4.8 Article

Late-Stage Intermolecular Allylic C-H Amination

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 37, Pages 14969-14975

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c06335

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH NIGMS Maximizing Investigators' Research Award MIRA [R35 GM122525]
  2. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  3. Taiho Pharmaceutical Co.
  4. Qingdao University of Science and Technology
  5. Graduate Department of Shandong Provincial Education Bureau
  6. China Scholarship Council
  7. NIH Ruth Kirschstein Postdoctoral Fellowship [1 F32GM11250101A1]

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A sustainable manganese perchlorophthalocyanine catalyst has been found to achieve selective intermolecular allylic C-H amination, including substrates with key sites and competing sites.
Allylic amination enables late-stage functionalization of natural products where allylic C-H bonds are abundant and introduction of nitrogen may alter biological profiles. Despite advances, intermolecular allylic amination remains a challenging problem due to reactivity and selectivity issues that often mandate excess substrate, furnish product mixtures, and render important classes of olefins (for example, functionalized cyclic) not viable substrates. Here we report that a sustainable manganese perchlorophthalocyanine catalyst, [Mn-III(ClPc)], achieves selective, preparative intermolecular allylic C-H amination of 32 cyclic and linear compounds, including ones housing basic amines and competing sites for allylic, ethereal, and benzylic amination. Mechanistic studies support that the high selectivity of [Mn-III(ClPc)] may be attributed to its electrophilic, bulky nature and stepwise amination mechanism. Late-stage amination is demonstrated on five distinct classes of natural products, generally with >20:1 site-, regio-, and diastereoselectivity.

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