, Wai Hang,Frederick, Michael O.,DiStasio, Robert A.,Lin, Song
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p. 747 - 754
(2020/07/03)
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- Merging Photoredox and Copper Catalysis: Enantioselective Radical Cyanoalkylation of Styrenes
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A photoredox and copper catalyzed asymmetric cyanoalkylation reaction of alkenes has been developed, which uses alkyl N-hydroxyphthalimide esters as alkylation reagents. In this radical cyanoalkylation reaction, the photoredox induced alkyl radical adds to styrene, and the generated benzylic radical couples with a chiral Box/CuII cyanide complex to achieve the enantioselective cyanation. This reaction features mild conditions, operational simplicity, broad substrate scope, high yields, and high enantioselectivities, which represents an efficient method for the asymmetric radical difunctionalization of alkenes.
- Sha, Wanxing,Deng, Lingling,Ni, Shengyang,Mei, Haibo,Han, Jianlin,Pan, Yi
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p. 7489 - 7494
(2018/08/16)
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- Enantioselective Decarboxylative Cyanation Employing Cooperative Photoredox Catalysis and Copper Catalysis
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The merger of photoredox catalysis with asymmetric copper catalysis have been realized to convert achiral carboxylic acids into enantiomerically enriched alkyl nitriles. Under mild reaction conditions, the reaction exhibits broad substrate scope, high yields and high enantioselectivities. Furthermore, the reaction can be scaled up to synthesize key chiral intermediates to bioactive compounds.
- Wang, Dinghai,Zhu, Na,Chen, Pinhong,Lin, Zhenyang,Liu, Guosheng
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supporting information
p. 15632 - 15635
(2017/11/14)
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- A Chiral Metal-Organic Material that Enables Enantiomeric Identification and Purification
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We show that CMOM-3S, a previously unreported porous crystalline metal-organic material that exhibits intrinsic homochirality, serves as a general-purpose chiral crystalline sponge (CCS) and a chiral stationary phase (CSP) for gas chromatography (GC). The properties of CMOM-3S are enabled by nano-sized channels connected to adaptable molecular recognition sites that mimic enzyme-binding sites. Further, CMOM-3S is composed of inexpensive components, facile to prepare, and requires only trace amounts of analyte. When coupled with the thermal and hydrolytic stability of CMOM-3S, these features mean that a coated fused silica capillary column in which CMOM-3S serves as a CSP is both more versatile and more robust than three benchmark commercial columns. That the enantiomer with the longer GC retention time is consistently captured in CCS experiments enables CMOM-3S to serve as a powerful tool to enable both chiral purification and enantiomer identification.
- Zhang, Shi-Yuan,Yang, Cheng-Xiong,Shi, Wei,Yan, Xiu-Ping,Cheng, Peng,Wojtas, Lukasz,Zaworotko, Michael J.
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supporting information
p. 281 - 289
(2017/09/05)
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- Substrate evaluation of rhodococcus erythropolis SET1, a nitrile hydrolysing bacterium, demonstrating dual activity strongly dependent on nitrile sub-structure
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Assessment of Rhodococcus erythropolis SET1, a novel nitrile hydrolysing bacterial isolate, has been undertaken with 34 nitriles, 33 chiral and 1 prochiral. These substrates consist primarily of β-hydroxy nitriles with varying alkyl and aryl groups at the β position and containing in several compounds different substituents α to the nitrile. In the case of β-hydroxy nitriles without substitution at the α position, acids were the major products obtained, along with recovered nitrile after biotransformation, as a result of suspected nitrilase activity of the isolate. Unexpectedly, amides were found to be the major hydrolysis product when the β-hydroxy nitriles possessed a vinyl group at this position. To probe this behaviour further, additional related substrates were evaluated containing electron-withdrawing groups at the α position, and amide was also observed upon biotransformation in the presence of SET1. Therefore this novel isolate has also demonstrated NHase activity with nitriles that appears to be substrate-dependent.
- Coady, Tracey M.,Coffey, Lee V.,O'Reilly, Catherine,Lennon, Claire M.
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supporting information
p. 1108 - 1116
(2015/02/19)
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- Catalytic asymmetric protonation of silyl ketene imines
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An efficient catalytic and highly enantioselective protonation of silyl ketene imines is described. The reaction is catalyzed by the chiral phosphoric acids TRIP or STRIP in the presence of a stoichiometric amount of methanol as the proton source and silyl acceptor. A variety of substituted racemic silyl ketene imines have been transformed into highly enantioenriched nitriles.
- Guin, Joyram,Varseev, Georgy,List, Benjamin
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supporting information
p. 2100 - 2103
(2013/03/28)
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- Asymmetric bioreduction of α,β-unsaturated nitriles and ketones
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Two applications for the asymmetric reduction of activated alkenes employing isolated enoate reductases are reported. A series of α,β-unsaturated nitriles were shown to be converted to the optically active nitrile products in high yields and excellent enantioselectivities (up to 99% ee). In addition, the reduction of 2,3-disubstituted cyclopentenones was shown to provide almost exclusively trans-2,3-disubstituted cyclopentanones in high yield and enantiopurity (94% ee).
- Kosjek, Birgit,Fleitz, Fred J.,Dormer, Peter G.,Kuethe, Jeffrey T.,Devine, Paul N.
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p. 1403 - 1406
(2008/12/20)
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