TY - JOUR
T1 - Gold(I)-Catalyzed and Nucleophile-Guided Ligand-Directed Divergent Synthesis
AU - Lee, Yen Chun
AU - Knauer, Lena
AU - Louven, Kathrin
AU - Golz, Christopher
AU - Strohmann, Carsten
AU - Waldmann, Herbert
AU - Kumar, Kamal
N1 - Funding Information:
Y.-C. L. would like to thank Ministry of Education (Taiwan) for the MOE Technologies Incubation Scholarship. This research was supported by funding from the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2018/11/8
Y1 - 2018/11/8
N2 - Transition metal catalysts can mediate a plethora of skeleton rearrangements of a range of substrates to construct complex small molecules. Yet, their potential to transform common substrates into distinct molecular scaffolds has not been fully explored to deliver biologically relevant small molecules. Gold(I)-catalyzed transformations of enynes are amongst the most intriguing rearrangements and provide opportunities to access a range of diverse scaffolds efficiently. In ligand-directed divergent synthesis (LDS), variation of ligands in metal complexes determines the fate of substrates during their transformation into distinct scaffolds. For instance, variation of ligands for the gold(I) catalysts helps to transform oxindole derived 1,6-enynes into several distinct molecular frameworks. In this report, we present how ligand variation in gold(I) catalysts, nucleophile-additives and alkyl and alkynyl substitutions on the 1,6-enynes as well as replacement of the oxindole ring with a different privileged ring-system (PRS) influence the LDS approach to access a wider chemical space. Based on the experimental results, we propose several mechanistic pathways in gold(I)-catalyzed cycloisomerizations and cascade reactions of 1,6-enyne substrates leading to structurally distinct chemotypes.
AB - Transition metal catalysts can mediate a plethora of skeleton rearrangements of a range of substrates to construct complex small molecules. Yet, their potential to transform common substrates into distinct molecular scaffolds has not been fully explored to deliver biologically relevant small molecules. Gold(I)-catalyzed transformations of enynes are amongst the most intriguing rearrangements and provide opportunities to access a range of diverse scaffolds efficiently. In ligand-directed divergent synthesis (LDS), variation of ligands in metal complexes determines the fate of substrates during their transformation into distinct scaffolds. For instance, variation of ligands for the gold(I) catalysts helps to transform oxindole derived 1,6-enynes into several distinct molecular frameworks. In this report, we present how ligand variation in gold(I) catalysts, nucleophile-additives and alkyl and alkynyl substitutions on the 1,6-enynes as well as replacement of the oxindole ring with a different privileged ring-system (PRS) influence the LDS approach to access a wider chemical space. Based on the experimental results, we propose several mechanistic pathways in gold(I)-catalyzed cycloisomerizations and cascade reactions of 1,6-enyne substrates leading to structurally distinct chemotypes.
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U2 - 10.1002/ejoc.201801080
DO - 10.1002/ejoc.201801080
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85055563220
SN - 1434-193X
VL - 2018
SP - 5688
EP - 5699
JO - European Journal of Organic Chemistry
JF - European Journal of Organic Chemistry
IS - 41
ER -