Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis

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Standard

Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis. / Jadhav, Amol P.; Park, Sang Yeon; Lee, Ji Woong; Yan, Hailong; Song, Choong Eui.

I: Accounts of Chemical Research, Bind 54, Nr. 23, 2021, s. 4319–4333.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jadhav, AP, Park, SY, Lee, JW, Yan, H & Song, CE 2021, 'Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis', Accounts of Chemical Research, bind 54, nr. 23, s. 4319–4333. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00400

APA

Jadhav, A. P., Park, S. Y., Lee, J. W., Yan, H., & Song, C. E. (2021). Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis. Accounts of Chemical Research, 54(23), 4319–4333. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00400

Vancouver

Jadhav AP, Park SY, Lee JW, Yan H, Song CE. Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis. Accounts of Chemical Research. 2021;54(23):4319–4333. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00400

Author

Jadhav, Amol P. ; Park, Sang Yeon ; Lee, Ji Woong ; Yan, Hailong ; Song, Choong Eui. / Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis. I: Accounts of Chemical Research. 2021 ; Bind 54, Nr. 23. s. 4319–4333.

Bibtex

@article{374caa503a3f4489a7b3165dddd2493f,
title = "Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis",
abstract = "ConspectusAsymmetric cation-binding catalysis in principle enables the use of (alkali) metal salts, otherwise insoluble in organic solvents, as reagents and effectors in enantioselective reactions. However, this concept has been a formidable challenge due to the difficulties associated with creating a highly organized chiral environment for cations and anions simultaneously. Over the last four decades, various chiral crown ethers have been developed as cation-binding phase-transfer catalysts and examined in asymmetric catalysis. However, the limited ability of chiral crown ethers to generate soluble reactive anions in a confined chiral cage offers a restricted reaction scope and unsatisfactory chirality induction. To address the constraints of monofunctional chiral crown ethers as cation-binding catalysts, it is therefore desirable to develop a cooperative cation-binding catalyst possessing secondary binding sites for anions, which enables the generation of a reactive anion within a chiral cage of a catalyst. This account summarizes our design, development, and applications of chiral BINOL-based oligoethylene glycols (oligoEGs) as a new type of bifunctional cation-binding catalyst. We initially found that achiral oligoEGs were efficient promoters in nucleophilic fluorination with potassium fluoride. Thereby, we hypothesized that, by breaking the closed cyclic ether unit of chiral crown ethers, the free terminal -OH groups could activate the electrophiles by hydrogen bonding whereas the ether oxygens could act as the Lewis base to coordinate metal ions, thus generating soluble anions in a confined chiral cage. This hypothesis was realized by synthesizing a series of chiral variants of oligoEGs by connecting two 3,3′-disubstituted-BINOL units with glycol linkers. Readily available BINOL-based chiral oligoEGs enabled numerous asymmetric transformations out of the reach of chiral monofunctional crown ether catalysts. We have demonstrated that this new type of bifunctional cation-binding catalysts can generate a soluble fluoride anion from alkali metal fluorides, which can be a versatile chiral promoter for diverse asymmetric catalytic reactions, kinetic resolution (selectivity factor of up to μ2300), asymmetric protonation, Mannich reactions, tandem cyclization reactions, and the isomerization of allylic alcohols and hemithioacetals. We have also successfully utilized our chiral oligoEG catalysts along with alkali metal salts of carbon- and heteroatom-based nucleophiles, respectively, for asymmetric Strecker reactions and the asymmetric synthesis of chiral aminals. The power of our cooperative cation-binding catalysis was exemplified by kinetic resolution reactions of secondary alcohols, achieving highly enantioselective catalysis with only <1 ppm loading of an organocatalyst with high TOFs (up to μ1300 h-1 at 1 ppm catalyst loading). The broadness and generality of our cooperative asymmetric cation-binding catalysis can be ascribed, in a similar fashion, to active-site architectures of enzymes using allosteric interactions, highly confined chiral cages formed by the incorporation of alkali metal salts in the catalyst polyether chain backbone, and the cooperative activation of reacting partners by hydrogen-bonding and ion-ion interactions. Confining reactive components in such a chiral binding pocket leads to enhanced reactivity and efficient transfer of the stereochemical information. ",
author = "Jadhav, {Amol P.} and Park, {Sang Yeon} and Lee, {Ji Woong} and Hailong Yan and Song, {Choong Eui}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 American Chemical Society.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00400",
language = "English",
volume = "54",
pages = "4319–4333",
journal = "Accounts of Chemical Research",
issn = "0001-4842",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "23",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cooperative Asymmetric Cation-Binding Catalysis

AU - Jadhav, Amol P.

