4.6 Article

Catalytic access to carbocation intermediates via nitrenoid transfer leading to allylic lactams

Journal

NATURE CATALYSIS
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages 79-88

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41929-020-00558-x

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Funding

  1. Institute for Basic Science [IBS-R010-D1]

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Carbocation intermediates are accessed catalytically via metal-nitrenoid transfer into alkenes, allowing for regiocontrolled elimination reactions. This method demonstrates high regioselectivity in the synthesis of valuable allylic lactams and offers the potential for enantioselective construction of gamma-lactams.
Carbocation intermediacy is postulated in numerous organic transformations and provides the foundation for retrosynthetic logics in chemical synthesis. Although a number of catalytic approaches are designed to generate transient carbocations under mild conditions, there is room for improvement in the context of selectivity control and synthetic utility. Here we present an approach that enables catalytic access to carbocation intermediates via metal-nitrenoid transfer into alkenes, which subsequently allows a regiocontrolled elimination reaction. Customized catalysts are capable of bypassing competing pathways of the reactive intermediates to furnish valuable allylic lactams with excellent regioselectivity. Mechanistic investigations suggest that the ligand plays a critical role as an internal base in the selectivity-determining proton transfer process. This protocol is broadly applicable for preparing both five- and the more challenging four-membered allylamides. The virtue of this platform is further demonstrated by achieving the enantioselective construction of gamma-lactams.

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