Radical aryl migration enables diversity-oriented synthesis of structurally diverse medium/macro- or bridged-rings

Lei Li(Southern University of Science and Technology), Zhong‐Liang Li(Southern University of Science and Technology), Fuli Wang(Southern University of Science and Technology), Zhen Guo(Shanxi University), Yong‐Feng Cheng(Southern University of Science and Technology), Na Wang(Shanxi University), Xiaowu Dong(Zhejiang University), Chao Fang(Southern University of Science and Technology), Jingjiang Liu(Southern University of Science and Technology), Chunhui Hou(Southern University of Science and Technology), Bin Tan(Southern University of Science and Technology), Xin‐Yuan Liu(Southern University of Science and Technology)
Nature Communications
December 22, 2016
Cited by 192Open Access
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Abstract

Medium-sized and medium-bridged rings are attractive structural motifs in natural products and therapeutic agents. Due to the unfavourable entropic and/or enthalpic factors with these ring systems, their efficient construction remains a formidable challenge. To address this problem, we herein disclose a radical-based approach for diversity-oriented synthesis of various benzannulated carbon- and heteroatom-containing 8-11(14)-membered ketone libraries. This strategy involves 1,4- or 1,5-aryl migration triggered by radical azidation, trifluoromethylation, phosphonylation, sulfonylation, or perfluoroalkylation of unactivated alkenes followed by intramolecular ring expansion. Demonstration of this method as a highly flexible tool for the construction of 37 synthetically challenging medium-sized and macrocyclic ring scaffolds including bridged rings with diverse functionalities and skeletons is highlighted. Some of these products showed potent inhibitory activity against the cancer cell or derivative of human embryonic kidney line in preliminary biological studies. The mechanism of this novel strategy is investigated by control experiments and DFT calculations.


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