Article

Air- and Moisture-Stable Amphoteric Molecules: Enabling Reagents in Synthesis

Davenport Research Laboratories, Department of Chemistry, University of Toronto, 80 St. George Street, Toronto M5S 3H6, Canada
Acc. Chem. Res., 2014, 47 (4), pp 1029–1040
DOI: 10.1021/ar400210c
Publication Date (Web): February 4, 2014
Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society
Biography

Zhi He received his B.Sc. degree in 2003 from Peking University and Ph.D. degree in organic chemistry in 2012 from the University of Toronto under the direction of Professor Andrei K. Yudin. He is currently working as a postdoctoral associate at Massachusetts Institute of Technology under the direction of Professor Timothy F. Jamison. His research is currently focused on the continuous-flow synthesis of pharmaceutical compounds.

Biography

Adam Zajdlik received a Bachelor’s degree in Chemistry from the University of Toronto in 2012 and is a graduate student in Synthetic Organic Chemistry who received an NSERC Canada Graduate Scholarship.

Biography

Andrei K. Yudin obtained his B.Sc. degree at Moscow State University and his Ph.D. degree at the University of Southern California under the direction of Professors G. K. Surya Prakash and George A. Olah. He subsequently took up a postdoctoral position in the laboratory of Professor K. Barry Sharpless at the Scripps Research Institute. In 1998, he started his independent career at the University of Toronto. He received early tenure in 2002 and became Full Professor in 2007. He is a recipient of a number of awards and his research interests are in development and application of novel synthetic methods that enable discovery of functionally significant molecules.

Abstract

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Conspectus

Researchers continue to develop chemoselective synthesis strategies with the goal of rapidly assembling complex molecules. As one appealing approach, chemists are searching for new building blocks that include multiple functional groups with orthogonal chemical reactivity. Amphoteric molecules that possess nucleophilic and electrophilic sites offer a versatile platform for the development of chemoselective transformations. As part of a program focused on new methods of synthesis, we have been developing this type of reagents.

This Account highlights examples of amphoteric molecules developed by our lab since 2006. We have prepared and evaluated aziridine aldehydes, a class of stable unprotected α-amino aldehydes. Structurally, aziridine aldehydes include both a nucleophilic amine nitrogen and an electrophilic aldehyde carbon over the span of three atoms. Under ambient conditions, these compounds exist as homochiral dimers with an aziridine-fused five-membered cyclic hemiaminal structure. We have investigated chemoselective reactions of aziridine aldehydes that involve both the aziridine and aldehyde functionalities. These transformations have produced a variety of densely functionalized nitrogen-containing compounds, including amino aldehydes, 1,2-diamines, reduced hydantoins, C-vinyl or alkynyl aziridines, and macrocyclic peptides.

We have also developed air- and moisture-stable α-boryl aldehydes, another class of molecules that are kinetically amphoteric. The α-boryl aldehydes contain a tetracoordinated N-methyliminodiacetyl (MIDA) boryl substituent, which stabilizes the α-metalloid carbonyl system and prevents isomerization to its O-bond enolate form. Primarily taking advantage of chemoselective transformations at the aldehyde functionality, these α-boryl aldehydes have allowed us to synthesize a series of new functionalized boron-containing compounds that are difficult or impossible to prepare using established protocols, such as α-borylcarboxylic acids, boryl alcohols, enol ethers, and enamides. Using α-borylcarboxylic acids as starting materials, we have also prepared several new amphoteric borylated reagents, such as α-boryl isocyanates, isocyanides, and acylboronates. These compounds are versatile building blocks in their own right, enabling the rapid synthesis of other boron-containing molecules.

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Received 26 September 2013
Published online 4 February 2014
Published in print 15 April 2014
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