scholarly journals Recent advances in organocatalytic asymmetric aza-Michael reactions of amines and amides

2021 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 2585-2610
Author(s):  
Pratibha Sharma ◽  
Raakhi Gupta ◽  
Raj Kumar Bansal

Nitrogen-containing scaffolds are ubiquitous in nature and constitute an important class of building blocks in organic synthesis. The asymmetric aza-Michael reaction (aza-MR) alone or in tandem with other organic reaction(s) is an important synthetic tool to form new C–N bond(s) leading to developing new libraries of diverse types of bioactive nitrogen compounds. The synthesis and application of a variety of organocatalysts for accomplishing highly useful organic syntheses without causing environmental pollution in compliance with ‘Green Chemistry” has been a landmark development in the recent past. Application of many of these organocatalysts has been extended to asymmetric aza-MR during the last two decades. The present article overviews the literature published during the last 10 years concerning the asymmetric aza-MR of amines and amides catalysed by organocatalysts. Both types of the organocatalysts, i.e., those acting through non-covalent interactions and those working through covalent bond formation have been applied for the asymmetric aza-MR. Thus, the review includes the examples wherein cinchona alkaloids, squaramides, chiral amines, phase-transfer catalysts and chiral bifunctional thioureas have been used, which activate the substrates through hydrogen bond formation. Most of these reactions are accompanied by high yields and enantiomeric excesses. On the other hand, N-heterocyclic carbenes and chiral pyrrolidine derivatives acting through covalent bond formation such as the iminium ions with the substrates have also been included. Wherever possible, a comparison has been made between the efficacies of various organocatalysts in asymmetric aza-MR.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bingqi Tong ◽  
Bridget Belcher ◽  
Daniel Nomura ◽  
Thomas Maimone

Electrophilic natural products have provided fertile ground for understanding how nature inhibits protein function using covalent bond formation. The fungal strain Gymnascella dankaliensis has provided an especially interesting collection of...


Author(s):  
Motofumi Osaki ◽  
Tomoko Sekine ◽  
Hiroyasu Yamaguchi ◽  
Yoshinori Takashima ◽  
Akira Harada

Synthesis ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinji Tanaka ◽  
Shoutaro Iwase ◽  
Sena Kanda ◽  
Marie Kato ◽  
Yutaro Kiriyama ◽  
...  

The asymmetric dehydrative intramolecular allylation reactions of furan and thiophene were performed using a cationic cyclopentadienyl-ruthenium (CpRu) complex of a chiral pyridine carboxylic acid, namely Cl-Naph-PyCOOH. Both furan and thiophene tethered with an allylic alcohol gave the corresponding bicyclic compounds in high yields and enantioselectivities using 0.1–5 mol% of catalyst. The reaction was found to proceed via a similar enantioface selection method mechanism to that previously reported by our group, which involved halogen and hydrogen bond formation, in addition to the generation of an intermediate σ-allyl complex.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angus Voice ◽  
Gary Tresadern ◽  
Rebecca Twidale ◽  
Herman Van Vlijmen ◽  
Adrian Mulholland

<p>Ibrutinib is the first covalent inhibitor of Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK) to be used in the treatment of B-cell cancers. Understanding the mechanism of covalent inhibition is crucial for the design of safer and more selective covalent inhibitors that target BTK. There are questions surrounding the precise mechanism of covalent bond formation in BTK as there is no appropriate active site residue that can act as a base to deprotonate the cysteine thiol prior to covalent bond formation. To address this, we have investigated several mechanistic pathways of covalent modification of C481 in BTK by ibrutinib using QM/MM reaction simulations. The lowest energy pathway we identified involves a direct proton transfer from C481 to the acrylamide warhead in ibrutinib, followed by covalent bond formation to form an enol intermediate. There is a subsequent rate-limiting keto-enol tautomerisation step (DG<sup>‡</sup>=10.5 kcal mol<sup>-1</sup>) to reach the inactivated BTK/ibrutinib complex. Our results represent the first mechanistic study of BTK inactivation by ibrutinib to consider multiple mechanistic pathways. These findings should aid in the design of covalent drugs that target BTK and related proteins. </p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sreejith Mangalath ◽  
Suneesh C Karunakaran ◽  
Gary Newnam ◽  
Gary Schuster ◽  
Nicholas Hud

A goal of supramolecular chemistry is to create covalent polymers of precise composition and stereochemistry from complex mixtures by the reversible assembly of specific monomers prior to covalent bond formation....


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (19) ◽  
pp. 8085-8090 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maciej Majdecki ◽  
Patryk Niedbala ◽  
Janusz Jurczak

2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (10) ◽  
pp. 1934578X1988440
Author(s):  
Kenichi Kobayashi ◽  
Kosaku Tanaka ◽  
Momoko Suzuki ◽  
Hiroshi Kogen

A catalytic asymmetric intramolecular Darzens reaction of 2-halomalonate derivatives was developed for the enantioselective preparation of chiral building blocks for epoxide-containing natural products. Among the screened catalysts, some phase-transfer catalysts gave the desired epoxide in moderate enantioselectivity, albeit in low yield. The epoxide product would be useful as versatile chiral building blocks for natural product synthesis.


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