Enantioselective Synthesis of Azamerone Matthew L

Enantioselective Synthesis of Azamerone Matthew L

Enantioselective Synthesis of Azamerone Matthew L. Landry, Grace M. McKenna, Noah Z. Burns* Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, United States *To whom correspondence should be addressed: [email protected] ABSTRACT: A concise and selective synthesis of the di- and an electronically mismatched late-stage tetrazine chlorinated meroterpenoid azamerone is described. The Diels–Alder reaction were thus identified as the key chal- paucity of tactics for the synthesis of chiral organochlo- lenges for chemical synthesis. rides motivated the development of unique strategies for A. Napyradiomycin meroterpenoids O Me accessing these motifs in enantioenriched forms. The O OH O route features a novel enantioselective chloroetherifica- Cl Cl N Cl tion reaction, a Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling between a N O Me HO Me Me quinone diazide and a boronic hemiester, and a late-stage OH HO O Me Me tetrazine [4+2]-cycloaddition/oxidation cascade. H O Me Me Me Me Me Cl 1: azamerone 2: napyradiomycin A1 OH O Cl The napyradiomycins are a diverse class of halogenated Cl Cl Me O Cl meroterpenoids that have been isolated from terrestrial HO 1 O Me and marine actinomycetes (Figure 1A). Initial isolation HO O Me Me efforts were driven by a desire to identify novel antibiotic O O Me HO scaffolds; the napyradiomycins have since demonstrated H + + Me potent inhibition of gastric (H -K )-ATPase, nonsteroidal Me Me Br estrogen antagonism, cancer cell cytotoxicities, and activ- 3: napyradiomycin B3 4: napyradiomycin C1 ity against Gram-positive bacteria.1c-f Of the 40 members within this class, only napyradiomycin A1 has suc- B. Proposed biosynthesis (Moore) Me O 2 OH O Me O cumbed to synthesis (2, Figure 1A). Syntheses of more Cl Me Cl highly oxidized members of the napyradiomycins, which Me HO Cl+ –CO HO2C 2 feature densely functionalized, chiral halocycle append- O O Me 1 OH [O] Me –H2O ages, remain elusive (e.g. 1 and 3, Figure 1A) and repre- N2 O Me N HO Me Me HN sent inspiring targets for synthetic development. Me Me HO H Me Azamerone is structurally unique among the napyradi- Cl 5: SF2415A1 6 omycins. It is the only known example of a phthalazi- none-containing natural product and the second known C. Azamerone retrosynthesis O Me O 3,4 [4+2] enantioselective Cl chloroetherification example of a pyridazine-containing natural product. O Me N N O Moore has postulated that this nitrogen–nitrogen bond- N N O Me Cl Me containing heterocycle arises from oxidative rearrange- N 8 O 7 3,4 ment of SF2415A1 (5) via intermediate 6 (Figure 1B). N Me HO Me O Me OH X Using 13C- and 15N-labeled precursors, they were able to OH Me O Me show that both nitrogens in azamerone originate from the H C–C bond H Me Me formation Me diazo group in 5. In addition to its unusual hetereocycle, Me Me OH Cl Cl azamerone’s highly oxidized structure, diversity of het- 9 O 10 1: azamerone eroatoms, two chiral sterically-hindered tertiary alcohols, and two distinct chlorine-bearing stereogenic centers Figure 1. (A) Representative napyradiomycin meroterpe- pose significant synthetic challenges. To address these de- noids. (B) Proposed biosynthesis of azamerone. (C) Retro- manding structural elements, we devised a convergent synthetic analysis of azamerone. synthesis of azamerone. We envisaged that azamerone could be retrosynthetically traced to a chlorobenzopyran, Our synthetic approach first required the assembly of tetrazine, and chlorocyclohexane of general forms 7, 8, enantioenriched chlorocycles 7 and 9. Biosynthetically, and 9. A challenging enantioselective chloroetherification chlorocycle motifs found in 7 and 9 are postulated to de- rive from chloronium-initiated cyclizations of the prenyl on trisubstituted olefin-containing hydroxyquinone 10, a 5 hindered carbon–carbon bond formation between 9 and 7, and geranyl fragments within 5 (Figure 1B). Neither of these transformations have enantioselective, synthetic enantioselectivity.6,7 After intensive investigation of po- parallels.6 In fact, the use of enantioselective halogena- tential substrate structures and chiral catalysts, we discov- tion in natural product synthesis has been limited thus far ered that prenylated hydroxyquinone 11 could be chloro- to enantioselective bromochlorination and dichlorination cyclized to a benzochloropyran by a TADDOL-ligated ti- of olefins.2b,6d Cognizant of these methodological gaps tanium complex and tert-butyl hypochlorite in modest and the challenge of chiral organochloride synthesis in yield and 10% ee (entry 1, Table 1). Application of other general, we set out to develop a new method for enanti- common systems for enantioselective chlorofunctionali- oselective chloroetherification to produce a benzochloro- zation returned