Hindawi Publishing Corporation
ISRN Organic Chemistry
Volume 2014, Article ID 531695, 29 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/531695
Review Article
Asymmetric Organocatalysis at the Service of Medicinal Chemistry
Alfredo Ricci
Department of Industrial Chemistry "Toso Montanari", School of Science, University of Bologna, V. Risorgimento 4, 40136 Bologna, Italy
Correspondence should be addressed to Alfredo Ricci; alfredomarco.ricci@unibo.it Received 4 December 2013; Accepted 30 December 2013; Published 11 March 2014 Academic Editors: J. M. Campagne, G. Li, J. C. Menendez, and L. Wang
Copyright © 2014 Alfredo Ricci. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
The application of the most representative and up-to-date examples of homogeneous asymmetric organocatalysis to the synthesis of molecules of interest in medicinal chemistry is reported. The use of different types of organocatalysts operative via noncovalent and covalent interactions is critically reviewed and the possibility of running some of these reactions on large or industrial scale is described. A comparison between the organo- and metal-catalysed methodologies is offered in several cases, thus highlighting the merits and drawbacks of these two complementary approaches to the obtainment of very popular on market drugs or of related key scaffolds.
1. Introduction
Over the past ten years, the field of enantioselective organocatalysis has had a significant impact on chemical synthesis [1, 2]. Currently, asymmetric organocatalysis is recognized [3] as an independent synthetic tool besides asymmetric metallic catalysis and enzymatic catalysis for the synthesis of chiral organic molecules. Multiple advantages compared with the other two catalytic domains are the reasons for the rapid growth and acceptance of organocatalysis. In general, organocatalysts are air- and moisture-stable and, thus, inert-equipments such as vacuum lines or glove boxes are not necessary. They are easy to handle even on large scale and relatively less toxic compared to transition metals. Moreover, frequentlythe reactions are conducted under mild conditions and high concentrations thus avoiding the use of large amounts of solvents and minimizing waste.
The organocatalysts can be classified by means of their interactions with the substrate or "mode of action" as covalent or noncovalent catalysts (Figure 1).
In covalent organocatalysis, a new covalent bond between the catalysts and the substrate is formed as in the case of aminocatalysis [4] and carbenes [5], leading to a strong interaction between the substrate and the reagent in the reaction.
In the case of noncovalent interactions between the substrate and the catalyst, the activation of the substrate occurs via weak binding exemplified by hydrogen bonding [6] or ionic interaction as in the case of phase transfer catalysis [7].
The field of asymmetric organocatalysis has enjoyed phenomenal growth in the past 15 years [8-10] and during the "golden age" [11] of organocatalysis many researchers from academia and chemical industry were involved in this field, with most efforts focused on the development of novel organocatalysts, new reactivities and asymmetric methodologies. Moreover current developments in the field of the synthesis of structurally complex and/or polyfunctionalized molecules indicate that chemists have adopted the fundamental principles of biosynthesis as synthetic strategic key elements for their synthetic approaches [12]. Among these, cascade reactions [13,14] employing a single catalyst capable of promoting each single step have gained in the recent years an important role in the efficient and rapid generation of molecules with complex architectures generally correlated with specificity of action and potentially useful biological properties [15]. Organocatalysts turn out to be particularly favourable when used in catalytic cascade reactions because they allow distinct modes of activation, which can often be combined [16,17].
Organocatalysis
Noncovalent organocatalysis weak interactions
Covalent organocatalysis new covalent bond formation
Ph OTMS
Amines
Ionic interactions
Carbenes
Figure 1: General classification of the activation mode of several representative classes of molecules in organocatalysis.
Despite their great development, the application of organocatalytic methodologies to the synthesis of active compounds in medicinal chemistry in the past years has rarely been reported. However, in most recent years organocatalytic methodologies for the synthesis of enantioenriched molecules for medicinal chemistry purposes have been gaining momentum being particularly attractive for the preparation of compounds that do not tolerate metal contamination. In academia, several groups have made a remarkable effort to show the great applicability of organocatalysts to the total synthesis of bioactive natural products [18] and of drugs [19] most of them currently available in the market such as oseltamivir, warfarin, paroxetine, baclofen, and maraviroc. These efforts mainly focused on the removal of barriers for scale-up by addressing issues such as catalyst loading, product inhibition, substrate scope, and bulk availability of designer catalysts which have drawn the attention of the companies [20,21] that have begun to incorporate organocatalysis as a synthetic tool in some industrial scale processes [22,23].
In this review some of the most recent representative applications of asymmetric organocatalysis to medicinal chemistry will be highlighted. Not only the access to market available drugs but also the access to drug candidates, to medicinal scaffolds, and to promising new compounds whose biological profile has not yet been fully explored will be reviewed. In some cases, a comparison between organo-and metal-catalysed methodologies aimed at the obtainment of the same medicinal targets will be reported and a few
interesting industrial examples of the use of organocatalysis in medicinal chemistry taken from the literature will be discussed as well.
2. Discussion
2.1. Noncovalent Organocatalysis
2.1.1. Hydrogen Bonding Catalysis. This ubiquitous interaction is one of the central forces in Nature. As an individual, hydrogen bonds are feeble and quite easy to break. However when acting together they become much stronger and lean each other. This phenomenon is called "cooperativity" (1 + 1is more than 2). Some of the many vital functions that hydrogen bonds fulfil in biological systems are shown in Figure 2.
The simultaneous donation of two hydrogen bonds leads to a highly successful strategy for electrophilic activation, increased strength, and directionalityrelative to single hydrogen bonds. Therefore asymmetric catalysis via noncovalent bond interactions such as hydrogen bonding turns out to be a powerful synthetic strategy.
Original achievements regarding bis-hydrogen bond complexes have been reported through the years. It is worth noting that this two-point binding is a powerful strategy both in metal-centered catalysis and in organocatalysis as shown in Figure 3.
However, whereas coordination to a chiral Lewis acid imposes limitations upon substrate structure, any Lewis
Organization and base pairing of DNA and RNA
Secondary and tertiary structure of proteins
Catalytic cycle of various enzymes
Maintenance of the form and the function of most biological systems
Figure 2: Some of the vital functions that hydrogen bonds fulfil in biological systems.
N N' H H
Kelly's bisphenol
3 / \ OO
Etter's urea
Jorgensen's hydration model
NN I I HH
Figure 3: Original achievements regarding bis-hydrogen-bonded complexes.
base is in principle capable of engaging bifurcated hydrogen bonds so that this catalytic strategy has potential as a general paradigm for synthesis. Thiourea catalysts designed by Sigman and Jacobsen [24] and Corey and Grogan [25] as well as minimal peptides introduced by Davie et al. [26] appeared together with many others during the last decade; they all fall into this class of catalysts. These structures are highly modular and can be readily modified and finely tuned. Many organocatalysts have been recognized to be reminiscent of natural enzymes in their mode of action and substrate interaction/activation [27]. Their use in several bioinspired methodologies has led to envisaging efficient synthetic routes leading among the others to the obtainment of target compounds of interest in medicinal chemistry.
In the biosynthesis of fatty acids and polyketides the active site of polyketide synthase (PKS) clearly highlights the key role displayed by hydrogen bonds (Scheme 1) [28].
The possibility of mimicking the hydrogen bond interactions of PKS's with a simple organic molecule ("hunt for smallest enzymes" according to Schreiner) has been shown
feasible by using double hydrogen bond-based organocata-lysts. The potential of this strategy has been appreciated by synthetic chemists for many years and has been widely used in asymmetric catalysis [29].
The application of the enantioselective decarboxylative reaction of malonic half thioesters (MAHTs) to the synthesis of medicinal targets is exemplified by the synthesis of GABA receptor antagonists 3 and 4 using I and II as the organocatalysts (Scheme 2). The y-nitrothioesters 1 and 2 easily achievable through these organocatalytic approaches occurring under mild conditions and tolerating both moisture and air are versatile building blocks for further modifications. Among them the formation of y-butyrolactams by reduction of the nitro group followed by intramolecular cyclization leads to intermediates en route to the antidepressant (R)-Rolipram [30] 3 and to gram scale synthesis and transformation to (S)-baclofen-HCl 4, a GABA receptor antagonist used in the treatment of spasticity [31].
Several enantioselective syntheses of GABA receptors have been reported based on the use of a metal/ligand assembly as the catalyst system. So far (Scheme 3) the Rh(acac)-catalyzed asymmetric 1,4-additions of arylboronic acids to 4-aminobut-2,3-enoic acid derivatives led to (-)-(R)-baclofen ent-4 and to (-)-(R)-rolipram 3 in high yields and excellent enantioselectivities [32]. However the use of inert atmosphere (argon) and the to some extent difficult purification by flash chromatography prevent this methodology to be easily applied on large scale.
An alternative metal-catalysed system [33] in which the potential for scale-up is clear is shown in Scheme 4 and appears highly competitive with the organocatalysed approach. The chiral Lewis acid-catalyzed Michael addition of diethyl malonate to fully elaborated nitrostyrene 5 allows the nitroester 6 that upon reduction and saponification leads to the target compound 3. Both enantiomers of rolipram 3 can be accessed in a total of six steps and at 10 gram scale with excellent overall yields of 76% and without chromatography.
