Guang-Qiang
Xu
,
Guo-Qiang
Lin
and
Bing-Feng
Sun
*
CAS Key Laboratory of Synthetic Chemistry of Natural Substances, Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry, 345 Lingling Road, Shanghai 200032, China. E-mail: bfsun@sioc.ac.cn
First published on 7th July 2017
The asymmetric total synthesis of (−)-patchouli alcohol was accomplished in a concise manner. Key reactions include a highly diastereo- and enantioselective formal organocatalytic [4 + 2] cycloaddition reaction, a radical denitration reaction, and an oxidative carboxylation reaction. The formal synthesis of norpatchoulenol was achieved as well.
The retrosynthetic analysis of 1 is depicted in Scheme 1. In the light of Bertrand's procedure,9g an intramolecular reductive radical coupling of 4 was envisioned to accomplish the target molecule. The MOM-protected carbinol in 4 could be traced back to a carboxylic acid group and further to a furan ring, thereby defining 59j and 6 as successive precursors. By incorporating a nitro group into the framework, the key intermediate 7 was envisaged and a denitration reaction could convert 7 to 6. Based on the formal organocatalytic [4 + 2] cycloaddition reaction developed by us and later successfully applied in natural product synthesis,10 compound 7 would be assembled from the reaction of 8 and 9.
The synthetic journey commenced with the execution of the critical [4 + 2] reaction of 8 and 9 (Scheme 2). The one-pot reaction of 8 and 9 was first catalyzed by 5 mol% 10 before being treated with 0.3 equivalents of DBU at room temperature, providing 7 in 61% yield and 94% ee with a diastereomeric ratio of 20/1 (Scheme 2).
Mechanistically, this [4 + 2] reaction proceeded in two steps (Scheme 3). In the first step, 7 may form a complex with 10via hydrogen bonding interactions, thereby discriminating the two faces of the reactive enol. The nitroolefin approaches the enol selectively from the less hindered α-face with the substituents of the two bond-forming carbons positioned in a staggered arrangement (11), delivering 12. In the second step, when DBU is used as the base, 13 might be operative to minimize the steric repulsion between the nitro and the phenyl groups, leading to the formation of 7 as the major product. Remarkably, this reaction could be readily scaled up to a ten-gram scale.
Scheme 3 Proposed stereocontrol model for the formal [4 + 2] cycloaddition reaction of 8 and 9 catalyzed by 10. |
The strategic incorporation of the nitro group into the skeleton enabled us to assemble the bicyclic framework efficiently in a highly enantioselective manner. The key denitration was next investigated. As listed in Table 1, the conversion of 5 to 8 was examined with various solvents and temperatures. The optimal set of conditions involved AIBN/n-Bu3SnH in mesitylene at 150 °C that provided 14 in 77% yield after a reaction time of less than half an hour (entry 4).
Entry | Conditions | Eq. (n-Bu3SnH) | Yield (%) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Toluene, 110 °C, 10 h | 2.5 | No reaction |
2 | Xylenes, 120 °C, 10 h | 2.5 | No reaction |
3 | Mesitylene, 150 °C, 10 h | 2.5 | 50 |
4 | Mesitylene, 150 °C, 25 min | 5 | 77 |
With the chiral [2.2.2] bicyclic skeleton 14 in hand, we proceeded to the next synthetic stage (Scheme 2). Reduction of the keto ester 8 with LAH followed by oxidation with DMP afforded the keto aldehyde 15 in 84% overall yield. Compound 15 was deoxygenated to give 16 in an overall yield of 70% via a two-step sequence involving thioacetalization with ethanedithiol and the succeeding desulfurization with RANEY® nickel. The geminal dimethyl groups were next installed by treating 16 with NaNH2 and CH3I to give 6 in 71% yield. The oxidation of 6 with NaIO4 in the presence of a catalytic amount of RuO2·H2O (1 mol%) in CCl4/MeCN/H2O underwent smoothly to afford the carboxylic acid 5 in a yield of 77%. Compound 5 was converted into 17 in 82% overall yield via the addition of lithium dimethylcuprate to the preformed acid chloride.9j The Grignard addition of vinylmagnesium bromide occurred on the less hindered carbonyl group in 17 providing the tertiary allyl alcohol in a chemoselective manner. Exposure of the resultant tertiary allyl alcohol to methoxymethyl chloride (MOMCl) and diisopropylethylamine (DIPEA) in CH2Cl2 at 0 °C for 24 hours gave 4 in 76% overall yield.11 The eventual single electron mediated 6-endo-trig cyclization reaction using Bertrand's conditions successfully delivered the annulated product which upon a catalytic hydrogenation reaction on Pd/C engendered 1 in 38% overall yield. The specific optical rotation of the synthetic sample ([α]24D −95.0 (c = 0.4, CHCl3)) matched that of the natural compound ([α]20D −94.6 (c = 1.21, CHCl3)).9e
An alternative strategy involving SmI2 mediated radical cyclization was attempted (Scheme 4). Thus, compound 5 was transformed into the vinyl ketone 18 through a Stille coupling reaction. To our disappointment, treatment of 18 with SmI2 did not generate the anticipated intramolecular reductive cyclization product 19 (Scheme 4). Instead, the dimerization product was identified by LRMS and HRMS techniques. Considering that the lower carbonyl group was trapped by two neighboring quaternary carbon centers, the grave steric hindrance might account for the deviation of the cyclization reaction.
Eventually, compound 5 was employed to synthesize 20via a redox procedure in a yield of 78% (Scheme 5). Compound 20 was a known synthetic precursor to norpatchoulenol (2).12
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Experimental procedures, spectroscopic data, and copies of 1H, 13C and 2D NMR spectra. See DOI: 10.1039/c7qo00459a |
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