AU - Park, Sang Yeon

AU - Lee, Ji Woong

AU - Yan, Hailong

AU - Song, Choong Eui

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 American Chemical Society.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - ConspectusAsymmetric cation-binding catalysis in principle enables the use of (alkali) metal salts, otherwise insoluble in organic solvents, as reagents and effectors in enantioselective reactions. However, this concept has been a formidable challenge due to the difficulties associated with creating a highly organized chiral environment for cations and anions simultaneously. Over the last four decades, various chiral crown ethers have been developed as cation-binding phase-transfer catalysts and examined in asymmetric catalysis. However, the limited ability of chiral crown ethers to generate soluble reactive anions in a confined chiral cage offers a restricted reaction scope and unsatisfactory chirality induction. To address the constraints of monofunctional chiral crown ethers as cation-binding catalysts, it is therefore desirable to develop a cooperative cation-binding catalyst possessing secondary binding sites for anions, which enables the generation of a reactive anion within a chiral cage of a catalyst. This account summarizes our design, development, and applications of chiral BINOL-based oligoethylene glycols (oligoEGs) as a new type of bifunctional cation-binding catalyst. We initially found that achiral oligoEGs were efficient promoters in nucleophilic fluorination with potassium fluoride. Thereby, we hypothesized that, by breaking the closed cyclic ether unit of chiral crown ethers, the free terminal -OH groups could activate the electrophiles by hydrogen bonding whereas the ether oxygens could act as the Lewis base to coordinate metal ions, thus generating soluble anions in a confined chiral cage. This hypothesis was realized by synthesizing a series of chiral variants of oligoEGs by connecting two 3,3′-disubstituted-BINOL units with glycol linkers. Readily available BINOL-based chiral oligoEGs enabled numerous asymmetric transformations out of the reach of chiral monofunctional crown ether catalysts. We have demonstrated that this new type of bifunctional cation-binding catalysts can generate a soluble fluoride anion from alkali metal fluorides, which can be a versatile chiral promoter for diverse asymmetric catalytic reactions, kinetic resolution (selectivity factor of up to μ2300), asymmetric protonation, Mannich reactions, tandem cyclization reactions, and the isomerization of allylic alcohols and hemithioacetals. We have also successfully utilized our chiral oligoEG catalysts along with alkali metal salts of carbon- and heteroatom-based nucleophiles, respectively, for asymmetric Strecker reactions and the asymmetric synthesis of chiral aminals. The power of our cooperative cation-binding catalysis was exemplified by kinetic resolution reactions of secondary alcohols, achieving highly enantioselective catalysis with only <1 ppm loading of an organocatalyst with high TOFs (up to μ1300 h-1 at 1 ppm catalyst loading). The broadness and generality of our cooperative asymmetric cation-binding catalysis can be ascribed, in a similar fashion, to active-site architectures of enzymes using allosteric interactions, highly confined chiral cages formed by the incorporation of alkali metal salts in the catalyst polyether chain backbone, and the cooperative activation of reacting partners by hydrogen-bonding and ion-ion interactions. Confining reactive components in such a chiral binding pocket leads to enhanced reactivity and efficient transfer of the stereochemical information.

AB - ConspectusAsymmetric cation-binding catalysis in principle enables the use of (alkali) metal salts, otherwise insoluble in organic solvents, as reagents and effectors in enantioselective reactions. However, this concept has been a formidable challenge due to the difficulties associated with creating a highly organized chiral environment for cations and anions simultaneously. Over the last four decades, various chiral crown ethers have been developed as cation-binding phase-transfer catalysts and examined in asymmetric catalysis. However, the limited ability of chiral crown ethers to generate soluble reactive anions in a confined chiral cage offers a restricted reaction scope and unsatisfactory chirality induction. To address the constraints of monofunctional chiral crown ethers as cation-binding catalysts, it is therefore desirable to develop a cooperative cation-binding catalyst possessing secondary binding sites for anions, which enables the generation of a reactive anion within a chiral cage of a catalyst. This account summarizes our design, development, and applications of chiral BINOL-based oligoethylene glycols (oligoEGs) as a new type of bifunctional cation-binding catalyst. We initially found that achiral oligoEGs were efficient promoters in nucleophilic fluorination with potassium fluoride. Thereby, we hypothesized that, by breaking the closed cyclic ether unit of chiral crown ethers, the free terminal -OH groups could activate the electrophiles by hydrogen bonding whereas the ether oxygens could act as the Lewis base to coordinate metal ions, thus generating soluble anions in a confined chiral cage. This hypothesis was realized by synthesizing a series of chiral variants of oligoEGs by connecting two 3,3′-disubstituted-BINOL units with glycol linkers. Readily available BINOL-based chiral oligoEGs enabled numerous asymmetric transformations out of the reach of chiral monofunctional crown ether catalysts. We have demonstrated that this new type of bifunctional cation-binding catalysts can generate a soluble fluoride anion from alkali metal fluorides, which can be a versatile chiral promoter for diverse asymmetric catalytic reactions, kinetic resolution (selectivity factor of up to μ2300), asymmetric protonation, Mannich reactions, tandem cyclization reactions, and the isomerization of allylic alcohols and hemithioacetals. We have also successfully utilized our chiral oligoEG catalysts along with alkali metal salts of carbon- and heteroatom-based nucleophiles, respectively, for asymmetric Strecker reactions and the asymmetric synthesis of chiral aminals. The power of our cooperative cation-binding catalysis was exemplified by kinetic resolution reactions of secondary alcohols, achieving highly enantioselective catalysis with only <1 ppm loading of an organocatalyst with high TOFs (up to μ1300 h-1 at 1 ppm catalyst loading). The broadness and generality of our cooperative asymmetric cation-binding catalysis can be ascribed, in a similar fashion, to active-site architectures of enzymes using allosteric interactions, highly confined chiral cages formed by the incorporation of alkali metal salts in the catalyst polyether chain backbone, and the cooperative activation of reacting partners by hydrogen-bonding and ion-ion interactions. Confining reactive components in such a chiral binding pocket leads to enhanced reactivity and efficient transfer of the stereochemical information.

U2 - 10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00400

DO - 10.1021/acs.accounts.1c00400

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34784182

AN - SCOPUS:85119927960

VL - 54

SP - 4319

EP - 4333

JO - Accounts of Chemical Research

JF - Accounts of Chemical Research

SN - 0001-4842

IS - 23

ER -

ID: 286858614