The use of magnesium is preferable to many other metal catalysts since toxicity issues are avoided. The dependence on solvents such as chloroform does, however, raise in this method toxicological and environmental issues.
The range of applications of bioinspired decarboxylative reactions is witnessed by the very recent [34] hydrogen-bond directed enantioselective decarboxylative Mannich reaction of keto acids with ketimines. Under the action of saccharide-derived amino thioureas as chiral catalysts (III), this reaction that can be run on a gram scale without any detriment on the reaction outcome leads to the expected trifluoromethylated 3,4-dihydro-quinazolin-2(1H)-one rings in very high yields and up to 99% ee. The potential application of this decarboxylative Mannich reaction in the domain of pharmaceutics is demonstrated in a new and efficient and shortcut synthesis of the anti-HIV drug DPC083 7 shown in Scheme 5. Herein the crucial role of the hydrogen bond interactions in building a complex rigid architecture responsible for the high stereos-electivity is highlighted.
Hydrogen bond-based organocatalysis also plays a primary role in the synthesis of low molecular weight drug candidates. The aza-Henry reaction (nitro-Mannich reaction)
' ><+) „o^S
✓ Vf
- -H sO
N CoA H
N - y^yf
Axt-H zS O
-» r'V Y ^NO2
Scheme 1: Activation ofMAHT in the active of PKA synthase and in the chiral core ofthe organocatalyst.
- ^ O O MeO v +
82% yield, 90% ee 2
5 gr scale ci
67% yield 97% ee
Cat. II 5 mol% <-
X = H Y = Cl
Cat. I 20 mol% MeO
X = OBn Y = OMe
Up to 97% yield and 90% ee
Raney-Ni/H, H3PO4, 64%
cr ^ NH,/HCl 4-(S)-baclofen/HCl
// V/n^ MeO^fVT^
3-(R)-rolipram
Scheme 2: Synthesis of GABA receptors via hydrogen bonds directed organocatalysis mimicry of polyketide synthase.
(+)H3N-
2 M NaOH, MeOH, rt,
Cl(-)^ OH
R, R1 N
OMe Rh(acac)(C2 H4 )2 BINAP, base
B(OH)2 Dioxane/H,O R4'
Up to 96% yield
12 h, HCl, Et2O, rt, 24 h
TFA, CH2Cl2, rt, 2h
Et3N, toluene, rfx, 20 h
(R)-baclofen ent 4 Cl 80% overall yield 89% ee
(R)-rolipram 3 57% overall yield 84% ee
Scheme 3: Metal-catalysed synthesis of GABA receptors.
HO MeO
EtO v OEt
C4H9 O^^/"^'
5 Ligand (5.5 mol%) EtO, C
(R)-rolipram 3
Mg(OTf), (5 mol%) NMM (6 mol%) mol sieves, rt
CO,Et 95% yield on 10 g scale 96% ee
Ra-Ni/H, H3PO4
NaOH, TsOH 92% three steps
OC4 H9
Scheme 4: Scalable metal-catalysed synthesis of both enantiomers of rolipram.
OO II H
X OAc r
+ CF3 Cat., 10 mol%^ | Cl- , THF, :,0° C, 48 h
F3C« ^—F3 C ^NH V7 NaBH4Cl' 1,
N O MeOH, RT PMB
^O PMB (Z)-DPC 083 (1) ,,0-,30°C 26%, 96% ee
HMPA -> +
NO PMB
O (2) TFA, anisole Cl
11 .AA
PMB (E)-DPC 083 53%, 96% ee
Scheme 5: Hydrogen-bonding assembly between organocatalyst, ketimine, and ^-ketoacid in the preparation of the anti-HIV drug DPC 083.
was used by Xu and coworkers [35] for the short asymmetric synthesis of the chiral piperidine derivative CP-99,994 8 (Scheme 6). The previous asymmetric syntheses of this potent neurokin-1 receptor antagonist were mainly based on the use of metal complexes as catalysts but suffered from several drawbacks, for example, low overall yield and enantioselectivity or a lengthy synthetic route. Notably the organocatalysed Takemoto's synthesis proceeded in five steps without the need to separate the diastereomeric intermediates that were cyclized as a mixture. The catalyst employed was a chiral thiourea IV, which served as an activator of both the nitroalkane and imine reactants. The transition state is relatively complex and is dominated by hydrogen-bonding interactions.
The simultaneous donation of two hydrogen bonds has also proven to be a highly successful strategy for electrophilic activation in enzymes with an "oxyanion hole" having a postulated role in the stabilization of many high-energy tetrahedral intermediates [36]. It appears that living systems discovered and made use of these interactions in the ubiquitous useful ring-forming Diels-Alder reaction eons ago for the construction of complex natural products so that the prospect of discovering a Diels-Alderase mimic would be especially exciting. Following this concept and inspired by the antibody 13G5-catalyzed Diels-Alder cycloaddition of acrylamide with a carbamate (Scheme 7), taking place via a cooperative multiple hydrogen bond coordination to both diene and dienophile [37]; a catalytic asymmetric
MeO HN Ph
Cat IV 10 mol% -><
NO, CH,Cl,, -20°C 80%
95% ee
(i) TFA
MeO HN Ph
83% ee
Cat IV
cis/trans: 19/1
Reductive amination of o-MeOC6H4 CHO
H Ph OMe 75% 8 (-)-CP-99, 994
Scheme 6: Organocatalytic synthesis of CP-99,994 8, a neurokinin-1 receptor agonist.
Gly-193 Ser-195
^N^ ^N^ Serine protease
Oxyanion hole
57-His r3Or,
Asp-x102 H/R ^-
Gly-193 Ser-195 \ / \ / N^ N
57-His H R
Z "H-N
Ser-195
Asp-102 O
\—i ^-N. U /
v-N / o^
Ser-195
N(CH3)2
O Antibody 13G5
A --->
HN UAr pH 7.4
H2 O, 37° C
Asn-91L
L36-Tyr.
O^-O^Ar O-H--O. ^,N(CH3)2I _(-)
" 32 NH'Y"-Asp-50H
NHCO2CH2Ar CON(CH3)2
95% e.e.; 49: 1 d.r.
Scheme 7: Occurrence of the oxyanion hole in enzymatic processes.
cycloaddition of 3-vinylindoles with activated dienophiles has been recently reported. The synthetic elaboration of vinyl indole derivatives via cycloaddition appears highly promising in that it leads (Figure 4) to fused poly-heterocyclic ring systems otherwise not easily accessible like carbazoles and pyridocarbazoles with antibiotic and antitumor activities.
A scenario in which a suitable bifunctional acid-base organic catalyst (V) coordinates through H-bond interactions both diene and dienophile leading (Scheme 8) to a highly organized transition state has been designed [38] delivering in very high yields and excellent enantioselectiv-ities a wide range of indolines and tetracarbazoles common
scaffolds in a variety of biologically active and pharmacologically important alkaloids [39-41]. The synthetic potential of the cycloadducts is exemplified by the access to indoline 9, to tetrahydrocarbazole 10 with potent activity against human papillomaviruses [42] and to a precursor [43] of tubifolidine 11 a Strychnos alkaloid previously prepared using a nine-step synthesis (Scheme 9).
The combination of hydrogen bond-based organocatal-ysis and cascade reactions or one-pot processes in the synthesis of therapeutics is powerful and can be illustrated by the synthesis of the alkaloid (-)-epibatidine, developed by the Takemoto's group and based on an enantioselective
Synthetic elaboration of .-N
vinyl indole derivatives *
Cycloadditions
R,O OMe
-N Ph H
Natural product from algae
-N Ri H
Antibiotic action
Me /=\ Me
R T MJ Me r=\J
N N Me
Antitumoral action H
Carbazoles Pyridocarbazoles
Figure 4: Biological activity of ring-fused indoles.
Lewis base activation: increase in the HOMO energy of the diene
Ç H H CF3
Cat. V
[4 + 2]
Broensted acid activation: lowering in the LUMO energy of the dienophile
O N-R O
X = Boc, Ts or Me: racemic mixtures X = H: high enantioselectivities
Scheme 8: Bifunctional activation in the Diels-Alder reaction of 3-vinylindoles.
double Michael addition [44]. The bifunctional thiourea-based organocatalyst IV catalysed the first Michael addition of the y,5-unsaturated ^-ketoester 12 to the nitroalkene 13 and on addition of KOH the newly formed nitroalkane cyclized to form the polysubstituted cyclohexene 14 in a high yield and 75% ee (Scheme 10). The total synthesis of (-)-epibatidine 15 was achieved in further seven steps from 14. Though due to its high toxicity (200 times more potent than morphine) and lacking of selectivity on nicotinic receptors (-)-epibatidine cannot be considered a lead for pharmaceutical development; it has already opened the route to a wide series of more selective and promising derivatives.
Other laboratory scale syntheses based on the use of thiourea-derived bifunctional organocatalysts have been reported leading to targets of interest in medicinal chemistry. Among them a further highly enantioselective (99% e.e.) synthesis of (R)-rolipram and of (3S-4R)-paroxetine (see Section 2.2.1.) has been accessed through the use of a combined thiourea-cinchona catalyst [45] using a highly
enantioselective Michael addition of malonate nucleophiles as key steps. An indanol-thiourea organocatalyst resulted on the other hand very effectively in one of the first enantioselective Friedel-Crafts alkylations of indole with nitroalkenes leading after a synthetic elaboration ofthe alkylation products to the synthesis of 1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-^-carbolines [46] with anti-inflammatory and anti-arrhythmic activities.
