4.8 Article

Asymmetric synthesis from terminal alkenes by cascades of diboration and cross-coupling

Journal

NATURE
Volume 505, Issue 7483, Pages 386-390

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature12781

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health, Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM-59417]
  2. John LaMattina graduate fellowships

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Terminal, monosubstituted alkenes are ideal prospective starting materials for organic synthesis because they are manufactured on very large scales and can be functionalized via a broad range of chemical transformations. Alkenes also have the attractive feature of being stable in the presence of many acids, bases, oxidants and reductants. In spite of these attributes, relatively few catalytic enantioselective transformations have been developed that transform aliphatic alpha-olefins into chiral products with an enantiomeric excess greater then 90 per cent. With the exception of site-controlled isotactic polymerization of alpha-olefins(1), none of these catalytic enantioselective processes results in chain-extending carbon-carbon bond formation to the terminal carbon(2-6). Here we describe a strategy that directly addresses this gap in synthetic methodology, and present a single-flask, catalytic enantioselective conversion of terminal alkenes into a number of chiral products. These reactions are facilitated by a neighbouring functional group that accelerates palladium-catalysed cross-coupling of 1,2-bis(boronates) relative to non-functionalized alkyl boronate analogues. In tandem with enantioselective diboration, this reactivity feature transforms alkene starting materials into a diverse array of chiral products. We note that the tandem diboration/cross-coupling reaction generally provides products in high yield and high selectivity (>95:5 enantiomer ratio), uses low loadings (1-2 mol per cent) of commercially available catalysts and reagents, offers an expansive substrate scope, and can address a broad range of alcohol and amine synthesis targets, many of which cannot be easily addressed with current technology.

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