4.8 Article

Overcoming the limitations of directed C-H functionalizations of heterocycles

Journal

NATURE
Volume 515, Issue 7527, Pages 389-393

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature13885

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences
  3. CAS/SAFEA International Partnership Program for Creative Research Teams
  4. National Natural Science Foundation of China [NSFC-21121062]
  5. Recruitment Program of Global Experts
  6. Scripps Research Institute
  7. NIH (NIGMS) [1R01 GM102265]

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In directed C-H activation reactions, any nitrogen or sulphur atoms present in heterocyclic substrates will coordinate strongly with metal catalysts. This coordination, which can lead to catalyst poisoning or C-H functionalization at an undesired position, limits the application of C-H activation reactions in heterocycle-based drug discovery(1-5), in which regard they have attracted much interest from pharmaceutical companies(3-5). Here we report a robust and synthetically useful method that overcomes the complications associated with performing C-H functionalization reactions on heterocycles. Our approach employs a simple N-methoxy amide group, which serves as both a directing group and an anionic ligand that promotes the in situ generation of the reactive PdX2 (X = ArCONOMe) species from a Pd(0) source using air as the sole oxidant. In this way, the PdX2 species is localized near the target C-H bond, avoiding interference from any nitrogen or sulphur atoms present in the heterocyclic substrates. This reaction overrides the conventional positional selectivity patterns observed with substrates containing strongly coordinating heteroatoms, including nitrogen, sulphur and phosphorus. Thus, this operationally simple aerobic reaction demonstrates that it is possible to bypass a fundamental limitation that has long plagued applications of directed C-H activation in medicinal chemistry.

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