2.1.2. Phase Transfer Catalysis. Phase transfer catalysis (PTC) has long been recognized as a versatile catalytic methodology for organic synthesis in both industry and academia. It features operational simplicity, typically mild reaction conditions, inexpensive and environmentally benign reagents and solvents, and relatively cheap catalysts that can be found in reasonable abundance [47]. Moreover, it has proven particularly viable for large- and industrial-scale applications. Chiral phase transfer catalysis has seen an explosive growth in the past couple of decades [48-50] and is still one of the hottest research areas in asymmetric noncovalent organocatalysis
HCl 9%
tetra-H-carbazole 9 quant. 97% e.e.
HCl 5 M, TFA
(i) LiAlH 4
(ii) Acetone CN,DEAD, Ph3P
(iii) HCl/MeOH
\ 68% yield, 94% e.e. H
Reference [43] -»
(ent.)
93% e.e.
O^CF3 O
Indoline 10
Tubifolidine 11
Scheme 9: Synthetic elaborations of the vinylindole cycloadducts.
Cat IV, 10 mol%
Toluene, 0°C ->
KOH, EtOH, 0° C 85%
, N Cl
Cascade sequence
OH O 75% e.e.
4 steps
(-)-epibatidine
Scheme 10: Organocatalyzed cascade synthesis of (-)-epibatidine 15.
[51, 52]. The development through the years of various types of chiral phase transfer catalysts relying on the molecular design of both natural product-derived and purely synthetic quaternary ammonium salts delivered [53, 54] not only higher reactivity and stereoselectivity but also new synthetic opportunities [55]. So far a wide variety of highly enan-tioselective transformations catalyzed mainly by cinchona alkaloids or binaphthyl-derived quaternary ammonium salts have been introduced and applied to the asymmetric synthesis of biologically active compounds including a number of pharmaceuticals. Furthermore pharmaceutical companies
have demonstrated the viability of asymmetric phase transfer reactions in the large-scale preparation of drugs.
Interestingly the first landmark example in the domain of chiral phase transfer organocatalysis was developed by Merck as early as in 1984 for the synthesis of a uricosuric drug (+)-indacrinone (MK-0197). In this work [56] the highly enantioselective alkylation of compound 16 was achieved using the cinchona alkaloid derivative V (obtained by N-alkylation of the quinuclidine core), NaOH as a base, and MeCl as the alkylating agent (Scheme 11). Using this approach intermediate 17, used for the synthesis of the indacrinone
10 mol%
95% yield 17
92% ee
_ o' \ .zN«^
50% aq NaOH 20° C, 18h
(+)-indacrinone 18
Scheme 11: Phase transfer catalysed synthesis of (+)-indacrinone 18.
HOOC-O
92% yield, 100 g scale 40% ee
Scheme 12: Synthesis of a drug candidate for treatment of brain edema via PTC catalysis.
18, could be accessed in high yield and enantiomeric purity on a pilot plant scale (~75 Kg); the cost of producing this enantiomer is significantly lower than the cost of producing the same molecule by a resolution process.
Studies on the origin of the stereoselectivity substantiated the hypothesis of a tight ion pair transition state where the enolate anion and the cationic catalyst were held close to each other through ^-interactions.
Almost in the same period scientists from Merck demonstrated that cinchona derivatives such as VI could catalyse the Michael addition of ketone 19 with methyl vinyl ketone (MVK) under mild conditions and crucially, at large scale [57] (Scheme 12) to give 20.
The ultimate goal of this study was the synthesis of drug candidate 21 (and analogues) for the treatment of brain edema and traumatic head injuries [58]. This reaction was carried out under various conditions and the operationally simple liquid/solid system gave excellent isolated yields at 100 g scale albeit with modest levels of enantioselectivity. These early examples showed the potential power of the asymmetric PTC reactions for industrial-oriented synthesis.
The learning generated in the previous examples was of great benefits for further developments of chiral phase transfer organocatalysis. An impressive use of the use of quaternary salts of cinchona alkaloids in phase transfer catalysis for the pilot scale production of drug candidates is shown in the development at Merck Sharp & Dohme of the asymmetric synthesis of an estrogen receptor ^-selective agonist [59] (Scheme 13). The base-catalysed Michael addition of the enolate of indanone 22 to MVK, in the presence of a (+)-cinchonine-derived quaternary ammonium phase transfer catalyst VII, gives diketone 23 in enantioenriched form. Robinson annulation then follows with construction of the cyclohexenone ring of tetrahydrofluorenone 24 that upon cyclization gives rise to the expected target 25. Overall the chemistry developed has been used to prepare >6 kg of the drug candidate in 18% overall yields and with >99% ee. The 2-naphtylmethylcinchoninium bromide catalyst VII selected on the basis of the 50% ee in the Michael addition step and on the bulk commercial availability of the required 2-naphtylmethyl bromide and the agitation rate were parameters critical to the success of this reaction.
R = 2-naphtylmethyl Cat VII
Scheme 13: Pilot-scale synthesis of an estrogen receptor-^.
CH3-NO2
Cat VIII
Cat eni-VIII
Cat (10 mol%), K2CO3(5 equiv.) ON toluene, RT, 48 h 2
NaOH, THF °2N
87-89%
100° C
87-89% COOH-»
Cat VIII, R = 4-ClC6 H4 91% ee (S)
Cat VIII: 54% yield 97% ee (S)
Cat eni-VIII: 66% yield 94% ee (R)
Baclofen
(S)-(+)-4 HCl (R)-(-)-4 HCl
89% ee (R)
Scheme 14: Laboratory-scale synthesis of both the enantiomers of baclofen 4.
Cat eni-VIII, R = 4-ClC6H4
In another more recent example the capability of chiral phase transfer catalysis based on quaternary ammonium salts VIII and ent-VIII-derived from cinchona alkaloids to induce highly enantioselective C-C bond forming reactions has been disclosed in the conjugate addition of nitroalkanes to 4-nitro-5-stirylisoxazoles, a valuable synthetic alternative to cinnamic esters [60] (Scheme 14). The transformation of the Michael adducts 26 into y-nitro acids could be easily performed, and the subsequent Raney-Ni reduction gave the hydrochlorides of the GABA receptors (S)- and (R)-baclofen 4 thus outlining a short organocatalysed route alternative with respect to that outlined in Scheme 1.
The accessibility of both the enantiomers in good yields and excellent enantioselectivities, the wide reaction scope, and the easy availability and the use of inexpensive organocatalysts outline major assets of this organocatalysed methodology.
2.1.3. Lewis and Bronsted Base Catalysis. Nucleophilic catalysts have had a wide role in the development of new synthetic methods [61]. In particular, the cinchona alkaloids
catalyse many useful processes with high enantioselectivities
[62]. They can be used as bases to deprotonate substrates with relatively acidic protons such as malonates, forming a contact pair between the resulting anion and the protonated amine. This interaction leads to a chiral environment around the anion and permits enantioselective reactions with elec-trophiles (Figure 5).
Since the seminal publication by Hiemstra and Wynberg
[63] there have been different applications of this methodology with significantly improved catalysts [64]. Important in many of these processes is the ability to control the formation of quaternary centers with high enantiomeric excess [65]. The robustness and the easy availability of the commercially available cinchona derivatives attracted in the last decades increasing interest of both the academic and applied research. In medicinal chemistry relevant targets such as anticancer and antiparasitic agents were approached by using this methodology.
In the past 10 years, the number of chiral, nonracemic pharmaceuticals on the market was consistently increasing and many new single enantiomer drugs were produced to
\ X^R1
Electrophile
Figure 5: Cinchona alkaloids catalysis through chiral contact ion pair.
N"~Ts Cat. IX (20 mol%) Ts
R^ | + J ->
x ^ + rY Et20,20°C, 16h H R1 N=(
27 28 " SEt
R1 = i-Pr, i-Bu R2 = aryl, heteroaryl Yields: 67-94%
dr: 75 : 25-98 : 2 ee: 80-99%
Scheme 15: Synthesis of anticancer thiazolone derivatives by organocatalytic aza-Mannich reaction.
offer enhanced therapy and reduced toxicity. Organocatalysis emerged to be an effective way to reach this goal. A series of chiral 2-ethylthio-thiazolone derivatives 29 have been prepared (Scheme 15) by a straightforward enantioselective aza-Mannich addition of thiazolones 27 to N-tosylimines 28 catalyzed by a simple cinchona alkaloid (IX) as the chiral base with a 20 mol % of catalyst loading using diethyl ether as solvent [66]. The derivatives bearing a quaternary center were obtained in good yields and, in general, with high diastereo-and enantioselectivities. All the compounds, evaluated in five human cell cancer lines using MTT essay, caused a dose-dependent growth inhibitory effect on all the tested cancer lines. This study provides a foundation for further developments of new single enantiomer anticancer drugs.
Malaria is one of the most important diseases of the third world and the efficacy of the available drugs is limited by emerging resistance. In 2011, in an extensive effort to find unique chemotypes for the treatment of malaria, it has been found that dihydropyrimidinone-derived guanidine derivatives were the most promising [67]. These guanidine analogs 34 were synthesized in a multistep synthesis with commercially available and inexpensive (+)-cinchonine X and (-)-cinchonidine XI promoting the key organocatalytic step (Scheme 16).
