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  • Antibiotics  (3)
  • Asymmetric synthesis  (3)
  • Natural products  (3)
  • Synthetic methods  (3)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Weinheim : Wiley-Blackwell
    Liebigs Annalen 1999 (1999), S. 335-360 
    ISSN: 1434-193X
    Keywords: 2-tert-Butylhydropyrimidinones ; 3-Aminocarboxylic acid derivatives ; Cyclic imino esters ; Lithium enaminates ; Alkylations ; β-Amino acids ; Asymmetric synthesis ; Kinetic resolution ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: -Racemic and enantiopure 2-tert-butyltetrahydropyrimidinones (from pivalaldehyde and 3-aminocarboxylic acids) are converted to Alloc-, Boc-, and Z-protected cyclic imino esters (7-10, Schemes 2-4). These are deprotonated to Li enaminates (K, L). Reactions with electrophiles (prim., sec. alkyl, allyl, benzyl, propargyl halides, aldehydes, imines, enoates) give good yields and are highly diastereoselective (products 11-42, Schemes 5-10). A two-step cleavage (removal of protecting group and hydrolysis) under very mild conditions converts the heterocyclic products to α-branched β-amino acid methyl esters (43-61, Schemes 11-13). The structure of the products is determined by NMR spectroscopy (Figure 1), by chemical correlation (Scheme 14), and by X-ray analysis (Figure 2, 3, 7, Table 1). A structure of the Li enaminates is proposed (Figure 4). Mechanistic models are derived for the reactions occurring with formation of two stereogenic centers with relative topicity like (Figures 5, 6).
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1434-193X
    Keywords: (S)-4,4,4-Trifluoro-3-hydroxybutanoic acid ; 2-Trifluoromethyl-3-hydroxypropanoic acid (F3-Roche acid) ; Chiral CF3-containing synthetic building blocks ; Natural products ; Cyclizations ; Olfactory comparison ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The natural products pyrenophorin (1a) and citronellol (2a), in which CH3 groups are replaced by CF3, were synthesized in enantiomerically pure form from simple four-carbon trifluorohydroxy acids (obtained by resolution). The cyclizations of analogous CH3 and CF3 seco acids (cf. 9) to give pyrenophorin derivatives require different methodologies; the F6 derivative 10a could be obtained in only very poor yield; in contrast to pyrenophorin. Most surprisingly, F6-pyrenophorin (1d) has an extremely poor solubility in common organic solvents, and has essentially no antimicrobial activity (see Table 2). The synthesis of F3-citronellol is the first application of an enantiopure F3-Roche acid (12) as a synthetic builiding block (see its derivatives 17-23). An olfactory comparison of F3-citronellol [(R)-(+)-2b] with citronellol and ent-citronellol (Scheme 6) shows that the fluorine derivative has a “very metallic, aggressive” character and lacks totally the “sweetness” of (R)-(+)- and (S)-(-)-2a. A number of generally useful, CF3-substituted electrophilic (iodides 4, 18, 37, tosylates 19, 33, aldehydes 5, 29, 39) and nucleophilic (Li dithiane precursor of 5, Li compounds 20, 38) reagents are described for the first time.Supporting information for this article is available on the WWW under //http://www.wiley-vch.de/contents/jc_2046/1999/99137_s.pdf or from the author.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Weinheim : Wiley-Blackwell
    Liebigs Annalen 1994 (1994), S. 731-738 
    ISSN: 0170-2041
    Keywords: Myxovirescin ; Myxococcus virescens ; Macrolides ; Julia olefination ; Yamaguchi macrolactonization ; Myxovirescins M2 and A1 ; Lactones ; Lactams ; Antibiotics ; Chemistry ; Organic Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The last steps of a chiral building-block approach to the synthesis of myxovirescins A1, A2 and M2 are described. The “northwestern” parts, hydroxy sulfones (see preceding paper), and the “southeastern” parts, hydroxy aldehyde derivatives (first paper in this series), of the target molecules (Scheme 1) are first coupled by a Julia olefination (60-70% yield); the resulting linear intermediates are oxidized (CH2OH → CO2H) and deprotected for the final Yamaguchi macrolactonization (85-90% yield, Scheme 2). Deprotection by hydrolysis of three different acetal moieties and chromatographic purification gave 20-mg amounts of synthetic myxovirescins M2 and A1 (Scheme 3) which were identical in all respects with authentic samples isolated and supplied to us by the team at the Gesellschaft für Biotechnologische Forschung in Braunschweig. - The total syntheses of the macrocyclic antibiotics consist of 62 and 66 steps, and the longest linear sequence of 25 steps was carried out in an overall yield of 2.5 and 0.85% (over 85 and 80% each step), respectively.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 0170-2041
