We report the development of a divergent synthetic process entailing four-step access to the elaborate fused skeletons reminiscent of aspidophytines and transtaganolides. A variety of branched precursors were synthesized on the basis of Ugi condensations and installation of diazoimide and subjected to rhodium-catalyzed tandem reactions. Switching of cyclization modes was demonstrated by the choice of the amine building blocks installed at site C.
Angularly substituted
trans-fused hydroindanes are now accessible
by the direct and convergent union of trimethylsilyl (TMS)-alkynes
with 4-hydroxy-1,6-enynes by a process that forges three C–C
bonds, one C–H bond, and two new stereocenters. The annulation
is proposed to proceed by initial formation of a Ti–alkyne
complex (with a TMS-alkyne) followed by regioselective alkoxide-directed
coupling with the enyne, stereoselective intramolecular cycloaddition,
elimination of phenoxide, 1,3-metallotropic shift, and stereoselective
protonation of the penultimate allylic organometallic intermediate.
Several examples are given to demonstrate the compatibility of this
reaction with substrates bearing aromatic and aliphatic substituents,
and an empirical model is presented to accompany the stereochemical
observations.
Copper-catalyzed 6-endo cyclization of N-propargylic β-enaminocarbonyls was developed for the synthesis of oxidation-labile 1,6-dihydropyridines. This synthetic method allows flexible and regio-defined assembly of various substituents at the N1, C2, C3, C4, and C6 positions of 1,6-dihydropyridines under mild conditions.
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