In this step, the diketone derivative 30 was deproto-nated by the nitrogen of the chiral base (cinchonine or cinchonidine) which attacks the imine formed in situ starting from 31 to give the corresponding intermediates 32 in high enantiomeric excesses. These were then cyclised into
dihydropyrimidinones 33. Being the two organocatalysts pseudoenantiomers, both enantiomers of dihydropyrimidi-nones could be synthesized. Further treatment of 33 with Lawesson reagent, followed by sulphur alkylation and its substitution with different anilines led to a library of 96 guanidine derivatives 34.
Another quite impressive example of how simple and unmodified cinchona alkaloids can be used for the synthesis of medicinally important scaffolds is provided by the synthesis of (-)-uperzine A 37 currently being tested in clinical trials as a promising drug for the treatment of Alzheimer disease [68]. This reaction that can be considered as the first application of cascade reaction to the synthesis of targets in medicinal and natural product chemistry dates back to 1998 when the field of organocatalysis was just at its infancy. Huperzine-A, containing a challenging bridged tri-cyclic core, was obtained via a simple Michael/aldol cascade reaction sequence between a ^-ketoester 35 and methacrolein (Scheme 17). The commercially available and inexpensive organocatalyst (-)-cinchonidine (XI) acts as a bifunctional organocatalyst. As a base it deprotonates 35 forming a chiral ion pair but the secondary alcohol function of the catalyst simultaneously activates a methacrolein molecule by forming a distinct hydrogen bond and incorporating it into the ionic complex. The Michael reaction, as the first step of the cascade reaction is thus initiated, followed by intramolecular aldol condensation. The tricyclic core 36 of (-)-huperzine A was formed with an overall yield of 60% and 64% enantiomeric excess (e.e.). The completion of the total synthesis starting
( -)-cinchonidine Cat. XI
X Catalyst
R3 SO2Ar
(i) MeI
R2 OC 34 (96 compounds)
Toluene
Lawesson's O
reagent
reflux
Scheme 16: Synthesis of a library of dihydropyrimidinones 34 anti-malarial derivatives by a cinchona alkaloid-driven key organocatalytic
Intermediate ionic complex
Scheme 17: Preparation of (-)-huperzine A by means ofan organocatalysed Michael/aldol cascade reaction sequence.
from 36 required 5 further steps. It is worth noting that the synthesis of ent-37 could be achieved in the same way starting from cinchonine. Though to some extent disappointing for the modest enantioselectivity this procedure outlines a rapid one-pot entry to molecular complexity by using a simple metal-free, commercially available, and inexpensive air- and moisture-stable organocatalyst.
2.1.4. Bronsted Acid Catalysis. Recently chiral Brensted acids have found widespread application in organocatalysis [69, 70]. For instance, in one of the most relevant processes the action of a Hantzsch ester, a biomimetic source of hydride, combines with that of chiral phosphoric acid as the catalyst. This can be considered as a metal-free simple H(+)-H(+) cascade reaction and has become a favourite application to
the enantioselective reduction of nitrogen-containing hete-rocycles like pyridines or quinolines to the corresponding tetrahydroquinolines and tetrahydropyridines [71, 72]. This approach gives access to a variety of highly enantioenriched heterocycles that are privileged structures in natural products and drugs.
The preparation of fluoroquinolones reported by Rueping and coworkers [73] outlines the application of the transfer hydrogenation process to the synthesis of building blocks that have been utilized to complete the metal-free synthesis of drugs like (R)-flumequine (43) or (R)-levofloxacin (44) that display antibacterial activity towards a broad spectrum of bacteria [74, 75]. The readily available fluorinated quinoline 37 and benzoxazine 38 were reduced in the presence of Hantzsch esters 39 or 40 with only 1 mol% of the sterically demanding chiral phosphoric acid XII as catalyst to give
EtO' oEt
t-Bu N i-Bu H
N H 41
79% yield, 96% ee
O H H O
Et N Et
1.2 equiv.
Cat 1 mol% PhH, 60° C, 14 h
N H 42
67% yield, 93% ee
COOH (R)-Flumequine 43
(R)-Levofloxacine 44
Scheme 18: Enantioselective transfer hydrogénation for the preparation of tricyclic fluoroquinolone antibacterial agents 43 and 44.
(i) CH2 O, AcOH
(ii) NaBH4
Galipinine 48
Scheme 19: Synthesis of (+)-galipinine via binolphosphoric acid-catalyzed enantioselective cascade reduction.
the corresponding hydrogenated compounds 41 and 42 in very good yields and with excellent enantioselectivities (Scheme 18).
The synthesis of the two targets 43 and 44 was then accomplished in three more steps.
Moreover through the use of only 1 mol% of the binaph-thol phosphate catalysts XIV, a stepwise hydride transfer from the Hantzsch ester 45 to quinoline 46 afforded [76] the corresponding tetrahydroquinoline 47 in excellent yields and enantioselectivities (Scheme 19). Mechanistically it has been assumed that this enantioselective cascade hydrogenation occurs in two cycles involving iminium ion an enamine
species, respectively. A reductive N-methylation concludes a concise synthesis of (+)-galipinine 48 showing antimalarial activity on Plasmodium Falciparum for the chloroquine-resistant strains.
Another remarkable and to some extent different use of a chiral phosphoric acid in the synthesis of a drug candidate is represented by the one-pot acid-catalyzed three-component condensation of an aldehyde 49, a thiourea 50, and a ^-ketoester 51 in an asymmetric Biginelli reaction to give the chiral 3,4-dihydropyrimidin-2-one derivatives 54 [77]. These scaffolds are privileged structures that depending on the substitution pattern exhibits a variety of important
Cat. XV
H2N NH, 10 mol%
CH2Cl2,25° C
Rj = Ar, Alk R2 = Alk R3 = Alk X = O, S
NH2 HN O
O 53 OR,
Condensation
R2 N O 54 H
Yield up to 86% Up to 97% ee
Scheme 20: Enantioselective chiral Brensted acid-catalyzed three-component Biginelli reaction.
pharmacological properties like the inhibition of Hepatitis B virus replication. Here the chiral phosphoric acid XV catalyzes the Biginelli reaction by forming a chiral N-acyliminium phosphate ion pair 52 to which enantioselective addition of ^-ketoesters 51 occurs to generate optically active 54 via the enantioenriched intermediate 53 (Scheme 20).
An asymmetric variant with an ytterbium-based catalyst for this Biginelli reaction was reported earlier [78], but the discovery of a metal-free synthesis by using Brensted acid XV, which avoided contamination of the product with traces of metal, resulted in an important advancement. The phosphoric acid-based catalyst matched or even improved the level of conversion and stereoselectivity of the corresponding Lewis acid-catalyzed reaction, while maintaining the same substrate scope.
2.2. Covalent Organocatalysis. The area of amine-organoca-talysed reactions is clearly dominated by secondary amines due to the versatility of possible combination of enamine (EN) and iminium (IM) activation. However, the primary amino function as a part of a chiral scaffold could be engaged as well in a number of synthetically appealing organocatalysed reactions. Several reviews on amino catalysis have recently appeared [79, 80].
2.2.1. Secondary Amine Organocatalysis via Enamines and Iminium Ions. The reaction that alerted the scientific community to the potential of organocatalysis was a proline-catalysed intramolecular aldol reaction reported almost simultaneously by two groups during the early 1970s [81, 82]. It was not until List et al. published a related intermolecular process [83] that secondary amine catalysis via enamine, inspired by Nature's aldolase enzymes, became en vogue in the domain of organocatalysed reactions. Since this report, there have been many subsequent publications of catalytic
reactions via enamines. Proline-catalysed Mannich reactions [84], dihydroxylations [85], cross aldolizations [86], and aminations [87, 88] have held persistent interest in the area of asymmetric catalysis.
Mechanistically, this enamine catalysis might be better described as a bifunctional catalysis because the amine-containing catalyst (proline) typically interacts with a ketone substrate to form an enamine intermediate but simultaneously engages with an electrophilic reaction partner through either hydrogen bonding or electrostatic interaction (Scheme 21).
The capacity of chiral amines to function as enantioselective LUMO-lowering catalysts for a range of transformations that had traditionally employed Lewis acids has also been extensively used in organocatalysis. This strategy, termed iminium activation, was founded on the mechanistic postulate that the reversible formation of iminium ions from «^-unsaturated aldehydes and chiral amines might emulate the equilibrium dynamics and rc-orbital electronics that are inherent to Lewis acid catalysts, thereby providing a platform for designing organocatalytic processes (Scheme 22). The first generation catalyst to fulfil criteria such as efficient and easily reversible iminium ion formation, discrimination of the olefin rc-face, and easy preparation was imidazolidinone XVI that in 2001 evolved in the more efficient imidazolidinone catalyst XVII (second generation). With its tailor-made family of imidazolidinone catalysts, iminium catalysis has been successfully applied to a broad range of chemical transformations including cycloadditions [89, 90], conjugate additions [91-93], hydrogenations [94], and cascade reactions [95]. The operational simplicity of these processes made them attractive alternatives to Lewis acid catalysis.
