Lock up your gold: Polymer‐incarcerated gold nanoclusters (PI Au) were synthesized by microencapsulation of gold nanoclusters and cross‐linking using a copolymer based on polystyrene (see TEM image). The nanoclusters could be used to catalyze the aerobic oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes and ketones under atmospheric conditions at room temperature, and additionally could be reused with little loss of activity.
Because the backbone of most of organic compounds is a carbon chain, carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions are among the most important reactions in organic synthesis. Many of the carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions so far reported rely on nucleophilic attack of enolates or their derivatives, because those nucleophiles can be, in general, readily prepared from the corresponding carbonyl compounds. In this Account, we summarize the recent development of reactions using enamide and enecarbamate as a novel type of nucleophile. Despite their ready availability and their intrinsic attraction as a synthetic tool that enables us to introduce a protected nitrogen functional group, enamide and enecarbamate have rarely been used as a nucleophile, since their nucleophilicity is low compared with the corresponding metal enolates and enamines. A characteristic of enamides and enecarbamates is that those bearing a hydrogen atom on nitrogen are relatively stable at room temperature, while enamines bearing a hydrogen atom on nitrogen are likely to tautomerize into the corresponding imine form. Enamides and enecarbamates can be purified by silica gel chromatography and kept for a long time without decomposition. During the investigation of nucleophilic addition reactions using enamides and enecarbamates, it has been revealed that enamides and enecarbamates bearing a hydrogen atom on nitrogen react actually as a nucleophile with relatively reactive electrophiles, such as glyoxylate, N-acylimino ester, N-acylimino phosphonate, and azodicarboxylate, in the presence of an appropriate Lewis acid catalyst. Those bearing no hydrogen atom on nitrogen did not react at all. The products initially obtained from the nucleophilic addition of enamides and enecarbamates are the corresponding N-protected imines, which can be readily transformed to important functional groups, such as ketones by hydrolysis and N-protected amines by reduction or nucleophilic alkylation. In the nucleophilic addition reactions of enamides and enecarbamates to aldehydes, it was unveiled that the reaction proceeds stereospecifically, that is, (E)-enecarbamate gave anti product and (Z)-enecarbamate afforded syn product with high diastereoselectivity (>97/3). This fact can be rationalized by consideration of a concerted reaction pathway via a hydrogen-involved cyclic six-membered ring transition state. In the addition reactions to N-acylimino phosphonates, much higher turnover frequency was observed when enamides and enecarbamates were used as a nucleophile than was observed when silicon enolates were used. When silicon enolates were used, the intermediates bearing a strong affinity for the catalyst inhibited catalyst turnover, resulting in low enantioslectivity because of the dominance of the uncatalyzed racemic pathway. In the case of nucleophilic addition of enamides and enecarbamate, however, a fast intramolecular hydrogen transfer from the enecarbamate nitrogen may prevent the intermediate from trapping the catalyst for a long time, to afford the product with a hig...
Nickel-catalyzed intermolecular benzylation and heterobenzylation of unactivated alkenes to provide functionalized allylbenzene derivatives is described. A wide range of both the benzyl chloride and alkene coupling partners are tolerated. In contrast to analogous palladium-catalyzed variants of this process, all reactions described herein employ electronically unbiased aliphatic olefins (including ethylene), proceed at room temperature and provide 1,1-disubstituted olefins over the more commonly observed 1,2-disubstituted olefins with very high selectivity.
Carbon radicals are reactive species useful in various organic transformations. The C-X bond cleavage of organohalides by photoirradiation is a common method to generate carbon radicals in a controlled fashion. The use of organochloride substrates is still a formidable challenge due to the low reduction potential and the high dissociation energy of the C-Cl bond. In this report, we address these issues by using a nonmetal organic molecule with a relatively simple structure as a photocatalyst. In this catalyst (bis(dimethylamino)carbazole), the amino groups increase both the HOMO and LUMO energy levels, especially in the former. As a result, compared to the parent molecule, the new catalyst shows experimentally red-shifted absorption in the visible region and forms an excited state with better reducing capability. This photocatalyst was used in the reduction of unactivated aryl chlorides and alkyl chlorides in the presence of hydrogen atom donor at room temperature. The catalytic system can also be applied to the coupling of aryl chlorides with electron-rich arene and heteroarenes to affect the C-C bond-forming reactions. Our mechanistic study results support the assumption that carbon radicals are formed from the organochlorides via a single-electron-transfer step.
In the presence of a catalytic amount of Cu(OTf)(2)-chiral diamine 3e complex, N-acylimino esters reacted with silyl enol ethers to afford the corresponding Mannich-type adducts in high yields with high enantioselectivities. A wide variety of silyl enol ethers derived from ketones, as well as esters and thioesters, reacted smoothly. In the reactions of alpha-substituted silyl enol ethers (alpha-methyl or benzyloxy), the desired syn-adducts were obtained in high yields with high diastereo- and enantioselectivities. Several intermediates for the synthesis of biologically important compounds were prepared using this novel catalytic asymmetric Mannich-type reaction, and at the same time, absolute and relative stereochemical assignments were made. In addition, it has been revealed that alkyl vinyl ethers reacted with N-acylimino esters in the presence of a catalytic amount of the Cu(II) catalyst to give the corresponding Mannich-type adducts in high yields with high enantioselectivities. This is the first example of catalytic asymmetric Mannich-type reactions with alkyl vinyl ethers. The reaction mechanism, structure of chiral catalyst-electrophile complexes, and transition states of these catalytic asymmetric reactions were assumed based on X-ray crystallographic analysis of the Cu(II)-chiral amine complex, PM3 calculations, and FT-IR analyses, etc. Finally, (1R,3R)-N-(3-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-3-phenylpropyl)dodecanamide (HPA-12, 1), a new inhibitor of ceramide trafficking from endoplasmic reticulum to the site of sphingomyerin (SM) synthesis, has been synthesized efficiently using the present Mannich-type reaction as a key step. The synthesis involved three steps (two-pot), and total yield was 82.9%.
Nickel-catalyzed intermolecular allylic substitution of simple alkenes (ethylene and alpha olefins) is described. This method is the first catalytic intermolecular process for direct allylation of nonconjugated, nonstrained simple alkenes. Catalyst loadings as low as 2.5 mol % Ni afford the desired product in high yield in both gram-scale and smaller scale coupling reactions.
New ceramide trafficking inhibitors, (1R,3R)-N-(3-hydroxy-1-hydroxymethyl-3-phenylpropyl)dodecanamide (HPA-12) and a series of its analogues, were synthesized in diastereomerically and enantiomerically pure forms, and the structure-activity relationship was investigated. These analogues were stereoselectively synthesized via catalytic enantioselective Mannich-type reactions using a Cu(II)-chiral diamine 4 complex. Analysis of HPA-12 analogues having various lengths of the amide side chain showed that the optimal chain length for the inhibition of sphingomyelin biosynthesis is 13 with an IC(50) of approximately 50 nM. Masking of the hydroxy group at the 2'- or 3-position of HPA-12 was carried out by methylation, and it was revealed that these hydroxy groups were essential for the activity. Installation of another hydroxy group onto HPA-12 at the same position as that in the natural ceramide was also conducted, but no enhancement of the activity was observed.
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