| Literature DB >> 28652644 |
Glenn C Micalizio1, Haruki Mizoguchi1.
Abstract
Alkoxide-directed metallacycle-mediated cross-coupling is a rapidly growing area of reaction methodology in organic chemistry. Over the last decade, developments have resulted in > thirty new and highly selective intermolecular (or "convergent") C-C bond-forming reactions that have established powerful retrosynthetic relationships in stereoselective synthesis. While early studies were focused on developing transformations that forge a single C-C bond by way of a functionalized and unsaturated metallacyclopentane intermediate, recent advances mark the ability to employ this organometallic intermediate in additional stereoselective transformations. Among these more advanced coupling processes, those that embrace the metallacycle in subsequent [4+2] chemistry have resulted in the realization of a number of highly selective annulative cross-coupling reactions that deliver densely functionalized and angularly substituted carbocycles. This review discusses the early development of this chemistry, recent advances in reaction methodology, and shares a glimpse of the power of these processes in natural product synthesis.Entities:
Keywords: [2+2+2] annulation; carbocycle synthesis; directed reaction; metallacycle-mediated cross-coupling; titanium
Year: 2016 PMID: 28652644 PMCID: PMC5482546 DOI: 10.1002/ijch.201600098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Isr J Chem ISSN: 0021-2148 Impact factor: 3.333