A number of drugs currently on the market have been approached with the enamine-iminium-based organocatal-ysis taking advantage by the simplicity of these inexpensive organocatalyst and by their high efficiency.
Scheme 21: Mechanism for the proline-catalysed intermolecular aldol reaction.
I-generation II-generation
Scheme 22: Iminium activation through LUMO lowering.
The case of warfarin is a very good example of the exceeding utility of organocatalytic methodologies in the assembly of relatively simple yet highly relevant molecules and many iminium-based organocatalysed processes have been designed for this aim. Warfarin is a vitamin K analogue, inhibiting vitamin K epoxide reductase. Its sodium salt, commercialised mainly under the trade names Coumadin and Marevan, is one of the most widely prescribed anticoagulants. Warfarin has been administered as a racemate for over fifty years; however, its two enantiomers display remarkably different pharmacological and pharmacokinetic profiles. Even if the S isomer shows higher activity, it is metabolised more rapidly than its less active R counterpart
[96]. Thus, production of both (R)- and (S)-warfarin in enantiopure form might be of importance for a tailored patient treatment [97].
An obvious synthetic approach to warfarin is represented by the Michael addition of 4-hydroxycoumarin to benzylideneacetone, a reaction which is well posited for iminium ion catalysis through enone activation. Such an approach appears superior and more straightforward compared to the few reported catalytic asymmetric methods based on organometallic chemistry, which rely on more tortuous oxidation-reduction sequences with protecting groups usage [98, 99]. Accordingly, the feasibility of the organocatalytic strategy leading directly to warfarin has been well
Table 1: Catalytic asymmetric approaches to warfarin through iminium ion catalysis.
Catalyst cocatalyst conditions
OH Ph O
OO Warfarin
Ph^NH2
Ph NH2
xx ph" nh2 xxi
N' ^ Ph, NHP(O)Ph2 OH
Ph^NH2
I \ H H
Entry Catalyst Cocatalyst Conditions Yield (%) e.e. (%) Ref.
1 xviii (10 mol%) — CH2Cl2, RT, 150 h 96 82 (R) [100,101]
2 xix (10mol%) AcOH (10 equiv.) THF, RT, 24h 99 92 (R) [102]
3 xx (5 mol%) LiClO4 (5 mol%), AcOH (10 equiv.) 1,4-dioxane, RT, 24 h 61 92 (R) [103]
4 ent-XX (2 mol%) BzOH (4 mol%) H2O, RT, 12 h 78 ^ 50a 70 ^ >99a (S) [104]
5 xxi (10 mol%) Caproic acid (10 equiv.) THF, RT, 36 h 96 91 (S) [105]
6 xxii (10 mol%) 4-MeBzOH (20 mol%) Toluene, RT, 72 h 99 94 (R) [106]
7 xxiii (20mol%) — THF/DMSO 4: 1, RT, 48 h 99 42b [107]
8 xxiv (20mol%) TFA (40 mol%) CH2Cl2,0°C, 96 h 88 96 (S) [108]
9 xxv (10 mol%) Succinic acid (10 mol%) n-BuOH/H2O, 40°C, 12h 97 83 (R) [109]
10 xxvi (20 mol%) AcOH (1 equiv.) THF, RT, 24 h 76 81b [110]
aIsolated by precipitation from the reaction mixture. Absolute configuration not reported.
demonstrated, with the large number of reports well witnessing its success and appeal. A survey of the various organocatalysts engaged in this synthesis and of the related results is shown in Table 1.
The first approach to enantioenriched warfarin through iminium ion catalysis, disclosed in 2003, involved [100] the employment of the phenylenediamine-derived catalyst XVIII and provided after prolonged reaction time the target compound in good yield and moderate enantioselectivity, which could be improved to >99% by a simple crystallisation (Table 1, entry 1). It was also mentioned [101] that the reaction could be performed on a kg scale by employing a related catalyst structure, recoverable after reaction completion. The approach is the same as the commercial synthesis of Coumadin in a retrosynthetic sense, but crucially the presence of imidazolidine catalysts XVIII affords an enantioselective reaction whilst the commercial synthesis
is racemic. A few years later it was discovered that the putative catalyst XVIII was undergoing a hydrolysis under the reaction conditions, delivering the corresponding free phenylenediamine, which was the actual catalytic species of the Michael addition. On this basis, the results obtained in this transformation could be improved [102] by employing a related diamine XIX in combination with a large amount of an acidic cocatalyst (acetic acid, entry 2). Subsequent efforts with simple primary diamine catalysts were directed [103] at improving the practical applicability of this reaction and included the discovery that the catalyst loading of phenylene-diamine XX could be lowered by exploiting a combination of Lewis (lithium perchlorate) and Br0nsted (acetic acid) acid cocatalysts in the reaction (entry 3) and that water as reaction medium under ultrasound activation [104] provided a fast protocol allowing the isolation of warfarin in essentially enantiopure form by simple filtration of the reaction
Figure 6: Reaction between coumarin and iminium ion in a concerted pathway.
mixture (entry 4). Variations in the phenylenediamine motif by functionalization of one of the amines have also been reported and include the monoamine XXI, generated in situ by acidic hydrolysis from a corresponding diimine [105], and the monophosphonamide XXII [106].
Both of these catalysts, employed in combination with carboxylic acids, provide the product warfarin in excellent enantioselectivity (entries 5 and 6). A different diamine, namely, 1,2-cyclohexanediamine, was employed for the preparation of catalyst XXIII bearing a lithium sulfate functionality on one of the amines, which however led [107] to rather poor results (entry 7). The lithium based catalyst XXIII was designed to exploit the mild Lewis acidity of lithium for the intramolecular activation of the imine formed between the catalyst and the Michael acceptor. Interestingly, computational studies showed that a related reaction (with cyclohexenone as Michael acceptor) follows an ene-type concerted pathway, with simultaneous C-C bond formation and proton transfer between the hydroxyl coumarin and the iminium ion activated olefin of the Michael acceptor (Figure 6).
A structurally distinct primary amine catalyst XXIV, derived from a Cinchona alkaloid, was also successfully applied in this reaction [108] with very good results at relatively high catalyst loadings (entry 8). Highlighting the high interest that this specific transformation has surged in the academic community, a recent publication reported the search for a more readily available catalytic system, considering that the preparation of the phenylenediamine cores of catalysts XVIII-XXII is rather troublesome and that the synthesis of the Cinchona derivative XXIV presents considerable safety issues (it is prepared through a Mitsunobu reaction which employs hazardous azides). To that purpose, the focus was set [109] on amino acid as starting materials, resulting in the disclosure of the diphenyl phenylglycinol XXV as a moderately efficient and easily available catalyst for the obtainment of warfarin in enantioenriched form (entry 9). The same report highlighted the better performances of primary amine compared to secondary amines in this reaction, reporting also the poor performances in this transformation of other popular secondary amine catalysts, such as proline or a MacMillan imidazolidinone. However, it was more recently demonstrated [110] that also a secondary amine, the dimeric proline-derived catalyst XXV, could be applied in this Michael addition reaction with fairly good results (entry 10).
Simple iminium ion catalysed reactions have also been inserted into more complex multistep reaction sequences; some of them herein are discussed in detail leading to medicinally relevant compounds. In this context, the example of Telcagepant is significant, as an iminium ion catalysed reaction was selected as the key step for the establishment of the stereochemistry in an industrial-scale preparation of this molecule. Telcagepant [111] is an antagonist of the calcitonin gene-related neuropeptide and was considered highly promising for the treatment of migraine avoiding concomitant cardiovascular problems often generated by other antimigraine agents. Telcagepant can be retrosynthetically disconnected between a chiral 2-amino-5-aryl caprolactam and a 4-aminopiperidine units, assembled with concomitant urea formation (Scheme 23).
A first-generation multi-kg (>500) process [112], relying on a dynamic kinetic resolution of the enantiomers through crystallisation, showcased several pitfalls in the preparation of the chiral caprolactam, thus calling for alternative synthetic strategies to this unit. To this end, an organocatalytic approach, namely, an iminium ion catalysed conjugate addition of nitromethane to a proper cinnamaldehyde [113], was judged as more promising than other asymmetric preparations based on transition metal catalysed reactions, such as ruthenium-catalysed hydrogenation [114] and rhodium based Hayashi-Miyaura addition [115]. Although previously reported with related substrates [116, 117] the organocat-alytic step required a careful optimisation for its large scale implementation, as the formation of several by-products was observed under the reported conditions. In particular, to avoid the formation of acetals the usual alcoholic solvents were replaced with a THF/water solvent mixture. The employment of a carefully tailored additive mixture composed byboric and pivaloyl acid proved also to be necessary to achieve an acceptable reaction rate while minimising by-products formation. A final amelioration involved the employment of the crude mixture of the in situ silylated diphenylprolinol XXVII as catalyst [118, 119], thus avoiding its purification. Finally, the reaction could be performed on a pilot plant (>100 kg) affording the desired Michael adduct 56 in 73% assay yield and 95% enantiomeric excess (Scheme 24).
