RSS-Feed abonnieren
DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-864791
Consecutive Proline-Catalyzed Aldol Reactions and Metal-Mediated Allylations: Rapid Entries to Polypropionates
Publikationsverlauf
Publikationsdatum:
09. März 2005 (online)

Abstract
A concise method for the rapid construction of polypropionate-type structures by consecutive organocatalytic aldol and metal-mediated allylation reactions is described.
Key words
aldol reactions - allylations - asymmetric synthesis - indium - organocatalysis
- 3
Bolm C.Gladysz JA. Chem. Rev. 2003, 103: 2761 ; Special Issue on Enantioselective Catalysis -
4a Isolation:
McGuire JM.Bunch RL.Anderson RC.Boaz HE.Flynn EH.Powell HM.Smith JW. Antibiot. Chemother. 1952, 2: 281 -
4b Structure (chemical degradation):
Wiley PF.Gerzon K.Flynn EH.Sigal MV.Weaver O.Quarck UC.Chauvette RR.Monahan R. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1957, 79: 6062 -
4c Structure (X-ray):
Harris DR.McGeachin SG.Mills HH. Tetrahedron Lett. 1965, 6: 679 -
5a Isolation:
Gunasekera SP.Gunasekera M.Longley RE.Schulte GK. J. Org. Chem. 1990, 55: 4912 ; correction J. Org. Chem. 1991, 56, 1346 -
5b Synthesis:
Paterson I.Florence GJ. Eur. J. Org. Chem. 2003, 12: 2193 - 6
Davies-Coleman MT.Garson MJ. Nat. Prod. Rep. 1998, 15: 477 -
7a
Houk KN.List B. Acc. Chem. Res. 2004, 37: 487 (Special Issue on Asymmetric Organocatalysis) - 7b Adv. Synth. Catal. 2004, 346: 1007 (Special Issue: Organic Catalysis)
-
7c
Dalko PI.Moisan L. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2004, 43: 5138 -
8a
Notz W.List B. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122: 7386 -
8b
List B.Lerner RA.Barbas CF. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122: 2395 -
8c
List B.Pojarliev P.Castello C. Org. Lett. 2001, 3: 573 -
8d
List B. Tetrahedron 2002, 58: 5573 -
8e
List B. Synlett 2001, 1675 -
8f
Pidathala C.Hoang L.Vignola N.List B. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2003, 42: 2785 -
9a
Sakthivel K.Notz W.Bui T.Barbas CF. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123: 5260 -
9b
Córdova A.Notz W.Barbas CF. J. Org. Chem. 2002, 67: 301 -
9c
Chowdari NS.Ramachary DB.Córdova A.Barbas CF. Tetrahedron Lett. 2002, 43: 9591 -
9d
Córdova A.Notz W.Barbas CF. Chem. Commun. 2002, 1: 3024 -
9e
Notz W.Tanaka F.Barbas CF. Acc. Chem. Res. 2004, 37: 580 -
9f
Thayumanavan R.Tanaka F.Barbas CF. Org. Lett. 2004, 6: 3541 -
10a
Northrup AB.MacMillan DWC. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124: 6798 -
10b
Northrup AB.Mangion IK.Hettche F.MacMillan DWC. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2004, 43: 2152 -
10c
Storer RI.MacMillan DWC. Tetrahedron 2004, 60: 7705 -
10d
Northrup AB.MacMillan DWC. Science 2004, 305: 1752 -
11a
Kumaragurubaran N.Juhl K.Zhuang W.Bøgevig A.Jørgensen KA. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124: 6254 -
11b
Bøgevig A.Kumaragurubaran N.Jørgensen KA. Chem. Commun. 2002, 6: 620 -
11c
Bøgevig A.Poulsen TB.Zhuang W.Jørgensen KA. Synlett 2003, 1915 -
11d
Halland N.Aburel PS.Jørgensen KA. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2004, 43: 1272 -
11e
Gathergood N.Juhl K.Poulsen TB.Thordrup K.Jørgensen KA. Org. Biomol. Chem. 2004, 2: 1077 -
11f
Pulkkinen J.Aburel PS.Halland N.Jørgensen KA. Adv. Synth. Catal. 2004, 346: 1077 - For recent examples, see:
