<p>The direct addition of enolizable aldehydes and sulfonyl imines to α-halo thioesters to produce β-hydroxy/amino thioesters enabled by reductive soft enolization is reported. The transformation is operationally simple and efficient and has the unusual feature of giving high <italic>syn</italic>-selectivity, which is the opposite of that produced for the aldol addition with (thio)esters under conventional conditions. This method is tolerant to aldehydes and imines that not only contain acidic α-protons, but also towards electrophiles containing other acidic protons and base-sensitive functional groups. Moreover, excellent diastereoselectivity is achieved when a chiral non-racemic α-hydroxy aldehyde derivative is used. Using MgI<sub>2</sub> and Ph<sub>3</sub>P, this method gives a wide range of aldol and Mannich products in good yields with high <italic>syn</italic>-diastereoselectivity. The products obtained from the reductive aldol and Mannich reactions are synthetically important intermediates in both polyketide and β-lactam synthesis, respectively, and can be readily derivatized to form many carbonyl derivatives through known manipulation of the thioester moiety.</p><p><p>Also, herein the asymmetric synthesis of (+)-mefloquine, a potent anti-malarial compound, is described. The synthesis is based on a key enantioselective Darzens reaction between a chiral α-chloro-N-amino cyclic carbamate (ACC) hydrazone and a quinoline-based aldehyde. This is a novel methodology developed by our lab, which gives a highly enantioenriched epoxide that can be further functionalized to give both enantiomers of mefloquine.</p> / Dissertation
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:DUKE/oai:dukespace.lib.duke.edu:10161/3952 |
Date | January 2011 |
Creators | Sauer, Scott J. |
Contributors | Coltart, Don M |
Source Sets | Duke University |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Dissertation |
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