Obviously, both the preparation of the starting aldehyde and the subsequent reaction steps leading to the caprolac-tam had also to be carefully optimised for the large scale synthesis. The first part of the overall sequence is depicted in Scheme 25 and involves the preparation of an allylic alcohol from difluorobenzene through lithiation, quenching with acrolein, acid promoted rearrangement, and TEMPO catalysed oxidation to give the substrate 55 to be submitted to the organocatalytic step. The aldehyde product 56 was not isolated, but treated directly in a Doebner-Knoevenagel type reaction with an in situ generated acetamido malonic acid (not isolated due to safety issues) in the presence of pyrrolidine. This decarboxylative Knoevenagel-type reaction, even if required extensive optimisation, was preferred over more established Wittig protocols based on atom economy reasoning. The resulting acid 57 was isolated and upgraded to >99% ee as a tributyl ammonium salt 58, obtained in an impressive 48% overall yield starting from difluorobenzene.
F,C^ ^ ^ \\
F / ""f %Hn >—N
F ' V,> ^ ^NH
+ HN >—N
Telcagepant
Scheme 23: Retrosynthetic disconnection of Telcagepant.
Cat. (5 mol%) i-BuCO, H (5 mol%) B(OH)3(50 mol%) aq. THF
+ CH3 NO, (6 equiv.)
OH Ph Ph
TMSCl imidazole
Cat. XXVII
73% assay yield 95% ee
Scheme 24: Organocatalysed Michael addition.
Hydrogenation of this enamide intermediate (57) with concomitant nitro group reduction proved to be very challenging, due to the unwanted formation of desfluoro products, which could not be present in more than tiny (0.2%) amounts for the successful employment of this synthesis for telcagepant production. After several attempts (Scheme 26), the hydrogenation reduction showed the desired features when performed on the acid in the presence of lithium salts, in isopropanol under acidic conditions, conditions which also promoted esterification of the carboxylate. Trifluoroethyl alkylation with a triflate gave the N-alkylated compound 59, whose ester was hydrolysed to the carboxylic acid.
Cyclisation involved the employment of a mixed anhydride, possible for the decreased nucleophilicity of the tri-fluoroethyl nitrogen, and was followed by a base promoted dynamic crystallisation process in aqueous NaOH/DMSO mixture, which allowed the isolation of the 2-acetamido caprolactam 60 in 73% overall yield from the enamide. Acidic hydrolysis of the acetamide gave the amine 61, which was engaged in urea formation by treatment with carbonyl diimidazole and the corresponding piperidine. Deproto-nation of the benzamide hydrogen in ethanol furnished the potassium salt of telcagepant 62 as an ethanol solvate, with >99.8% purity and >99.9% ee. This environmentally responsible synthesis contains all of the elements required for a manufacturing process and prepares telcagepant 62 with the high quality required for pharmaceutical use.
The key role played by proline-derived organocatalysts in medicinal chemistry is also witnessed by the recent synthesis of maraviroc. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a pandemic that was first recognized in 1981. In 2008 HIV caused the death of 2 million people due to the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). Due to high medical
need the exciting prospect of a new class of drugs for HIV led to the rapid development of the academic and industrial research in this field. Maraviroc (UK-427,857) (69) is a chemokine receptor 5 (CCR-5) receptor antagonist that is currently developed at Pfizer for the treatment of HIV. A robust, plant-suitable synthesis of 69 was urgently required to manufacture larger quantities and the process research [120, 121] of a commercialisable route has been recently developed.
The chiral ^-amino aldehyde 65 a key intermediate in synthesis of 68 was produced in the industrial process in an 8.3% overall yield in a multistep sequence in which the enantioenriched ^-amino ester 64 was obtained by tartaric acid resolution of the racemic counterpart. Moreover the resolution of the ^-amino ester was only moderately efficient with two recrystallisations required to achieve the desired enantiomeric excess of >95% (Scheme 27, route a).
An interesting perspective for introducing improvements in this process is offered by organocatalysis. In a recent paper [122] the Cordova group has proposed the asymmetric synthesis of maraviroc and its analogues via an organocatalysed highly enantioselective synthesis of the key chiral ^-amino aldehyde 66 fragment. The assembly of 66 occurs via a two-step protocol involving catalytic enantioselective tandem aza-Michael hemiacetal formation between hydroxylamine and enal followed by N-O cleavage (Scheme 27, route b).
The use of (S)-diphenylprolinol silyl ether XXVII as the catalyst appears to be very helpful in providing the ^-amino aldehydes 66 in yields up to 75% and remarkably good (92-95%) enantioselectivities. Moreover the tolerance of the organocatalysed reaction to a wide range of protecting groups at nitrogen opens the route to structural diversity leading to different analogues of maraviroc of potential interest for scouting new medicinal targets.
(i) n-BuLi THF, -55° C
(ii) Acrolein
(iii) H2SO4
THF/water ->
TEMPO (1 mol%) NaOCl, NaBr
K2HPO4, MTBE F ->
Organocatalytic step
73% 95% ee
Pyrrolidine (35 mol%) DMA, 15°C
NaO, CO,Na DMA? NHAc
91% Z/E 94 : 6
n-Bu3N ¿-PrOAc ,CO,H Heptane
57 NHAc
93% Z/E > 99 : 1 ee > 99%
HO2 C^„CO2H NHAc
Scheme 25: Large scale preparation of 58.
n-Bu3 NH+
48% overall yield from difluorobenzene
Pd(OH)2/C LiCl (0.3 equiv.) H2 SO4 (2.5 equiv.) H2 (50-100 psig) 35-50° C CO2H ¿-PrOH
(i) CF3CH2OTf Et3N, 50-60° C F CO2i-Pr (ii) NaOH
i-BuCOCl, Et3N DMAP (5 mol%) CO2i-Pr i-PrOAc, 35° C
F3 C^ 3O
(i) HCl, aq. ¿-PrOH
,,NHAc (ii) HCl, MTBE F
73% overall yield from the enamide | aq. DMSO NaOH
Cl-NH3
(i) CDI, Et3N THF, 60° C
(ii) Piperidine (iii) KOi-Bu, EtOH
\ ,O O
y-N-" O •EtOH
Telcagepant potassium salt EtOH solvate >99.8% purity >99.9% ee
Scheme 26: Second part of the synthesis ofTelcagepant.
(route a) (route b)
8.3% overall yield
R = Cbz, Boc, C6H11-CO, C6F2H9-CO R1 = Ph, p-Br-Ph, napht
H OTMS ^N' V
Mo(CO)6
Up to 75% yield and 95% e.e.
Scheme 27: Resolution-based (route a) and organocatalysed (route b) asymmetric synthesis of ^-amino aldehydes.
Maraviroc (UK-427, 857) 69
Figure 7: The structure of maraviroc (69).
Following the organocatalysed methodology maraviroc
69 (Figure 7) could be obtained (3 steps) by reaction of p-amino aldehyde 67 and tropane 68 in 53% overall yield with 80% e.e. and (3 steps) 45% overall yield with 92% e.e. by varying the reaction conditions (Scheme 28). It is also worth noting that the reaction presented herein can be scaled up. Thus the multigram-scale reaction between cin-namic aldehyde (31.4 g) and Cbz-protected hydroxylamine in the presence of 7mol% of (S)-proline-derived catalyst gave the corresponding 5-hydroxyoxazolidinone precursor of the of ^-amino aldehyde 67 in 91% yield (65 g) and 99% e.e.
Iminium ion organocatalysis appears to be key step in the synthesis of the antidepressants (-)-paroxetine (72). This molecule originally marketed by GlaxoSmithKline as Seroxat, a blockbuster selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor for the treatment of depression and anxiety related disorders, has previously been focused on enzymatic asymmetric desymmetrization [123,124] chiral auxiliary-assisted [125], or asymmetric, deprotonation reactions [126]. In the previous methodologies the total synthesis of this chiral compound consisted of approximately 12-14 steps. A novel approach, based on organocatalysis employing a chiral proline-derived catalyst led to a number of brief (formal) syntheses of paroxetine. Using simple building blocks like fluorocinnamaldehyde
70 and malonate derivative 71 with the silylated prolinol XXVII as the organocatalyst, Michael reaction was shown (Scheme 29, route a) to proceed in good yields and stereos-electivity [127] to afford the target product 72 in a three-step sequence. A previous report [128] leading to (-)-paroxetine in six steps overall and based on organocatalyst XVIII had also shown the possibility of performing a potentially scalable Michael addition (Scheme 29, route b).
In both cases, the nature of the solvent was highlighted as a key parameter, and polar-protic solvents were required. Whereas the latter example utilised a much more industrially friendly solvent (ethanol versus trifluoroethanol), the reaction times were greater, running for multiple days. Regardless, the potential step saving in these routes is significant taking into account that current industrial syntheses are typically 1015 steps. Moreover the simplicity of the chemistry involved makes these organocatalysed processes suitable candidates or further scale-up activities.
The spirocyclic motif is featured in a number of natural products as well as medicinally relevant compounds [129131]. The stereocontrolled construction of the spirocyclic indole core, of high interest for the synthesis of biologically active compounds, poses a challenging synthetic problem mainly in connection with the installation of the spiro-quaternary stereocenter. Only a few asymmetric transformations based on cycloaddition processes [132-134] or on the intramolecular Heck reaction [135, 136] have proven successful for achieving this goal. The asymmetric cascade organocatalysis exploiting the ability of chiral amines to combine two modes of activation of carbonyl compounds via iminium and enamine catalysis into one mechanistic scheme allows the direct, one-step synthesis of complex spirocyclic oxindoles having multiple stereocenters.
