4.8 Article

α-Amino Acids and Peptides as Bifunctional Reagents: Carbocarboxylation of Activated Alkenes via Recycling CO2

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 7, Pages 2812-2821

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c11896

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21822108, 21772129]
  2. Fok Ying Tung Education Foundation [161013]
  3. Sichuan Science and Technology Program [20CXTD0112, 2020YFH0083, 2021YJ0405]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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This study utilizes carboxylic acids as bifunctional reagents to achieve redox reactions of alkenes, leading to the preparation of valuable derivatives that are otherwise difficult to access. Despite challenges, excellent selectivity and good experimental parameters are achieved.
Carboxylic acids, including amino acids (AAs), have been widely used as reagents for decarboxylative couplings. In contrast to previous decarboxylative couplings that release CO2 as a waste byproduct, herein we report a novel strategy with simultaneous utilization of both the alkyl and carboxyl components from carboxylic acids. Under this unique strategy, carboxylic acids act as bifunctional reagents in the redox-neutral carbocarboxylation of alkenes. Diverse, inexpensive, and readily available alpha-AAs take part in such difunctionalizations of activated alkenes via visible-light photoredox catalysis, affording a variety of valuable but otherwise difficult to access gamma-aminobutyric acid derivatives (GABAs). Additionally, a series of dipeptides and tripeptides also participate in this photocatalytic carbocarboxylation. Although several challenges exist in this system due to the low concentration and quantitative amount of CO2, as well as unproductive side reactions such as hydrodecarboxylation of the carboxylic acids and hydroalkylation of the alkenes, excellent regioselectivity and moderate to high chemoselectivity are achieved. This process features low catalyst loading, mild reaction conditions, high step and atom economy, and good functional group tolerance, and it is readily scalable. The resulting products are subject to efficient derivations, and the overall process is amenable to applications in the late-stage modification of complex compounds. Mechanistic studies indicate that a carbanion is generated catalytically and it acts as the key intermediate to react with CO2, which is also generated catalytically in situ and thus remains in low concentration. The overall transformation represents an efficient and sustainable system for organic synthesis, pharmaceutics, and biochemistry.

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