Cyclic carbamates are a common feature of small molecule therapeutics,
offering a constrained hydrogen bond acceptor that is both polar and sterically
small. Methods for their preparation most often focus first on aminoalcohol
synthesis and then reaction with phosgene or its equivalent. This report
describes an enantioselective synthesis of cyclic carbamates in which carbon
dioxide engages an unsaturated basic amine, facilitated by a bifunctional
organocatalyst designed to stabilize a carbamic acid intermediate while
activating it toward subsequent enantioselective carbon-oxygen bond formation.
Six-membered cyclic carbamates are prepared in good yield with high levels of
enantioselection, as constrained 1,3-amino alcohols featuring a chiral tertiary
alcohol carbon. Spectroscopic analysis (NMR, DOSY) of various substrate-reagent
combinations provides insight into the dominant species under the reaction
conditions. Two peculiar requirements were identified to achieve highest
consistency: a ‘Goldilocks’ amount of water and the use of a
non-crystalline form of the ligand. These atypical features of the final
protocol notwithstanding, a diverse range of products could be prepared. Their
functionalizations illustrate the versatility of the carbamates as precursors to
enantioenriched small molecules.
We describe the first highly enantioselective 7-exo-trig iodolactonizations of conformationally unbiased ε-unsaturated carboxylic acids, effected by an unusual combination of a bifunctional BAM catalyst, I2, and I(iii) reagent (PhI(OAc)2:PIDA).
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