    Keywords: Myxovirescins ; Myxococcus virescens ; Antibiotics ; Macrolides ; Lactones ; Lactams ; Iodine-lithium exchange ; Michael additions ; Chemistry ; Organic Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The part of the target molecules myxovirescins A and M containing the atoms C(15)-C(28) is described in this paper (for retrosynthetic analysis see Scheme 1). There are three stereogenic centers which are incorporated by using (S)-2-hydroxymethyl-butanoic acid and the appropriate enantiopure diastereoisomeric 2,4-dimethyl-glutaric acids as building blocks (Schemes 2-4). These are joined by the achiral unit 4-oxo-hex-5-enoic acid. The key steps of the assembly are a cuprate Michael addition (Scheme 5) and a nucleophilic addition of a Li derivative to an aldehyde (Scheme 6). In both cases the organometallic reagents are generated by I/Li exchange using two equiv. of tBuLi. The chiral building blocks are prepared by yeast reduction of ethyl 2-formyl-butanoate and by resolution of the 2,4-dimethyl-pentanedioic acid monomethyl ester with phenethylamine; both enantiomers derived from the meso-2, 4-dimethyl-glutaric acid are converted to the same aldehyde (5a; “meso-trick”, Schemes 3 and 4). The “northwestern” parts for the final synthesis are actually hydroxy sulfones (2 in Scheme 6), the termini of which are ready for Julia coupling and oxidation to a carboxylic acid group. The preparation of the intermediates on gram scales is described and all new compounds are fully characterized by their physical properties, by spectroscopy (IR, 1H- and 13C-NMR spectra) and by elemental analysis.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Weinheim : Wiley-Blackwell
    Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English 27 (1988), S. 1624-1654 
    ISSN: 0570-0833
    Keywords: Lithium enolates ; Enolates ; Peptides ; C-C coupling ; Natural products ; Alkylation ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The chemistry of lithium enolates is used to demonstrate that complex structures held together by noncovalent bonds (“supramolecules”) may dramatically influence the result of seemingly simple standard reactions of organic synthesis. Detailed structural data have been obtained by crystallographic investigations of numerous Li enolates and analogous derivatives. The most remarkable features of these structures are aggregation to give dimers, tetramers, and higher oligomers, complexation of the metal centers by solvent molecules and chelating ligands, and hydrogen-bond formation of weak acids such as secondary amines with the anionoid part of the enolates. The presence in nonpolar solvents of the same supramolecules has been established by NMR-spectroscopic, by osmometric, and by calorimetric measurements. The structures and the order of magnitude of the interactions have also been reproduced by ab-initio calculations. Most importantly, supramolecules may be product-forming species in synthetic reactions of Li enolates. A knowledge of the complex structures of Li enolates also improves our understanding of their reactivity. Thus, simple procedures have been developed to avoid complications caused by secondary amines, formed concomitantly with Li enolates by the common methods. Mixtures of achiral Li enolates and chiral Li amides can give rise to enantioselective reactions. Solubilization by LiX is observed, especially of multiply lithiated compounds. This effect is exploited for alkylations of N-methylglycine (sarcosine) CH2 groups in open-chain oligopeptides. Thus, the cyclic undecapeptide cyclosporine, a potent immunosuppressant, is converted into a THF-soluble hexalithio derivative (without epimerization of stereogenic centers) and alkylated by a variety of electrophiles in the presence of either excess lithiumdiisopropyl amide or of up to 30 equivalents of lithium chloride. Depending on the nature of the LiX additive, a new stereogenic center of (R) or (S) configuration is created in the peptide chain by this process. A structure-activity correlation in the series of cyclosporine derivatives thus available is discussed.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 0570-0833