Among them the synthesis of spirooxindole 77 recently patented by Hoffmann-La Roche [137], a specific and potent inhibitor of MDM2-p53 interaction and innovative target for the discovery of anticancer agents [138], has been recently reported [139] which highlights the potential of organocas-cades in building complex structures of interest in medicinal chemistry (Scheme 30). In the one-pot double organocascade compound 73 would first act as a Michael acceptor, intercepting the nucleophilic diamine intermediate 75 generated by condensation of the catalyst XXIX with the «^-unsaturated ketone 74. The resulting Michael addition product 76 would then selectively engage itself in an intramolecular iminium catalysed conjugate addition to afford the spirooxindole 77. The target product could be obtained with 99% d.e. and e.e. after a single crystallization.
Influenza viruses pose a serious threat to world public health. Two of the drugs currently used to treat influenza patients are (-)-oseltamivir phosphate (Tamiflu) [140] and zanamivir (Relenza) [141]. Enamine catalysed transformations were exploited in the realisation of synthetic sequences leading to (-)-oseltamivir. The phosphate salt of this molecule, commercialised as Tamiflu, is a neuraminidase inhibitor useful as antiviral agent for the treatment and the prevention of influenza infections. Due to its specific biological action, (-)-oseltamivir is considered to be very general against all types of influenza viruses, including the avian H5N1, which has a mortality rate close to 50%. In the mid-2010s, fear for a potentially disastrous pandemic spread of a mutation of this virus amongst humans has prompted several nations to plan the accumulation ofmassive stocks of this drug. The production of this molecule is being based on a multistep synthesis employing shikimic acid as starting material. Both the variable availability of natural shikimic acid and the relative length of the synthesis put great pressure on industrialists and academics to develop very quickly alternative synthetic routes, in order to satisfy the exponentially increasing requests [142]. Asymmetric catalysis was considered a very attractive method, as it would not rely heavily on natural chiral sources. Accordingly, several syntheses based on enantioselective Lewis acid catalysis have been reported [143], starting already from 2006 [144, 145]. Enamine catalysis was later appreciated as a useful alternative and was consequently applied as the key stereodetermining step in a few syntheses of (-)-oseltamivir. Interestingly, many
68 —r N
+ p-TsOH
Conditions: i, ii = 78%, 80% e.e. 3 steps, 53% overall yield Maraviroc (UK-427, 857)
Conditions: ii, iv = 78%, 92% e.e. 3 steps, 45% overall yield
Conditions: i = 20mol% catalyst XXVII, CHCl3, 4°C, 18 h
ii = MO(CO)6, CH3CN/H2O (9: 1), rfx, 2 h
iv = 20 mol% (S)-proline catalyst, toluene, -40° C, 120 h
iii = TsOH, NaBH(OAc)3, r.t., 1.5 h
Scheme 28: Silylated prolinol-catalysed enantioselective synthesis of Maraviroc.
Route a
20 mol% cat. XXVII
+ O CF3CH2OH H
BH3, THF, r.t. ^CO2 R -»
HO*~ -N ^'O Ph
84%, 90% e.e.
LiAlH4, THF rfx
"N ^O 72 (-)-paroxetine
Route b
10 mol% cat. XXVIII ->
BnO2C CO2Bn
CO2Bn CO2Bn 72%, 86% e.e.
H OTMS
Cat. XXVIII
Ar = 3,5-(CF3 )2Ph
Scheme 29: Formal syntheses of (-)-paroxetine via organocatalysis.
of the reported protocols went beyond the study of the simple reaction steps but increased the overall efficiency by combining many of the steps in a one pot fashion.
Essentially, two complementary organocatalytic strategies to (-)-oseltamivir have been developed, both based on the addition of an a-alkoxy aldehyde (pentan-3-yloxyacetaldehyde) to a nitroalkene. The first approach, disclosed in 2009 [146], involved the addition of this aldehyde to a 2-ester substituted nitroalkene, catalysed by a silyl-protected D-prolinol derivative. This constituted the first reaction of a nine-step synthesis leading to the target compound (-)-oseltamivir, in which all steps were carefully optimised and designed for their combination in one-pot sequences. The whole sequence could be in fact carried out in only three one-pot operations, which soon after [147] were reduced to two in the second generation synthesis depicted in Scheme 31. The synthesis starts with the mentioned organocatalytic reaction. The nitroaldehyde product 78, generated with high enantioselectivity, reacts then with
a vinyl phosphonate in the presence of a base, giving a nitro-Michael Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons sequential reaction which however leads to a mixture of different products 79 a-c. Solvent evaporation followed by stirring the basic mixture in ethanol triggers retroaldol elimination processes followed by olefination rendering very nicely a single cyclohexene product 80, which upon treatment with a thiophenol gives a cyclic five-substituted cyclohexane 81 featuring the desired stereochemistry, isolated in overall 56% yield over the three steps. The introduction of the thiophenol is necessary to control the relative configuration at the a-nitro chiral centre through equilibration. This intermediate (81) is converted into the target (-)-oseltamivir 84 through a six-step one-pot sequence, starting with ferf-butyl ester cleavage with trifluoroacetic acid, leading to an acid which is converted first in a chloride and then in an acylazide 82.
This azide undergoes a Curtius rearrangement with concomitant acetylation, which serves to install the desired acetamide functionality (83). Nitro group reduction with
=O H 73
Cat. XXIX 20 mol% ->
o-FC6H4 CO2H (30 mol%) Toluene 1M 40°, 72 h
70% yield 4.5 : 1 d.r
Et MDM2-p53
Scheme 30: Tandem double Michael addition via enamine-iminium activation sequence toward spirocyclic oxindole.
N OTMS H XXVII
1 mol% ClCH2CO2H (20 mol%) toluene, RT, 6 h x
t-BuO2C^K
Evaporation then EtOH, RT 10 min
t-BuO2C
syn: anti 7.8 : 1 97% ee
EtO Y 2 Cs2CO311 0°C to RT, 4 h
t-BuO2C^y 79 a NO2
O-.A^^Et H" P(O)(OEt)2 CO2Et t-BuO2C Y 79 b NO2
O CO2Et
t-BuO2^^T 80 NO2
p-TolSH -15° C, 36 h
t-BuO,C
56% yield over the three, one pot steps
t-BuO2C
CO2Et CO2Et
O2N P(O)(OEt)2 79 c _
(i) TFA, toluene RT, 4 h, then
evaporation
(ii) (COCl)2, toluene
RT, 30 min, thenevaporation
(iii) TMSN3, pyridine toluene, RT, 20 min
AcOH, Ac2O RT, 48 h, then evaporation
,,CO2Et
(i) Zn, TMSCl EtOH, 70° C
2 h, then°
NH3, 0°C, 10min
(ii) K2CO3, RT, 9 h
,CO2Et
(-)-oseltamivir 84
81% yield over the six one-pot steps
Scheme 31: Two-pot organocatalysed synthesis of (-)-oseltamivir 84.
NHAc 85
Ph OSiPh,Me
10 mol%
HCO, H (30 mol%)
a06H5, 20° C, 1.5 h
Or AcHN
•P^____CO,Et
Cs, CO3 0°C, 3 h then EtOH, 1 h
O',/^CO,Et
AcHN^Y""^ NO,
p-TolSH -15°C, 36h
AcHN^y""^ NO,
(i) Zn, TMSCl EtOH, 70° C
2 h, then
NH3, 0° C, 10 min
(ii) K2CO3, RT, 14 h
CO,Et 84
(-)-oseltamivir
28% yield on gram scale
Scheme 32: Scalable organocatalysed short synthesis of (-)-oseltamivir 84.
zinc, ammonia bubbling, and elimination of the stereodirect-ing thiophenol through a retro-Michael addition finally leads to the target oseltamivir product 84. It is worth noting that the metal-based reagents employed in this synthesis contain either alkali-metal ions or nontoxic Zn. Thus this procedure is suitable for large-scale preparation.
A second approach to this target molecule through organocatalysis aimed at avoiding the hazardous azide addition and Curtius rearrangement steps, by introducing the amide functionality already at the beginning of the synthesis. To this end, the readily available 2-Z-acetamido nitroethene 85 was engaged in an enamine catalysed reaction with the same aldehyde previously employed. By this approach, disclosed in 2010 [148], the target oseltamivir 84 could be obtained after a few more steps based on the previous synthesis. Due to its importance, this organocatalytic reaction and the subsequent steps were then the subject of thorough studies directed at their generalisation [149,150] and careful optimisation [151], which culminated very recently in the disclosure of a synthesis of oseltamivir proceeding in one-pot from the aldehyde and this nitroalkene [152]. Compared to the previous sequence reported in Scheme 31, this synthesis (Scheme 32) not only obviates the need of introducing the acetamide functionality with azide chemistry, but also avoids evaporation steps and the usage of toxic chlorinated solvents, allowing the obtainment of oseltamivir even on gram scale with a remarkable 28% yield over the five steps without any intermediate work-up or isolation.
In the same year a nine-step synthesis of (-)-oseltamivir has been proposed [153] in which a novel barium-catalysed asymmetric Diels-Alder-type reaction gives access to the cyclohexene framework of Tamiflu in the key enantioselec-tive reaction path with a Pd-catalysed allylic occurring in the following steps of the synthetic sequence. Though of relevant
interest for employing a nontoxic metal and for being effective at 60 g scale, the advantage of this synthesis with respect to the organocatalysed methodology is to some extent diminished by the need of isolating all the intermediates and by the use of a potentially explosive reagent such as diphenyl phosphoryl azide.
