Abstract
The endoperoxide scaffold is found in numerous natural products and synthetic substances with pharmaceutical interest. The principal challenge to their synthetic access remains the preparation of chiral compounds, due to the weakness of the peroxide bond, which limits the scope of available or applicable methods. Here, we demonstrate how peroxycarbenium species can be trapped by silylated nucleophiles with high enantioselectivities, and diastereoselectivities when applicable, using a chiral imidophosphorimidate (IDPi) as catalyst. The scope of the methodology is broad, encompassing a large varie-ty of enoxysilanes, and yielding 1,2-dioxanes or 1,2-dioxolanes. Peroxides can be converted into chiral alcohols or trans-epoxides, and the methodology was applied in a key step of the total synthesis of ethyl plakortide Z, which demonstrated enhanced selectivity. Kinetic studies demonstrated that tert-butyldimethylsilylated nucleophiles are more potent than trime-thylsilylated ones. Furthermore, it was observed that the reaction necessitates an induction period, indicating the formation of a silylium species that behaves as the true catalyst.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
Detailed experimental procedures, determination of enantiomeric ratios and stereochemistries, copies of 1H and 13C NMR data.
Actions