    Keywords: Nucleophilic reactions ; Synthetic methods ; Selectivity ; Organotitanium compounds ; Organozirconium compounds ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: The addition of carbanionic organometallic compounds (usually RLi or RMgX) to a carbonyl group - a key step in numerous syntheses - is not always straightforward. Depending on the substrate, various complications and problems may arise, but in many cases these can be remedied by addition of (RO)3TiCl, (RO)3ZrCl or (R2N)3TiX to the classic lithium and Grignard reagents. This usually leads to formation of stable organo-titanium and -zirconium compounds which react highly selectively with carbonyl groups. For example, CH3Ti(OiPr)3 reacts five orders of magnitude faster with benzaldehyde than with acetophenone at room temperature; reagents of the type RTi(OiPr)3 add smoothly to nitro-, ido-, or cyano-subsituted benzaldehyde, and the reactions may be performed in chlorinated solvents or acetonitrile; the zirconium analogues have particularly low basicity and add in high yield to α- and β-tetralones or to substrates containing a nitroaldol group; the inclusion of chiral OR* groups gives enantioselective reagents (up to 90% ee); allylic (RO3)Ti- derivatives react only at the more highly substituted carbon atom and, in addition, react diastereoselectively (up to 98% ds) with unsymmetrical ketones. Finally, titanium reagents have also been found to effect novel transformations such as direct geminal dialkylation (C=O→CMe2) and alkylative amination [C=O→CR(NR2′)]. The modification and finetuning (“taming”) of carbonyl reactivity obtainable by use of the new reagents is not dearly bought; starting materials are the cheap and harmless “titanates”, “zirconates” and the corresponding tetrachlorides.
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  • 7
    ISSN: 0170-2041
    Keywords: Myxovirescins ; Myxococeus virescens MX v48 ; Suzuki coupling ; Macrolides ; Lactones ; Lactams ; 1,3-Dioxolanes ; 1,3-Dithianes ; Antibiotics ; Chemistry ; Organic Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In this and the following two papers the synthesis of myxovirescins A1, A2 and M2, 28-membered macrocyclic lactam-lactones with antibiotic acitivity, is described. A retrosynthetic analysis of the myxovirescin family of ca. 30 target molecules leads to a strategy which could be applied to approximately half of them by slight variations of the building blocks used (Schemes 1-3 and following paper). The southeastern part of the molecule, containing the atoms O(1)-C(14) of myxovirescins A and M is described in this first paper (Scheme 3). The assembly is achieved by using the following appropriately protected units: (S)-2-hydroxy-pentanoic acid, ([1,3]dithian-2-ylmethyl)-amine (Scheme 4), the triflate of (S,R)-2,2-dimethyl-5-vinyl-[1,3]dioxolan-4-ylmethanol, (E)-3-bromo-2-buten-1-ol, and (E)-2-bromo-2-buten-1,4-diol (Scheme 5), the starting materials for these being malic acid, aminoacetaldehyde, ribose, crotyl alcohol and butyne-1,4-diol. The building blocks are put together by using the following key steps: Kolbe electrolysis, amide formation, lithiodithiane alkylation, and Suzuki coupling (Schemes 6 and 8). The only newly created chirality center [C(6) of the target molecules] is generated stereoselectively by a Li-selectride reduction/Mitsunobu inversion (Table 1, Scheme 7). The termini of the O(1)-C(14) fragment (2 in Scheme 8) carry a (protected) hydroxy acid and an aldehyde group for the Julia coupling and lactonization, respectively, in the final steps of the synthesis. All intermediates are fully characterized. The X-ray crystal structures of two compounds prepared for incorporation as N(4)-C(11) and as C(12)-C(14) of the target molecules are also described (Figures 1 and 2).
