An N-Heterocyclic Carbene (NHC)-catalyzed oxidative formal [4 + 2] annulation of acylhydrazones with saturated carboxylic acids bearing γ-H to assemble δ-lactams featuring a chiral carbon stereogenic center was developed through an in situ activation strategy. The ready availability of the starting materials, excellent enantioselectivity, facile assembly, high yields, and potential biological significance of the final products make this protocol an attractive alternative for the construction of the pyridinone scaffold.
An NHC-catalyzed formal [4 + 2] reaction of isatins with N-hydroxybenzotriazole ester of α,β-unsaturated carboxylic acids bearing γ-H to construct spirocyclic oxindole-dihydropyranones featuring a chiral tetrasubstituted carbon stereogenic center was developed. The high enantioselectivity, the ready availability of the raw materials, the facile assembly, and the potential biological significance of the final products make this protocol an attractive alternative for the synthesis of spirocyclic heterocycles.
The asymmetric total synthesis of farnesin, a rearranged ent-kaurenoid, was achieved through a convergent approach involving photo-Nazarov and intramolecular aldol cyclizations to build the syn-syn-syn hydrofluorenol ABC ring system and bicyclo[3.2.1]octane CD ring system in the first application of a UV-light-induced excited-state Nazarov cyclization of a non-aromatic dicyclic divinyl ketone in a total synthesis. Unlike the conventional acid-promoted ground-state Nazarov reaction, the excited-state Nazarov reaction enables stereospecific formation of the highly strained syn-syn-synfused hydrofluorenone scaffold through a disrotatory cyclization.
A NHC-catalyzed [4 + 2] cyclization of 2-bromo-2-enal bearing γ-H with 3-alkylenyloxindoles under mild reaction conditions gives spirocarbocyclic oxindoles containing one quaternary carbon in moderate to good yields with high diastereoselectivities. The easy availability of the starting materials, the concise assembly and the potential utilization value of the products make this strategy attractive in molecular biology and pharmacy.
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