-
12a
Nyberg AI.Usano A.Pihko PM. Synlett 2004, 1891 -
12b
Casas J.Sundén H.Córdova A. Tetrahedron Lett. 2004, 45: 6117 - β-Hydroxyaldehydes are notorious for the facility by which they undergo oligomerization, elimination and other decomposition reactions. For recent documented examples, see:
-
13a
Chemler SR.Roush WR. J. Org. Chem. 2003, 68: 1319 -
13b
Lautens M.Stammers TA. Synthesis 2002, 1993 - 14
Pihko PM.Erkkilä A. Tetrahedron Lett. 2003, 44: 7607 - For recent reviews, see:
-
15a
Russo DA. Chem. Ind. N. Y. 1996, 64: 405 -
15b
Li C.-J. Tetrahedron 1996, 52: 5643 -
15c
Paquette LA. Green Chem. 1998, 250 -
15d
Podlech J.Maier TC. Synthesis 2003, 633 -
15e
Denmark SE.Fu J. Chem. Rev. 2003, 103: 2763 -
17a
Paquette LA.Mitzel TM. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1996, 118: 1931 -
17b For an example of similar allylations of β-hydroxyaldehydes with allylboronic acid, see:
Kabalka GW.Narayana C.Reddy NK. Tetrahedron Lett. 1996, 37: 2181 - The enantioselectivity was determined by GC analysis of the 5,5-dimethyl-1,3-dioxane derivatives of 1 or 3 as described in ref.14 Conditions: Supelco γ-DEXTM 120 column (30 m × 0.25 mm, 0.25 µm film). The carrier has a velocity of 28 cm/s, FID detection (300 °C) (110 °C isotherm 45 min, then raised to 180 °C at a rate of 2 °C/min);
-
19a
for GC analysis of the dimer 1: (2S,3S)-anti-isomer t R = 50.0 min, (2R,3R)-anti-isomer t R = 52.3 min, (2R,3S)-syn-isomer t R = 47.7 min, (2S,3R)-syn-isomer t R = 48.1 min;
-
19b
GC analysis of the cross aldol product 3: anti-isomer t R = 55.1 min, anti-isomer t R = 56.0 min, syn-isomer t R = 54.2 min, syn-isomer t R = 55.1 min.
- 20
Araki S.Ito H.Butsugan Y. J. Org. Chem. 1988, 53: 1833 - 25
Rychnovsky SD.Rogers B.Yang G. J. Org. Chem. 1993, 58: 3511 - 26
Tenenbaum JM.Woerpel KA. Org. Lett. 2003, 5: 4325 - 27
Bracher F.Litz T. Bioorg. Med. Chem. 1996, 4: 877 -
28a
Data for 9 has been deposited with the CCDC entry number 258398. X-ray crystallographic data collection and processing: Crystallographic data were collected at 173 K on a Nonius Kappa CCD area-detector diffractometer using graphite monochromatized MoKα radiation (λ = 0.71073 Å). The data collection was performed using φ and ω scans. The data were processed using DENZO-SMN v0.93.0. The structures were solved by direct methods using the SHELXS program and full-matrix least-squares refinements on F2 were performed using SHELXL-97 program. All heavy atoms were refined anisotropically. The CH hydrogen atoms were included at the fixed distances with fixed displacement parameters from their host atoms, except the vinyl hydrogens, which were refined with fixed displacement parameters. The figure was drawn with Ortep-3 for Windows.
-
28b
Otwinowski Z.Minor W. Methods in Enzymology, Volume 276: Macromolecular Crystallography, Part ACarter CW.Sweet RM. Academic Press; New York: 1997. p.307-326 -
28c
Sheldrick GM. SHELX-97 University of Göttingen; Germany: 1997. -
30a
Isaac MB.Chan T.-H. Tetrahedron Lett. 1995, 36: 8957 -
30b
Paquette LA.Mitzel TM. J. Org.Chem. 1996, 61: 8799 - For informative discussions, see:
-
31a
Hoffmann RW.Dahlmann G.Andersen MW. Synthesis 1994, 629 -
31b
Ref. 13a.
References
These authors contributed equally to this work.
2X-ray crystallography.
