Skeletal Metalation of Lactams through Carbonyl-to-Nickel Exchange Logic

23 February 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Classical metalation reactions such as the metal-halogen exchange are powerful tools to construct chemical bonds between two molecules. An analogous metal-carbon exchange strategy would provide a new entry into the direct structural remodeling of core carbon frameworks, yet its development has remained highly challenging. Here we introduce a skeletal metalation strategy that enables lactams, a highly prevalent motif in bioactive molecules, to be readily converted into well-defined, synthetically useful organonickel reagents. The reaction features a selective activation of unstrained CN bonds mediated by an easily prepared Ni(0) reagent, followed by CO deinsertion and dissociation under mild room temperature conditions in a formal carbonyl-to-nickel exchange process. The underlying principles of this unique reactivity was rationalized by organometallic and computational studies. The skeletal metalation was further applied to a direct CO excision reaction and a carbon isotope exchange reaction of lactams, underscoring the synthetic potential of metal-carbon exchange logic for skeletal modifications of complex molecules.

Keywords

Nickel
lactam
heterocycle
carbon monoxide
skeletal metalation

Supplementary materials

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