4.8 Article

Catalytic activation of carbon-carbon bonds in cyclopentanones

Journal

NATURE
Volume 539, Issue 7630, Pages 546-550

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature19849

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas [R1118]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Science [R01GM109054]
  3. Welch Foundation [F1781]
  4. Office of China Postdoctoral Council (OCPC) [38]
  5. National Science Foundation

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In the chemical industry, molecules of interest are based primarily on carbon skeletons. When synthesizing such molecules, the activation of carbon-carbon single bonds (C-C bonds) in simple substrates is strategically important: it offers a way of disconnecting such inert bonds, forming more active linkages (for example, between carbon and a transition metal) and eventually producing more versatile scaffolds(1-13). The challenge in achieving such activation is the kinetic inertness of C-C bonds and the relative weakness of newly formed carbon-metal bonds(6,14). The most common tactic starts with a three-or four-membered carbon-ring system(9-13), in which strain release provides a crucial thermodynamic driving force. However, broadly useful methods that are based on catalytic activation of unstrained C-C bonds have proven elusive, because the cleavage process is much less energetically favourable. Here we report a general approach to the catalytic activation of C-C bonds in simple cyclopentanones and some cyclohexanones. The key to our success is the combination of a rhodium pre-catalyst, an N-heterocyclic carbene ligand and an amino-pyridine co-catalyst. When an aryl group is present in the C3 position of cyclopentanone, the less strained C-C bond can be activated; this is followed by activation of a carbon-hydrogen bond in the aryl group, leading to efficient synthesis of functionalized alpha-tetralones-alpha common structural motif and versatile building block in organic synthesis. Furthermore, this method can substantially enhance the efficiency of the enantioselective synthesis of some natural products of terpenoids. Density functional theory calculations reveal a mechanism involving an intriguing rhodiumbridged bicyclic intermediate.

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