Abstract
Boron-mediated homologation can potentially access almost any kind of chiral centers
from readily available boronates via asymmetric carbenoid insertion, followed by
versatile transformations of the carbon−boron bonds. However, the current asymmetric
boron homologation strategies exhibit limitations, and enantioselective insertion of
diversely substituted carbenoids remains challenging. Here we report an
enantioconvergent approach for direct insertion of carbon-, oxygen-, nitrogen-, sulfur-,
and silicon-substituted carbenoids into carbon−boron bonds. The excellent
enantioselectivity is enabled by a new class of chiral oxazaborolidines derived from
inexpensive α-amino esters. Computational studies revealed that the non-C2-symmetric
oxazaborolidine features a puckered geometry and the cooperative effects of multiple
substituents create an asymmetric environment for effective enantioinduction. This
method is scalable, and each chiral center can be independently controlled by the chiral
oxazaborolidine without being influenced by nearby stereocenters. Besides forming
singular chiral centers, iterative operations of this asymmetric homologation simplify
synthesis of complex molecules with multiple stereocenters.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
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The data supporting the findings of this study
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