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  • 8
    ISSN: 0570-0833
    Keywords: asymmetric syntheses ; chiral synthetic building blocks ; enolates ; lithium compounds ; Asymmetric synthesis ; Chiral building blocks ; Enols ; Lithium ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: In order to replace a substituent at a single stereogenic center of a chiral molecule without racemization, a temporary center of chirality is first generated diastereoselectively, the original tetragonal center is then trigonalized by removal of a substituent, a new ligand is introduced, again diastereoselectively, and finally, the temporary center is removed. By means of these four steps (the “Self-Regeneration of Stereocenters”, SRS), 2- and 3-amino-, hydroxy-, and sulfanylcarboxylic acids have been successfully alkylated with formation of tertiary carbon centers and without the use of a chiral auxiliary. Use of this methodology has allowed the potential of these inexpensive chiral building blocks to be expanded considerably. This article aims to demonstrate (using, in part, examples from natural product syntheses) that chiral heterocyclic acetals with enamine, enol ether, enolate, dienolate, enoate, radical, and acyliminium functionalities and also those that are potential reactants for Michael additions and pericyclic processes (for example, electron-rich and electronpoor dienophiles and dienes) are now easily accessible, more often than not, in both enantiomeric forms. Stereogenic nitrogen atoms of aziridines, boron atoms of cyclic or linear systems, and stereogenic planes of π-complexes can also be used as the temporary chirality element in other approaches to the realization of the SRS principle. Enantiomerically pure derivatives of, for example, glycine, hydroxy- and sulfanylacetic acid, 3-aminopropanoic acid, and 3-oxocarboxylic acids can be prepared by resolution of racemic mixtures via diastereoisomeric salts or by chromatography on a chiral column. Hence, the extensive reactivity of compounds developed to test the SRS principle and, above all, the outstanding stereoselectivities of the reactions can be put to good use even when no suitable chiral precursor is available - even though this amounts to an abandonment of the principle! The readily available 2-tert-butyl-1,3-imidazolidin-3-one, -oxazolid-in-5-one, -dioxin-3-one, and -hydropyrimidinone (all of which contain a single stereogenic center at the acetal C atom) can thus be used in the preparation of a vast range of 2-amino- and 3-hydroxycarboxylic acids, and no chiral auxiliary has to be removed or regenerated during these procedures. (One example is the synthesis of 4-fluoro-MeBmt, a derivative of the C9 amino acid found in cyclosporin.) In the final chapter we will discuss the most useful findings gained from investigations into both the self-regeneration of stereocenters and the use of chiral acetals in the synthesis of enantiomerically pure compounds (EPC synthesis): the formation and characteristics of complexes obtained from Li-enolates and other Li compounds with secondary amines; the application of α-alkoxy and α-amino-Li-alkoxides as in situ bases and sources of aldehydes in C—C bond forming reactions with unstable enolates or nitronates; the significance of A1,3 effects on the stereochemical course of nucleophilic, radical, and electrophilic reactions of N-acylated heterocycles and homo- or heterocyclic carboxylic ester enolates; and the effects of the amide protecting group on the reactivity of neighboring centers and on the stereoselectivity of the reactions at those centers. At the end of this article we have included an appendix containing tables, which are intended to summarize all the examples known in as complete a fashion as possible.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Weinheim : Wiley-Blackwell
    Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English 29 (1990), S. 1320-1367 
    ISSN: 0570-0833
    Keywords: Synthetic methods ; Future of chemistry ; Chemistry today ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: This review article is an attempt to sketch the important developments in organic synthesis during the past 25 years, and to project them into the future. - The primary motivations that once induced chemists to undertake natural product syntheses no longer exist. Instead of target structures themselves, molecular function and activity now occupy center stage. Thus, inhibitors with an affinity for all the important natural enzymes and receptors have moved to the fore as potential synthetic targets. - New synthetic methods are most likely to be encountered in the fields of biological and organometallic chemistry. Enzymes, whole organisms, and cell cultures for enan-tioselective synthesis of specific substances have already been incorporated into the synthetic arsenals of both research laboratories and industry. In addition, designing appropriate analogues to transition states and intermediates should soon make it possible, with the aid of the mammalian immune system and gene technology, to prepare catalytically active monoclonal antibodies for almost any reaction; perhaps, more important, such processes will increasingly come to be applied on an industrial scale.