4.8 Article

Catalytic alkylation of remote C-H bonds enabled by proton-coupled electron transfer

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NATURE
卷 539, 期 7628, 页码 268-271

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature19811

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资金

  1. NIH [R01 GM113105]
  2. Sloan Foundation Research Fellow
  3. Amgen Young Investigator Award

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Despite advances in hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) catalysis(1-5), there are currently no molecular HAT catalysts that are capable of homolysing the strong nitrogen-hydrogen (N-H) bonds of N-alkyl amides. The motivation to develop amide homolysis protocols stems from the utility of the resultant amidyl radicals, which are involved in various synthetically useful transformations, including olefin amination(6-11) and directed carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bond functionalization(12-16). In the latter process-a subset of the classical Hofmann-Loffler-Freytag reaction-amidyl radicals remove hydrogen atoms from unactivated aliphatic C-H bonds(17-21). Although powerful, these transformations typically require oxidative N-prefunctionalization of the amide starting materials to achieve efficient amidyl generation. Moreover, because these N-activating groups are often incorporated into the final products, these methods are generally not amenable to the direct construction of carbon-carbon (C-C) bonds. Here we report an approach that overcomes these limitations by homolysing the N-H bonds of N-alkyl amides via proton-coupled electron transfer. In this protocol, an excited-state iridium photocatalyst and a weak phosphate base cooperatively serve to remove both a proton and an electron from an amide substrate in a concerted elementary step. The resultant amidyl radical intermediates are shown to promote subsequent C-H abstraction and radical alkylation steps. This C-H alkylation represents a catalytic variant of the Hofmann-Loffler-Freytag reaction, using simple, unfunctionalized amides to direct the formation of new C-C bonds. Given the prevalence of amides in pharmaceuticals and natural products, we anticipate that this method will simplify the synthesis and structural elaboration of amine-containing targets. Moreover, this study demonstrates that concerted proton-coupled electron transfer can enable homolytic activation of common organic functional groups that are energetically inaccessible using traditional HAT-based approaches.

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