Literature DB >> 29894155

Informing Molecular Design by Stereoelectronic Theory: The Fluorine Gauche Effect in Catalysis.

Marialuisa Aufiero1, Ryan Gilmour1.   

Abstract

The axioms of stereoelectronic theory constitute an atlas to navigate the contours of molecular space. All too rarely lauded, the advent and development of stereoelectronic theory has been one of organic chemistry's greatest triumphs. Inevitably, however, in the absence of a comprehensive treatise, many of the field's pioneers do not receive the veneration that they merit. Rather their legacies are the stereoelectronic pillars that persist in teaching and research. This ubiquity continues to afford practitioners of organic chemistry with an abundance of opportunities for creative endeavor in reaction design, in conceiving novel activation modes, in preorganizing intermediates, or in stabilizing productive transition states and products. Antipodal to steric governance, which mitigates destabilizing nonbonding interactions, stereoelectronic control allows well-defined, often complementary, conformations to be populated. Indeed, the prevalence of stabilizing hyperconjugative interactions in biosynthetic processes renders this approach to molecular preorganization decidedly biomimetic and, by extension, expansive. In this Account, the evolution and application of a simple donor-acceptor model based on the fluorine gauche effect is delineated. Founded on reinforcing hyperconjugative interactions involving C(sp3)-H bonding orbitals and C(sp3)-X antibonding orbitals [σC-H → σC-X*], this general stratagem has been used in conjunction with an array of secondary noncovalent interactions to achieve acyclic conformational control (ACC) in structures of interest. These secondary effects range from 1,3-allylic strain (A1,3) through to electrostatic charge-dipole and cation-π interactions. Synergy between these interactions ensures that rotation about strategic C(sp3)-C(sp3) bonds is subject to the stereoelectronic requirement for antiperiplanarity (180°). Logically, in a generic [X-CH2-CH2-Y] system (X, Y = electron withdrawing groups) conformations in which the two C(sp3)-X bonds are synclinal (i.e., gauche) are significantly populated. As such, simple donor-acceptor models are didactically and predictively powerful in achieving topological preorganization. In the case of the gauche effect, the low steric demand of fluorine ensures that the remaining substituents at the C(sp3) hybridized center are placed in a predictable area of molecular space: An exit vector analogy is thus appropriate. Furthermore, the intrinsic chemical stability of the C-F bond is advantageous, thus it may be considered as an inert conformational steering group: This juxtaposition of size and electronegativity renders fluorinated organic molecules unique among the organo-halogen series. Cognizant that the replacement of one fluorine atom in the difluoroethylene motif by another electron withdrawing group preserves the gauche conformation, it was reasoned that β-fluoroamines would be intriguing candidates for investigation. The burgeoning field of Lewis base catalysis, particularly via iminium ion activation, provided a timely platform from which to explore a postulated fluorine-iminium ion gauche effect. Necessarily, activation of this stereoelectronic effect requires a process of intramolecularization to generate the electron deficient neighboring group: Examples include protonation, condensation to generate iminium salts, or acylation. This process, akin to substrate binding, has obvious parallels with enzymatic catalysis, since it perturbs the conformational dynamics of the system [ synclinal-endo, antiperiplanar, synclinal-exo]. This Account details the development of conformationally predictable small molecules based on the [X-Cα-Cβ-F] motif through a logical process of molecular design and illustrates their synthetic value in enantioselective catalysis.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29894155     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.8b00192

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  9 in total

1.  Understanding the Conformational Behavior of Fluorinated Piperidines: The Origin of the Axial-F Preference.

Authors:  Zackaria Nairoukh; Felix Strieth-Kalthoff; Klaus Bergander; Frank Glorius
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2020-05-12       Impact factor: 5.236

2.  Inverting Small Molecule-Protein Recognition by the Fluorine Gauche Effect: Selectivity Regulated by Multiple H→F Bioisosterism.

Authors:  Patrick Bentler; Klaus Bergander; Constantin G Daniliuc; Christian Mück-Lichtenfeld; Ravindra P Jumde; Anna K H Hirsch; Ryan Gilmour
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2019-07-03       Impact factor: 15.336

3.  Electrochemical Vicinal Difluorination of Alkenes: Scalable and Amenable to Electron-Rich Substrates.

Authors:  Sayad Doobary; Alexi T Sedikides; Henry P Caldora; Darren L Poole; Alastair J J Lennox
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2019-11-28       Impact factor: 15.336

4.  Stereocontrolled Synthesis of Fluorinated Isochromans via Iodine(I)/Iodine(III) Catalysis.

Authors:  Joel Häfliger; Olga O Sokolova; Madina Lenz; Constantin G Daniliuc; Ryan Gilmour
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2022-06-13       Impact factor: 16.823

5.  Regio- and Enantioselective Intermolecular Aminofluorination of Alkenes via Iodine(I)/Iodine(III) Catalysis.

Authors:  Michael Schäfer; Timo Stünkel; Constantin G Daniliuc; Ryan Gilmour
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2022-06-28       Impact factor: 16.823

6.  Enhancing glycan stability via site-selective fluorination: modulating substrate orientation by molecular design.

Authors:  Alexander Axer; Ravindra P Jumde; Sebastian Adam; Andreas Faust; Michael Schäfers; Manfred Fobker; Jesko Koehnke; Anna K H Hirsch; Ryan Gilmour
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2020-11-23       Impact factor: 9.825

7.  Development of copper-catalyzed enantioselective decarboxylative aldolization for the preparation of perfluorinated 1,3,5-triols featuring supramolecular recognition properties.

Authors:  Céline Sperandio; Jean Rodriguez; Adrien Quintard
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2019-12-27       Impact factor: 9.825

8.  Enantioselective Synthesis of 3-Fluorochromanes via Iodine(I)/Iodine(III) Catalysis.

Authors:  Jérôme C Sarie; Christian Thiehoff; Jessica Neufeld; Constantin G Daniliuc; Ryan Gilmour
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2020-06-09       Impact factor: 16.823

9.  Catalytic Enantioselective Synthesis of Heterocyclic Vicinal Fluoroamines by Using Asymmetric Protonation: Method Development and Mechanistic Study.

Authors:  Matthew W Ashford; Chao Xu; John J Molloy; Cameron Carpenter-Warren; Alexandra M Z Slawin; Andrew G Leach; Allan J B Watson
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2020-08-18       Impact factor: 5.236

  9 in total

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