16For the propionaldehyde dimerization-allylation sequence, the following procedure is illustrative. To l-proline (5.8 mg, 0.05 mmol, 10 mol%) in DMF (0.5 mL), was added propionaldehyde (72 µL, 1.0 mmol, 200 mol%) at 0 °C. The reaction mixture was stirred 10 h at 4 °C. Then, to the reaction mixture were added H2O (0.5 mL), indium (68.9 mg, 0.6 mmol, 120 mol%), and allyl bromide (52 µL, 0.6 mmol, 120 mol%). The reaction mixture was stirred for additional 3 h at r.t. The reaction mixture was then extracted with EtOAc (2 × 3 mL). The combined organic layers were dried over anhyd Na2SO4, concentrated in vacuo, and purified by flash chromatography (50% MTBE in hexanes) to yield 57 mg (72%) of 1 as a mixture of diastereomers.
18In addition to indium, tin and zinc were also screened as metals for the allylation, crotylation and prenylation reactions. Tin provided similar yields but lower selectivities and zinc similar selectivities but poor yields.
21For the trans-4-hydroxyproline-catalyzed aldol-prenylation sequence, the following procedure is illustrative. To 4-hydroxy-l-proline in dry DMSO (0.1 mL), was added propionaldehyde (72 µL, 1.0 mmol, 200 mol%) at 0 °C. The reaction mixture was stirred for 24 h at 4 °C and then allowed to warm to r.t. H2O (0.5 mL) was added, followed by indium (86.5 mg, 0.75 mmol, 150 mol%), NaI (112.9 mg, 0.75 mmol, 150 mol%) and prenyl bromide (88 µL, 0.75 mmol, 150 mol%). The reaction mixture was stirred for 2 h at r.t. EtOAc (5 mL) was added and the resulting mixture was acidified with 6 M HCl and extracted with EtOAc (2 × 5 mL). The combined organic extracts were washed with brine (5 mL), dried over anhyd Na2SO4, and concentrated in vacuo. The crude product was purified by flash chromatography (30% MTBE in hexane) to yield 39.3 mg (42%) of pure 8a.
22Selected characterization data:
2,4-Dimethyloct-7-ene-3,5-diol (5, Table 2, Entries 4 and 5).
Mixture of diastereomers; R
f
= 0.26 (50% MTBE in hexane). IR (thin film): 3342, 2966, 2938, 1642, 1460, 1333, 1138, 1035, 968, 913 cm-1. 1H NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 5.73-5.93 (m, 1 H), 5.09-5.17 (m, 2 H), 3.97 (ddd, 1 H, J = 7.2, 5.2, 2.1 Hz), 3.89 (ddd, 1 H, J = 7.6, 5.6, 2.1 Hz), 3.85 (ddd, 1 H, J = 7.8, 5.6, 2.0 Hz), 3.83 (ddd, 1 H, J = 8.5, 5.0, 2.2 Hz), 3.75 (ddd, 1 H, J = 7.8, 5.9, 1.8 Hz), 3.67 (dt, 1 H, J = 8.1, 3.0 Hz), 3.64 (dt, 1 H, J = 8.7, 3.3 Hz), 3.53-3.59 (m, 1 H, J = 9.5, 2.0 Hz), 3.40 (dd, 1 H, J = 8.9, 2.6 Hz), 3.29 (t, 1 H, J = 6.1 Hz), 2.11-2.56 (m, 2 H), 1.46-1.91 (m, 2 H), 0.78-1.01 (m, 9 H). 13C NMR (150 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 135.5, 135.3, 135.2, 135.0, 118.3, 118.2, 117.9, 117.8, 81.0, 80.9, 80.4, 78.8, 76.4, 75.7, 75.4, 71.9, 40.9, 40.3, 40.1, 39.6, 38.8, 37.9, 37.8, 37.5, 34.8, 34.7, 31.8, 31.6, 31.0, 30.1, 27.1, 22.8, 20.4, 19.8, 19.1, 17.3, 14.3, 14.1, 13.1, 11.6. The major isomer could be readily correlated with literature data (see ref.25). HRMS (benzaldehyde acetal derivative): m/z calcd for C17H24O2: 260.1775; found: 260.1775.
(3
S
,4
S
,5
S
)-4,6,6-Trimethyl-oct-7-ene-3,5-diol (8a, Table 4, Entries 1 and 2).