racemic product.7 Unexpectedly, under pyran akin to 7 and to discover a means for resolving the these conditions ortho-quinone 12 was formed as the ma- enantiomers of chlorocycle 9, which was previously made jor product. Proposed intermediate 13 is consistent with in racemic form (9, X = OAc, Figure 1C).9a our hypothesis in a related dihalogenation system that a Table 1. Enantioselective chloroetherification optimization coordinatively saturated octahedral titanium complex is necessary for high selectivity.6d Chloroether 12 arises via Me Me trapping by the carbonyl oxygen of the vinylogous car- Cl O Me O ClTi(Oi-Pr)3 (25 mol %) boxylate in 14, however titanium is not necessary for such PhO ligand (25 mol %) PhO Me Cl+ source (1.1 equiv) regioselectivity as the racemic product could be produced OH ± additive (1.0 equiv) O in 52% yield solely by the action of tert-butyl hypo- solvent, −78 ℃ O 11 O 12 chlorite (see Supporting Information). We anticipated that 12 could be leveraged as a precursor to a para-quinone Me Me intermediate such as 7 in the synthesis of azamerone and O O thus pursued optimization of this chloroetherification. Me Me PhO stereoselective PhO chlorination Cl Cl A survey of chiral ligands provided optimal TADDOL O O 8 O t-Bu O t-Bu ligand B, which produced chloropyran 11 in increased O Ti O O Ti O 13 Cl 14 Cl yield but with similarly low enantioselectivity (entry 2, O * O * Table 1). Although comparable to ligand A under the con- entrya conditions yield (%) ee (%) ditions of entry 1 and 2, acyclic ligand B proved to be 1 A, t-BuOCl, DCM 29 10 more selective and higher yielding across a broader range 2 B, t-BuOCl, DCM 39 7 of conditions and was selected for further optimization ef- 3 B, t-BuOCl, hexanes 11 <1 forts. Screening of reaction solvents revealed that 2-me- 4 B, t-BuOCl, PhMe 38 16 thyl-tetrahydrofuran increased the selectivity of the chlo- 5 B, t-BuOCl, Et2O 36 14 6 B, t-BuOCl, t-BuOMe 25 16 roetherification to 57% ee (entries 3–8, Table 1). Use of 7 B, t-BuOCl, THF 18 22 other electrophilic chlorine sources led to a reduction in 8 B, t-BuOCl, 2-Me-THF 33 57 the yield or enantioselectivity of the process (entries 8– 9 B, NCS, 2-Me-THF <5 – 10 B, DCDMH, 2-Me-THF 42 33 11, Table 1). Inclusion of heterocyclic base additives, 11 B, Palau’Chlor, 2-Me-THF 28 29 such as pyridine and quinoline, increased the enantiose- 12 B, t-BuOCl, 2-Me-THF, pyridine 20 78 lectivity of chlorocyclization (entries 12, 13, Table 1); the 13 B, t-BuOCl, 2-Me-THF, quinoline 24 81 precise role of these additives is unclear, but they could 14b B, t-BuOCl, 2-Me-THF, quinoline 68 84 15c B, t-BuOCl, 2-Me-THF, quinoline 45 79 serve as general bases, activating agents for transfer of 16c,d B, t-BuOCl, 2-Me-THF, quinoline 40e 84 electrophilic chlorine, or ligands on titanium. Employing Ph Ph Ar Ar O a stoichiometric amount of titanium and chiral ligand pro- Cl O MeO vided only a modest increase in selectivity but a dramatic Me OH OH O N O Cl N N Cl Me OH OH improvement in yield (entry 14, Table 1). Increasing the O MeO N N OMe MeO Me H H Ph Ph Ar Ar Me O amount of tert-butyl hypochlorite to 1.3 equivalents pro- A B: Ar = 2-naphthyl DCDMH Palau’Chlor vided an improvement in yield with 25 mol % titanium and ligand (entry 15, Table 1). Gratifyingly, performing a. Reactions were conducted on 0.035–0.176 mmol scale, the reaction on 4-gram scale under these conditions re- and 1H-NMR yields are reported based on 1,4-dinitroben- sulted in an isolated 40% yield (entry 16, Table 1). zene as internal standard; b. 100 mol % ClTi(Oi-Pr)3, 100 With an enantioselective chloroetherification in hand, mol % B; c. 1.3 equiv t-BuOCl; d. reaction conducted on 4.0 we commenced our synthesis of azamerone. Prenylqui- grams 11; e. isolated yield. none 11, which is made in two steps from commercially De novo development of an enantioselective chloro- available materials, was cyclized to chloropyran 12 using etherification required the identification of a substrate our optimized conditions (Scheme 1). Treatment of re- which was not only amenable to asymmetric halogenation sulting 1,2-dione 12 with aqueous acid on workup in- but also could be parlayed in to a synthesis of azamerone. duced hydrolysis and isomerization to an intermediate 2- Although considerable advances have been made in the hydroxy-para-quinone which was smoothly converted to area of catalytic, enantioselective chlorolactonization and its corresponding 2-chloro-para-quinone 15 with oxalyl chloroetherification, high selectivity has been achieved chloride and DMF. Pyranoquinone 15 is a common motif only for styrenyl substrates; use of non-stabilized olefins which is embedded within all members of the napyradio- is accompanied by a precipitous drop in mycins (e.g.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    5 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us