β-Lactones are a privileged structural motif as enzyme inhibitors and chemical probes, particularly for the inhibition of enzymes from the serine hydrolase class. Herein, we demonstrate that cross-metathesis (CM) of α-methylene-β-lactones offers rapid access to structurally diverse, previously unexplored β-lactones. Combining this approach with competitive activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) identified lead β-lactone inhibitors/probes for several serine hydrolases, including disease-associated enzymes and enzymes of uncharacterized function. The structural diversity afforded by the α-methylene-β-lactone scaffold thus expands the landscape of serine hydrolases that can be targeted by small-molecule inhibitors and should further the functional characterization of enzymes from this class through the optimization of target-selective probes.
Over the temperature range 250-300 degrees C, 8-exo-methoxybicyclo[4.2.0]oct-2-ene (1a) undergoes a [1,3] sigmatropic rearrangement to 5-exo- and 5-endo-methoxybicyclo[2.2.2]oct-2-enes, 2a and 2b, respectively, with a clear preference for the si product: si/sr = 3.2. Both 1a and its 8-endo epimer 1b experience appreciable epimerization and fragmentation. A long-lived intermediate with weakly interacting diradical centers, one of which is stabilized by a methoxy substituent, can account for all such observations.
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