| Literature DB >> 24317692 |
Ahmad Masarwa1, Dorian Didier1, Tamar Zabrodski1, Marvin Schinkel2, Lutz Ackermann2, Ilan Marek1.
Abstract
Since the nineteenth century, many synthetic organic chemists have focused on developing new strategies to regio-, diastereo- and enantioselectively build carbon-carbon and carbon-heteroatom bonds in a predictable and efficient manner. Ideal syntheses should use the least number of synthetic steps, with few or no functional group transformations and by-products, and maximum atom efficiency. One potentially attractive method for the synthesis of molecular skeletons that are difficult to prepare would be through the selective activation of C-H and C-C bonds, instead of the conventional construction of new C-C bonds. Here we present an approach that exploits the multifold reactivity of easily accessible substrates with a single organometallic species to furnish complex molecular scaffolds through the merging of otherwise difficult transformations: allylic C-H and selective C-C bond activations. The resulting bifunctional nucleophilic species, all of which have an all-carbon quaternary stereogenic centre, can then be selectively derivatized by the addition of two different electrophiles to obtain more complex molecular architecture from these easily available starting materials.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24317692 DOI: 10.1038/nature12761
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962