R
f
= 0.26 (30% MTBE in hexane). [α]D -5.4 (c 0.5, CH2Cl2). IR (thin film): 3467, 3019, 2966, 2935, 1638, 1464, 1414, 1130, 1030, 692 cm-1. 1H NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 5.86 (dd, 1 H, J = 17.5, 10.7 Hz), 5.08 (dd, 1 H, J = 1.3, 10.7 Hz), 5.05 (dd, 1 H, J = 1.3, 17.5 Hz), 3.58 (dt, 1 H, J = 3.1, 8.2 Hz), 3.27 (d, 1 H, J = 5.5 Hz), 1.74-1.67 (m, 1 H), 1.64 (ddq, 1 H, J = 3.1, 7.3, 14.3 Hz), 1.39 (ddq, 1 H, J = 7.3, 8.2, 14.3 Hz), 1.04 (s, 6 H), 0.96 (t, 3 H, 7.3 Hz), 0.89 (d, 3 H, 7.0 Hz). 13C NMR (100 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 145.7, 113.1, 83.3, 76.0, 42.8, 38.6, 27.5, 23.1, 22.3, 18.7, 9.4. HRMS (ESI): m/z calcd for C11H22O2Na: 209.1517; found: 209.1507.
(3
S
,4
S
,5
S
)-2,4,6,6-Tetramethyloct-7-ene-3,5-diol (9, Table 4, Entries 3 and 4).
Mp 74-75 °C; R
f
= 0.33 (30% MTBE in hexane); [α]D -3.2 (c 0.8, CHCl3). IR (thin film): 3316, 2965, 2934, 1642, 1469, 1382, 1262, 1100, 1060, 990 cm-1. 1H NMR (600 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 5.87 (dd, 1 H, J = 17.6, 10.9 Hz), 5.06 (dd, 1 H, J = 10.7, 1.0 Hz), 5.03 (dd, 1 H, J = 17.8, 1.2 Hz), 3.45 (dd, 1 H, J = 9.0, 2.8 Hz), 3.26 (d, 1 H, J = 5.6 Hz), 1.85 (dq, 1 H, J = 7.0, 3.0 Hz), 1.76 (ddq, 1 H, J = 9.0, 5.6, 7.0 Hz), 1.03 (s, 3 H), 1.02 (s, 3 H), 0.98 (d, 3 H, J = 6.9 Hz), 0.86 (d, 3 H, J = 7.0 Hz), 0.83 (d, 3 H, J = 6.8 Hz). 13C NMR (150 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 145.9, 113.2, 83.8, 79.1, 43.1, 36.5, 29.7, 23.3, 22.9, 20.6, 19.0, 14.2. Anal. Calcd for C12H24O2: C, 72.0; H, 12.1. Found: C, 71.9; H, 12.5.
For the crossed-aldol-allylation sequence, the following procedure is illustrative. To l-proline (11.7 mg, 0.1 mmol, 10 mol%) and isobutyraldehyde (185 µL, 2.0 mmol, 200 mol%) in DMF (0.5 mL), was added with syringe pump a solution of propionaldehyde (72 µL, 1.0 mmol, 100 mol%) in DMF (0.5 mL) at 4 °C during 30 h. The reaction mixture was stirred for additional 10 h at 4 °C. Then, to the reaction mixture were added H2O (1.0 mL), In (229.6 mg, 2.0 mmol, 200 mol%), and allyl bromide (175 µL, 2.0 mmol, 200 mol%). The reaction mixture was stirred for additional 2 h at r.t. The reaction mixture was extracted with EtOAc (2 × 5 mL). The combined organic layers were dried over anhyd Na2SO4, concentrated in vacuo, and purified by flash chromatography (50% MTBE in hexane) to yield 109 mg (63%) of 4 as a mixture of diastereomers.
24The original anti:syn isomer ratio (ca. 25:1) of the aldol products 6a/6b derived from 3 is eroded slightly in the allylation step, possibly as a result of enrichment due to kinetic differences in the rate of the reaction. It should be noted that in the corresponding aldol-prenylation sequence the original anti:syn ratios were faithfully preserved.
29A similar boat-chair transition state geometry has been proposed by Chemler and Roush to account for the anti-selectivity of the reactions between crotyltrifluorosilanes and β-hydroxyaldehydes. See ref. 13a.