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Electrophilic Pt(II) Complexes: Precision Instruments for the Initiation of Transformations Mediated by the Cation–Olefin Reaction
- Source :
- Accounts of Chemical Research
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 2014.
-
Abstract
- A discontinuity exists between the importance of the cation–olefin reaction as the principal C–C bond forming reaction in terpene biosynthesis and the synthetic tools for mimicking this reaction under catalyst control; that is, having the product identity, stereochemistry, and functionality under the control of a catalyst. The main reason for this deficiency is that the cation–olefin reaction starts with a reactive intermediate (a carbocation) that reacts exothermically with an alkene to reform the reactive intermediate; not to mention that reactive intermediates can also react in nonproductive fashions. In this Account, we detail our efforts to realize catalyst control over this most fundamental of reactions and thereby access steroid like compounds. Our story is organized around our progress in each component of the cascade reaction: the metal controlled electrophilic initiation, the propagation and termination of the cyclization (the cyclase phase), and the turnover deplatinating events. Electrophilic Pt(II) complexes efficiently initiate the cation–olefin reaction by first coordinating to the alkene with selection rules that favor less substituted alkenes over more substituted alkenes. In complex substrates with multiple alkenes, this preference ensures that the least substituted alkene is always the better ligand for the Pt(II) initiator, and consequently the site at which all electrophilic chemistry is initiated. This control element is invariant. With a suitably electron deficient ligand set, the catalyst then activates the coordinated alkene to intramolecular addition by a second alkene, which initiates the cation–olefin reaction cascade and generates an organometallic Pt(II)-alkyl. Deplatination by a range of mechanisms (β-H elimination, single electron oxidation, two-electron oxidation, etc.) provides an additional level of control that ultimately enables A-ring functionalizations that are orthogonal to the cyclase cascade. We particularly focus on reactions that combine an initiated cyclization reaction with a turnover defining β-hydride elimination, fluorination, and oxygenation. These latter demetalation schemes lead to new compounds functionalized at the C3 carbon of the A-ring (steroid numbering convention) and thus provide access to interesting potentially bioactive targets. Progress toward efficient and diverse polycyclization reactions has been achieved by investing in both synthetic challenges and fundamental organometallic reactivity. In addition to an interest in the entrance and exit of the metal catalyst from this reaction scheme, we have been intrigued by the role of neighboring group participation in the cyclase phase. Computational studies have served to provide nuance and clarity on several key aspects, including the role (and consequences) of neighboring group participation in cation generation and stabilization. For example, these calculations have demonstrated that traversing carbonium ion transition states significantly impacts the kinetics of competitive 6-endo and 5-exo A-ring forming reactions. The resulting nonclassical transition states then become subject to a portion of the strain energy inherent to bicyclic structures, with the net result being that the 6-endo pathway becomes kinetically favored for alkene nucleophiles, in contrast to heteroatom nucleophiles which progress through classical transition states and preferentially follow 5-exo pathways. These vignettes articulate our approach to achieving the desired catalyst control.
- Subjects :
- Reactive intermediate
Electrons
Alkenes
Carbocation
010402 general chemistry
Photochemistry
01 natural sciences
Catalysis
Article
Isomerism
Cascade reaction
Coordination Complexes
Cations
Lewis acids and bases
Lewis Acids
chemistry.chemical_classification
010405 organic chemistry
Alkene
General Medicine
General Chemistry
Combinatorial chemistry
0104 chemical sciences
Kinetics
chemistry
Cyclization
Electrophile
Povarov reaction
Oxidation-Reduction
Palladium
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15204898 and 00014842
- Volume :
- 47
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Accounts of Chemical Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....be32bbbba0f9d6d654249d0372ec4315
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ar500047j