1 / 16

Dihydropyran and oxetane formation via a transannular oxa-conjugate addition

Dihydropyran and oxetane formation via a transannular oxa-conjugate addition. Steve Houghton Christopher Boddy Syracuse University Department of Chemistry June 15, 2007. Laulimalide. Cytotoxic marine polyketide Potential anticancer agent, similar to Taxol Stabilizes microtubules

Télécharger la présentation

Dihydropyran and oxetane formation via a transannular oxa-conjugate addition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dihydropyran and oxetane formation via a transannular oxa-conjugate addition Steve Houghton Christopher Boddy Syracuse University Department of Chemistry June 15, 2007

  2. Laulimalide • Cytotoxic marine polyketide • Potential anticancer agent, similar to Taxol • Stabilizes microtubules • Isolated from sponge in trace amounts • Insufficient material for clinical development Pacific marine sponge Cacospongia mycofijiensis Microtubules (green) during cell division

  3. Producing laulimalide • Engineering of a recombinant biosynthetic pathway • Produce macrocyclic precursors by fermentation • Several synthetic transformations will have to be validated • install the transannular dihydropyran • 2,3-Z olefin. • Provides new rapid and efficient strategy for total synthesis

  4. Proposal for biosynthetic origin of dihydropyran laulimalide scytophycin C Pyran and cis olefin may form via a non-enzymatic method

  5. Hypothesis tested using model system 8.2 kcal/mol more stable • Can we form dihydropyrans via transannular oxa-conjugate addition in 20-membered rings? • Is oxa-conjugate addition a stereoselective reaction? • Kinetic or thermodynamically controlled? Energy calculations: DFT B3LYP/6-G31 d p level

  6. Model Systemsynthesis

  7. 1,3-Diols are separable • Deprotection revealed 2 spots on TLC • Characterized by Rychnovshky method by preparing acetonides dr 1:1 anti syn

  8. Oxa-conjugate addition unexpected product • Highly strained trans oxetane is formed • Under basic conditions diols are not reactive syn diastereomer Single diastereomer Confirmed by COSY, HSQC, HMBC, NOESY 14.2 kcal/mol higher energy than dihydropyran Energy calculations: DFT B3LYP/6-G31 d p level

  9. Two possible mechanisms for oxetane formation • SN2 displacement • Elimination/addition • If SN2, anti diastereomer must produce cis oxetane

  10. Anti diastereomer also produces trans oxetane • Since inversion of stereochemisty is not observed cannot be SN2 displacement • Mechanism must be elimination, oxa-conjugate addition anti diastereomer 14.2 kcal/mol 13.3 kcal/mol higher energy than dihydropyran Energy calculations: DFT B3LYP/6-G31 d p level

  11. E1cB-like mechanism • Elimination is likely rate determining • Not reversible mechanism • Intermediate is not observed

  12. Cis triene may access dihydropyrans • Olefin geometry may play role in oxetane formation Energy calculations: DFT B3LYP/6-G31 d p level

  13. Cyclic carbonate produces cis triene • Cis triene is generated under basic conditions from both syn and anti diastereomers

  14. Cis triene produces new compound Amberlyst conditions yields a new compound as shown by LC-MS trans oxetane cis triene 4 hrs uncharacterized new compound

  15. Conclusions • Transannular oxa-conjugate addition can occur • High energy oxetane favored over low energy dihydropyran • Unusual regioselectivity of acid catalyzed oxa-conjugate addition • Regioselectivity could be attributed to olefin geometry of elimination (triene intermediate)

  16. Acknowledgements • Dr. Christopher Boddy • The Boddy lab members • Deborah Kerwood • Department of Chemistry • Syracuse University

More Related