This review covers the synthesis of isolabile vinylmetalloids through hydroboration, hydrosilylation, and hydrostannation, with special focus on recent developments, metal-catalyzed reactions, and synthetically useful methods.
The complex [Cp*Ru(MeCN) 3 ]PF 6 is shown to catalyze the hydrosilylation of a wide range of alkynes. Terminal alkynes afford access to α-vinylsilane products with good regioselectivity. Deuterium labeling studies indicate a clean trans addition process is at work. The same complex is active in internal alkyne hydrosilylation, where absolute selectivity for the trans addition process is maintained. Several internal alkyne substrate classes, including propargylic alcohols and α,β-alkynyl carbonyl compounds, allow regioselective vinylsilane formation. The tolerance of a wide range of silanes is noteworthy, including alkyl-, aryl-, alkoxy-, and halosilanes. This advantage is demonstrated in the direct synthesis of triene substrates for silicon-tethered intramolecular DielsAlder cycloadditions.Metal-catalyzed simple addition reactions of alkynes are important synthetic processes and are desirable from the standpoint of synthetic efficiency and atom economy. Questions of regioand stereoselectivity become important considerations, and pathways affording syn addition are plentiful and well studied. Metal catalysis of trans addition processes-where new bonds must be formed on opposite sides of the alkyne-have only rarely been observed. Indeed, the possibility of creating direct trans addition processes which do not involve initial cis addition followed by E/Z isomerization is an exciting target. This paper describes our work studying trans addition processes in alkyne hydrosilylation with ruthenium catalysts to afford vinylsilane products.Vinyl-metal species are extremely important building blocks in organic synthesis. 1,2 Among these, vinylsilanes play a growing role due to their low cost, low toxicity, ease of handling, and simplicity of byproduct removal. Particularly significant is the potential of vinylsilanes as nucleophilic partners in palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions. 3 Vinylsilanes are also useful as acceptors in conjugate addition reactions, as masked ketones through Tamao-Fleming oxidation, 4 and as terminators for cation cyclizations. 5 Unlike most other organometallic reagents-including in many cases organoboranes and organostannanes-vinylsilanes can be readily carried through many synthetic operations.However, the utility of vinylsilanes has been inhibited by the inconvenience of accessing stereo-and regio-defined vinylmetal compounds. Among the possible routes to these compounds, hydrosilylation of alkynes represents the most straightforward, atom-economical access. 6 Classical platinum catalysis 7 provides clean cis addition to (E)-vinylsilanes (2), and ligand tuning has made this a very regioselective process as well. 8 In addition, there has been significant progress using a variety of metal-catalyzed approaches to provide stereodefined, 1,2-substituted vinylsilanes of the form 1 or 2. There has been no reported general access to bmtrost@stanford.edu.
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NIH-PA Author ManuscriptNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript 1,1-disubstituted vinylsilanes 9 (3) a...
The combination of peptide molecular recognition and residue-selective dirhodium catalysis allows modification of aromatic side chains that is selective for coil structures. A rate enhancement of >10(3) relative to nonselective dirhodium modification was observed. The increased reactivity of this approach creates the first selective chemical modification of the phenylalanine residue.
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