| Literature DB >> 30344769 |
Alex Frichert1, Peter G Jones2, Thomas Lindel1.
Abstract
The first synthesis of diterpenoid eunicellane skeletons incorporating a 1,3-cyclohexadiene moiety is presented. Key step is a low-valent titanium-induced pinacol cyclization that proved to be perfectly diastereoselective. Determination of the relative configuration of the diol was aided by the conversion to the diastereomer by oxidation and reduction. Conformational analysis of some of the resulting diols obtained under McMurry conditions was complicated by the presence of several conformers of similar energy. The pinacol coupling appears to start at the ketone, as indicated by the selective reduction of non-cyclizing cyclohexane systems that were synthesized from limonene oxide. The title compounds and their synthetic precursors are prone to aromatization on contact with air oxygen. Attempted synthesis of cyclohexene-containing eunicellane bicycles by elimination of water from tertiary alkynyl carbinols afforded novel allene systems. Our study may be of help towards the total synthesis of solenopodin or klysimplexin derivatives.Entities:
Keywords: conformational analysis; low valent titanium; marine natural products; pinacol coupling; ten-membered rings
Year: 2018 PMID: 30344769 PMCID: PMC6176824 DOI: 10.3762/bjoc.14.222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Org Chem ISSN: 1860-5397 Impact factor: 2.883
Figure 1Bicyclic eunicellane-type diterpenes.
Figure 2Synthetic eunicellane-type compounds with benzene partial structure.
Scheme 1Access to ketoester 14 that did not cyclize to the ethyl vinyl ether under McMurry conditions.
Scheme 2Synthesis of the 1,3-cyclohexadiene-containing eunicellane-type [8.4.0]bicycle 18 by McMurry coupling to the diol, followed by two-step epimerization at C2.
Figure 3Preferred conformations of diastereomeric diols 18 and 19 including decisive NOESY correlations.
Scheme 3Assembly of the envisaged cyclization precursor 27.
Scheme 4Structure analysis of diastereomeric cyanohydrins 29 and 30.
Scheme 5Formation of allenes 32 and 34 from sterically crowded propargylic alcohol 31.