A new enantioselective total synthesis of phlegmarine-type Lycopodium alkaloid lycoposerramine-Z (1) has been accomplished, using one-pot chemoselective sequential additions of two different Grignard reagents to the bis-Weinreb-amide intermediate and an efficient construction of the fully fuctionalized cyclohexanone intermediate with a chiral phosphoric acid catalyzed enantioselective intramolecular Michael addition.
A short, scalable, and collective
total synthesis of four fawcettimine-type Lycopodium alkaloids in eight or nine steps is disclosed.
A dense multi-small-ring spiro-α-aminocyclopentanone
successfully served as the key intermediate, which was directly accessed
by a LiDBB-mediated intramolecular reductive coupling of the aliphatic
imine and an ester-carbonyl. Compared to those that employ classical
Heathcock intermediate(s) containing a nine-membered ring, the new
strategy shows the significant improvement of the synthetic step and
redox economies as well as excellent stereochemical control.
A unified route for the total synthesis
of three tetracyclic diquinane Lycopodium alkaloids (+)-paniculatine, (−)-magellanine,
and (+)-magellaninone has been accomplished in 13–14 overall
steps based on late-stage diverse transformations from an advanced
tetracyclic common intermediate. In the established synthesis, quick
formation of the two five-membered rings was efficiently achieved
by an intramolecular reductive coupling of ketone–carbonyl
and ester–carbonyl and an organocatalytic intramolecular Michael
addition of aldehyde-derived enamine to an internal enone functionality
with satisfactory redox and step economies and excellent stereoselectivities,
providing the requisite tricyclic carbo-framework possessing multiple
dense stereogenic centers, and an intramolecular reductive amination
finally furnished the essential piperidine ring.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.