-The discovery of truly new reactions is likely to be limited to the realm of transition-metal organic chemistry, which will almost certainly provide us with additional “miracle reagents” in the years to come. As regards main group elements (“organoelemental chemistry”), we can surely anticipate further stepwise improvements in experimental procedures and the broader application of special techniques, leading to undreamed of efficiency and selectivity with respect to known procedures. The primary center of attention for all synthetic methods will continue to shift toward catalytic and enantioselective variants; indeed, it will not be long before such modifications will be available with every standard reaction for converting achiral educts into chiral products. Analysis, spectroscopy, structure determination, theory, and electronic data processing have all become indispensable in organic synthesis. Only with the aid of these “tools” will the methods of organic chemistry permit selective syntheses of ever larger and more complex systems on both the molecular and supramolecular levels. - Examples have been introduced throughout this discourse to illustrate its many themes, and a very comprehensive bibliography should help the interested reader become more familiar with important keywords and authors.[The list of references is also available upon request in the form of a Microsoft Word© file on diskette.] - This article will have served its intended purpose if it changes the minds of some of those who claim organic chemistry is a mature science, and if it causes students to discover the vitality and forcefulness with which organic synthesis is meeting new challenges and attempting to fulfill old dreams.Er zeigt uns so in seinem wissenschaftlichen Leben, daß die Chemie nicht von einer Theorie, nicht von einer Methode aus zu erschöpfen ist, und daß Erkenntnis und Nutzen in ihr untrennbar verwoben sind.“He showed us through his scientific life that chemistry cannot be exploited fully with the aid of a single theory or a single methodology, and that it is a field in which knowledge and application are inextricably linked.” G. Bugge: Das Buch der großen Chemiker, Vol. 2, 4th reprint, Verlag Chemie, Weinheim 1974.R. Koch, writing about Louis Pasteur
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  • 10
    ISSN: 0570-0833
    Keywords: Poly(hydroxyalkanoates) ; Natural products ; Degradation ; Plastics ; Chemistry ; General Chemistry
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Along with polyisoprenoids, polypeptides, polysaccharides, and polynucleotides, Nature contains a further group of biopolymers, the poly(hydroxyalkanoates). The commonest member of this group, poly[(R)-3-hydroxybutyrate] P(3-HB), had been identified by Lemoigne as early as the 1920s, as a storage substance in the microorganism Bacillus megaterium made up of more than 12000 (3-HB) units. However, the widespread distribution and significance of these biopolymers has only become clear recently. The work of Reusch, in particular, has shown that low molecular weight P(3-HB) (100-200 3-HB units) occurs in the cell membranes of prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. The function of P(3-HB) in the latter sources is largely unknown; it has been proposed that a complex of P(3-HB) and calcium polyphosphate acts as an ion channel through the membrane. Indeed, it has even been speculated that P(3-HB) plays a role in transport of DNA through the cell wall. In the present article, the following subjects will be discussed: metabolism of P(3-HB) and analogous polyesters in the synthesis and degradation of storage materials; P(3-HB) as a starting material for chiral synthetic building blocks; synthesis of cyclic oligomers (oligolides) of up to ten 3-HB units, and their crystal structure; high molecular weight bio-copolymers of hydroxybutyrate and hydroxyvalerate (BIOPOL) as biologically degradable plastics; nonbiological production of polyhydroxyalkanoates from 3-hydroxy carboxylic acids and the corresponding β-lactones; specific synthesis of linear oligomers with a narrow molecular weight distribution, consisting of about 100 (R)-3-hydroxybutyrate units, by using an exponential coupling procedure; structure of the polyesters, and a comparison with other polymers; the experimental results which led to the postulation of a P(3-HB) ion channel through the cell wall; modeling of P(3-HB) helices of various diameters, by using the parameters obtained from the crystal structures of oligolides; formation of a crown ester complex and ion transport experiments with the triolide of 3-HB. The article describes one example of the contributions that synthetic organic chemists can make to important biological problems in an interdisciplinary framework.
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