An efficient process for dynamic kinetic resolution of amines was developed by combining a ruthenium-catalyzed racemization with a lipase-catalyzed resolution. A variety of unfunctionalized primary amines were transformed into one enantiomer of the amide in high yield and high enantioselectivity.
Racemization catalyst 5 c and the enzyme Candida antarctica lipase B were combined in a one-pot dynamic kinetic resolution (DKR) of primary amines in which a wide range of amines were transformed to their corresponding amides in up to 95 % isolated yield and >99 % ee. The DKR protocol was applicable with either isopropyl acetate or dibenzyl carbonate as the acyl donor. In the latter case, release of the free amine from the carbamate products was carried out under very mild conditions. The racemization of (S)-1-phenylethylamine with several different Ru catalysts was also evaluated. Catalyst 5 c, of the Shvo type, was able to selectively racemize amines and was also compatible with the reaction conditions used for DKR. A racemization study of three different amines with varying electronic properties was also performed. Competitive racemization of a 1:1 mixture of the deuterated and non-deuterated amine was carried out with 5 c and a primary kinetic isotope effect was observed for all three amines, providing support that the rate-determining step is beta-hydride elimination. The chemoenzymatic DKR protocol was applied to the synthesis of norsertraline (16) by using a novel route starting from readily available 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-1-naphthylamine (1 o).
The catalytic activity of commercially available, air and water stable ruthenium complexes in the addition of carboxylic acids to terminal alkynes was found to be drastically enhanced by the addition of small quantities of base. Moreover, the regioselectivity of the reaction can be controlled by the choice of the base so that both the Markovnikov (Na2CO3) and the anti-Markovnikov products (DMAP) are now easily accessible in excellent selectivities.
Easy and clean: A palladium(0)‐catalyzed decarbonylative Heck olefination of activated esters of aryl, heteroaryl, and vinyl carboxylic acids opens up an opportunity for a novel waste‐free Heck olefination process (see scheme).
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