A convergent synthesis of a protected version of (+)-lycoricidine has been accomplished in 13 steps from L-arabinose. Preparation of the aminocyclitol moiety 50 employed a novel vinylsilane-terminated N-sulfonyliminium ion cyclization of vinylsilane aldehyde 42. Closure of the B-ring using an intramolecular Heck reaction afforded lycoricidine derivative 58. An unexpected cyclization of vinylsilane aldehyde 42 allowed for the stereodivergent preparation of semiprotected conduritols 43 and 45.
A convenient nonelectrochemical amide oxidation method has been
developed. The process involves
a cuprous ion-promoted decomposition of o-diazobenzamides
like 4, generated in situ from the
corresponding o-aminobenzamides, to give
N-acyliminium ion intermediate 9 via a
1,5-H-atom
transfer, followed by metal-catalyzed oxidation of the resulting
α-amidyl radical. The transformation
produces α-methoxybenzamides 15 in good yields. An
attempt was made to apply this oxidation
method to a total synthesis of the alkaloid (−)-anisomycin
(16). Scalemic o-aminobenzamide
pyrrolidine derivatives 18a/18b underwent
oxidation to give α-methoxylated amide substrates
19a/19b, respectively, in good yields. However, alkylation
of the N-acyliminium intermediate 20
with
(p-methoxybenzyl)magnesium chloride gave the undesired
anti-compounds 22a/22b as the
major
products. The amide oxidation exhibits good regioselectivity with
many unsymmetrical 2-substituted
piperidine and pyrrolidine systems. In general, it appears that
the larger the C-2 substituent, the
greater the methylene/methine H-atom abstraction ratio.
A mechanistic rationale for this selectivity
is suggested based upon amide rotamer populations. An extension of
this methodology can be
used to conduct two sequential amide oxidations using readily prepared
2-amino-6-nitrobenzamides
such as 68 and 69.
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