An expedient and reliable method for accessing reactive alpha-oxo gold carbenes via gold-catalyzed intermolecular oxidation of terminal alkynes has been developed. Significantly, this method offers a safe and economical alternative to the strategies based on diazo substrates. Its synthetic potential is demonstrated by expedient preparation of dihydrofuran-3-ones containing a broad range of functional groups.
Facile cycloisomerization of (2-ethynylphenyl)alkynes is proposed to be promoted synergistically by two molecules of BrettPhosAuNTf2, affording tricyclic indenes in mostly good yields. A gold vinylidene is most likely generated as one of the reaction intermediates based on both mechanistic studies and theoretical calculations. Different from the well-known Rh, Ru and W counterparts, this novel gold species is highly reactive and undergoes facile intramolecular C(sp3)-H insertions as well as O-H and N-H insertions. The formation step for the gold vinylidene is predicted theoretically to be complex with a bifurcated reaction pathway. The pyridine N-oxide acts as a weak base to facilitate the formation of an alkynylgold intermediate, and the bulky BrettPhos ligand in the gold catalyst likely plays a role in sterically steering the reaction toward the gold vinylidene formation.
An unprecedented gold-catalyzed formal [3+2] cycloaddition between ynamides and isoxazoles has been developed, allowing rapid and practical access to a wide range of synthetically useful 2-aminopyrroles.
Catalytic
transformations involving metal carbenes are considered
one of the most important aspects of homogeneous transition metal
catalysis. Recently, gold-catalyzed generation of gold carbenes from
readily available alkynes represents a significant advance in metal
carbene chemistry. This Review summarizes the advances in the gold-catalyzed
nitrene-transfer reactions of alkynes with nitrogen-transfer reagents,
such as azides, nitrogen ylides, isoxazoles, and anthranils, and gold-catalyzed
carbene-transfer reactions, involving oxygen atom-transfer reactions
of alkynes with nitro compounds, nitrones, sulfoxides, and pyridine N-oxides, through the presumable α-imino gold carbene
and α-oxo gold carbene intermediates, respectively. Gold-catalyzed
processes are reviewed by highlighting their product diversity, selectivity,
and applicability, and the mechanistic rationale is presented where
possible.
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