A new pseudocyclic triflate derivative of benziodoxole (IBA-OTf) was prepared and characterized by X-ray analysis. This highly electrophilic reagent readily reacts with various organic substrates to give the corresponding products in good yields. Furthermore, IBA-OTf can be used as a catalyst with m-chloroperoxybenzoic acid as the terminal oxidant.
An established route to the bacteriochlorophyll skeleton from two dihydrodipyrrin halves has been extended to accommodate several substituents characteristic of the native bacteriochlorophyll a.
Challenges to the de novo synthesis of bacteriochlorophyll a (BChl a
), the chief pigment
for anoxygenic bacterial photosynthesis, include creating the macrocycle
along with the trans-dialkyl substituents in both
pyrroline rings (B and D). A known route to a model bacteriochlorophyll
with a gem-dimethyl group in each pyrroline ring has been probed for
utility in the synthesis of BChl a
by
preparation of a hybrid macrocycle (BC-1), which contains
a trans-dialkyl group in ring D and a gem-dimethyl
group in ring B. Stereochemical definition began with the synthesis
of (2S,3S)-2-ethyl-3-methylpent-4-ynoic
acid, a precursor to the trans-dialkyl-substituted
AD dihydrodipyrrin. Knoevenagel condensation of the latter and a gem-dimethyl,
β-ketoester-substituted BC dihydrodipyrrin afforded the enone
(E, 70%; Z, 3%); subsequent double-ring cyclization of the E-enone (via Nazarov, electrophilic aromatic substitution,
and elimination reactions) gave BC-1 (53% yield) along
with a trace of chlorin byproduct (1.4% relative to BC-1 upon fluorescence assay). BC-1 exhibited the desired trans-dialkyl stereochemistry in ring D and was obtained
as a 7:1 mixture of (expected) epimers owing to the configuration
of the 132-carbomethoxy substituent. The strategy wherein trans-dialkyl substituents are installed very early and
carried through to completion, as validated herein, potentially opens
a synthetic path to native photosynthetic pigments.
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