The "cesium effect" magnified: exceptional chemoselectivity in cesium ion mediated nucleophilic reactions.


Journal

Chemical science
ISSN: 2041-6520
Titre abrégé: Chem Sci
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101545951

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
03 Apr 2024
Historique:
received: 14 01 2024
accepted: 01 03 2024
medline: 5 4 2024
pubmed: 5 4 2024
entrez: 5 4 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Chemodivergent construction of structurally distinct heterocycles from the same precursors by adjusting specific reaction parameters is an emergent area of organic synthesis; yet, understanding of the processes that underpin the reaction divergence is lacking, preventing the development of new synthetic methods by systematically harnessing key mechanistic effects. We describe herein cesium carbonate-promoted oxadiaza excision cross-coupling reactions of β-ketoesters with 1,2,3-triazine 1-oxides that form pyridones in good to high yields, instead of the sole formation of pyridines when the same reaction is performed in the presence of other alkali metal carbonates or organic bases. The reaction can be further extended to the construction of synthetically challenging pyridylpyridones. A computational study comparing the effect of cesium and sodium ions in the oxadiaza excision cross-coupling reactions reveals that the cesium-coordinated species changes the reaction preference from attack at the ketone carbonyl to attack at the ester carbon due to metal ion-specific transition state conformational accommodation, revealing a previously unexplored role of cesium ions that may facilitate the development of chemodivergent approaches to other heterocyclic systems.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38577370
doi: 10.1039/d4sc00316k
pii: d4sc00316k
pmc: PMC10988617
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

5277-5283

Informations de copyright

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

There are no conflicts to declare.

Auteurs

Soumen Biswas (S)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

William B Hughes (WB)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Luca De Angelis (L)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Graham C Haug (GC)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Ramon Trevino (R)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Seth O Fremin (SO)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Hadi D Arman (HD)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Oleg V Larionov (OV)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Michael P Doyle (MP)

Department of Chemistry, The University of Texas at San Antonio One UTSA Circle San Antonio TX 78249 USA oleg.larionov@utsa.edu michael.doyle@utsa.edu.

Classifications MeSH