3. Concluding Remarks
Featuring aspects of medicinal chemistry are the strong reliability of the processes, the use of cheap and commercial catalysts, and short synthetic sequences. Moreover, both enantiomers of the catalysts should be easily available in order to obtain both enantiomers of the products and allow analysing them from a biological viewpoint. As herein highlighted, enantioselective organocatalysis plays nowadays a major role, alongside metal-catalysed processes, in chemical synthesis because together these complementary disciplines have revolutionized the way the synthesis is carried out. A point that should not be underestimated is the attractiveness of the operational simplicity of organocatalytic reactions: rigorous exclusion of oxygen and moisture is usually not required, and potential toxic metal contamination is avoided. The success and the usefulness of the organocatalytic approach are well demonstrated by the several examples in which different organocatalytic strategies, involving various activation modes and/or catalyst structures, have been successfully applied to the same target compound, as herein exemplified in the case of baclofen or rolipram.
The application of organocatalysis to the synthesis of molecules of interest in various fields including medicinal chemistry is however still facing problems such as the relatively high catalyst loading, the long reaction time, and also the difficult recyclability of the organocatalyst. To give a
partial solution, significant advances have been reported in recent times describing polymer supported organic catalysts, easily recovered after the reaction has taken place by filtration [154-156]. In contrast with immobilised metal complexes (via solid-supported bound ligand), leaching problems are much less critical when using organocatalysts immobilised by covalent bonding to the solid support. Even if costs considerations, as well as decrease of catalyst activity and selectivity, are issues not fully solved yet, several remarkable examples have been reported, which show great promise for future development.
Conflict of Interests
The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.
Acknowledgments
The author expresses the warmest thanks to Dr. Luca Bernardi for his precious suggestions and reading of the paper.
References
[1] P. I. Dalko and L. Moisan, "In the golden age of organocatalysis," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 43, no. 39, pp. 5138-5175, 2004.
[2] B. List, "The ying and yang of asymmetric aminocatalysis," Chemical Communications, pp. 819-824, 2006.
[3] B. List, "Organocatalysis: a complementary catalysis strategy advances organic synthesis," Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis, vol. 346, no. 9-10, p. 1021, 2004.
[4] M. Nielsen, D. Worgull, T. Zwifel, B. Gschwend, S. Bertelsen, and K. A. Jorgensen, "Mechanisms in aminocatalysis," Chemical Communications, vol. 47, no. 2, pp. 632-649, 2011.
[5] A. Grossmann and D. Enders, "N-heterocyclic carbene catalyzed domino reactions," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 51, no. 2, pp. 314-325, 2012.
[6] P. M. Pihko, Hydrogen Bonding in Organic Synthesis, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, Germany, 2009.
[7] K. Maruoka, Asymmetric Phase Transfer Catalysis, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, Germany, 2008.
[8] E. N. Jacobsen and D. W. C. McMillan, "Organocatalysis," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 107, no. 48, pp. 20618-20619, 2010.
[9] D. W. C. McMillan, "Commentary the advent and development of organocatalysis," Nature, vol. 455, pp. 304-308, 2008.
[10] B. List, "Biocatalysis and organocatalysis: asymmetric synthesis inspired by nature," in Asymmetric Synthesis: The Essentials, M. Christmann and S. Brase, Eds., pp. 161-165, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, Germany, 2007.
[11] P. I. Dalko and L. Moisan, "In the golden age of organocatalysis," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 43, no. 39, pp. 5138-5175, 2004.
[12] T. Newhouse, P. S. Baran, and R. W. Hoffmann, "The economies of synthesis," Chemical Society Reviews, vol. 38, no. 11, pp. 30103021, 2009.
[13] D. Enders, M. R. M. Huttl, C. Grondal, and G. Raabe, "Control of four stereocentres in a triple cascade organocatalytic reaction," Nature, vol. 441, no. 7095, pp. 861-863, 2006.
[14] A. Carlone, S. Cabrera, M. Marigo, and K. A. J0rgensen, "A new approach for an organocatalytic multicomponent domino asymmetric reaction," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 46, no. 7, pp. 1101-1104, 2007.
[15] M. Eichelbaum, B. Testa, and A. Somogyi, Eds., Stereochemical Aspects of Drug Action and Disposition, Spriger, Heidelberg, Germany, 2003.
[16] K. C. Nicolau, D. J. Edmonds, and P. G. Bulger, "Cascade reactions in total synthesis," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 45, no. 43, pp. 7134-7186, 2006.
[17] C. Grondal, M. Jeanty, and D. Enders, "Organocatalytic cascade reactions as a new tool in total synthesis," Nature Chemistry, vol. 2, no. 3, pp. 167-178, 2010.
[18] R. M. de Figueiredo and M. Christman, "Organocatalytic synthesis of drugs and bioactive natural products," European Journal ofOrganic Chemistry, no. 16, pp. 2575-2600, 2007.
[19] J. Aleman and S. Cabrera, "Applications of asymmetric organocatalysis in medicinal chemistry," Chemical Society Reviews, vol. 42, no. 2, pp. 774-793, 2013.
[20] H. U. Blaser and E. Schmidt, Asymmetric Catalysis on Industrial Scale: Challenges, Approaches and Solutions, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, Germany, 2004.
[21] H. Groger, "Asymmetric organocatalysis on a technical scale: current status and future challenges," Organocatalysis, vol. 2007/2, pp. 227-258, 2008.
[22] C. A. Busacca, D. R. Fandrick, J. J. Song, and C. H. Senanayake, "The growing impact of catalysis in the pharmaceutical industry," Advanced Synthesis and Catalysis, vol. 353, no. 11-12, pp. 1825-1864, 2011.
[23] G. P. Howell, "Asymmetric and diastereoselective conjugate addition reactions: C-C bond formation at large scale," Organic Process Research & Development, vol. 16, no. 7, pp. 1258-1272, 2012.
[24] M. S. Sigman and E. N. Jacobsen, "Schiff base catalysts for the asymmetric strecker reaction identified and optimized from parallel synthetic libraries," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 120, no. 19, pp. 4901-4902,1998.
[25] E. J. Corey and M. J. Grogan, "Enantioselective synthesis of a-amino nitriles from N-benzhydryl imines and HCN with a chiral bicyclic guanidine as catalyst," Organic Letters, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 157-160,1999.
[26] E. A. C. Davie, S. M. Mennen, Y. Xu, and S. J. Miller, "Asymmetric catalysis mediated by synthetic peptides," Chemical Reviews, vol. 107, no. 12, pp. 5759-5812, 2007.
[27] L. Bernardi, M. Fochi, M. Comes Franchini, and A. Ricci, "Bioinspired organocatalytic asymmetric reactions," Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry, vol. 10, no. 15, pp. 2911-2922, 2012.
[28] M. M. Benning, T. Haller, J. A. Gerlt, and H. M. Holden, "New reactions in the crotonase superfamily: structure of methylmalonyl CoA decarboxylase from Escherichia coli," Biochemistry, vol. 39, no. 16, pp. 4630-4639, 2000.
[29] S. Nakamura, "Catalytic enantioselective decarboxylative reactions using organocatalysts," Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry, vol. 12, pp. 394-405, 2014.
[30] J. Lubkoll and H. Wennemers, "Mimicry of polyketide synthases-enantioselective 1,4-addition reactions of malonic acid half-thioesters to nitroolefins," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 46, no. 36, pp. 6841-6844, 2007.
[31] H. Y. Bae, S. Some, J. Y. - Kim et al., "Organocatalytic enantios-elective Michael-addition of malonic acid half-thioesters to nitroolefins: from mimicry of polyketide synthases to scalable synthesis of y-amino acids," Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis, vol. 353, no. 17, pp. 3196-3202, 2011.
[32] J. Becht, O. Meyer, and G. Helmchen, "Enantioselective syntheses of (-)-(R)-rolipram, (-)-(R)-baclofen and other GABA analogues via rhodium-catalyzed conjugate addition of arylboronic acids," Synthesis, no. 18, pp. 2805-2810, 2003.
[33] D. M. Barnes, S. J. Wittenberger, J. Zhang et al., "Development of a catalytic enantioselective conjugate addition of 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds to nitroalkenes for the synthesis of endothelin-A antagonist ABT-546. Scope, mechanism, and further application to the synthesis of the antidepressant rolipram," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 44, pp. 13097-13105, 2002.
[34] H. N. Yuan, S. Wang, J. Nie, W. Meng, Q. Yao, and J. A. Ma, "Hydrogen-bond-directed enantioselective decarboxyla-tive mannich reaction of ^-ketoacids with ketimines: application to the synthesis of anti-HIV drug DPC 083," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 52, no. 14, pp. 3869-3873, 2013.
[35] X. Xu, T. Furukawa, T. Okino, H. Miyabe, and Y. Takemoto, "Bifunctional-thiourea-catalyzed diastereo- And enantioselective Aza-Henry reaction," Chemistry, vol. 12, no. 2, pp. 466-476, 2005.
[36] Y. Zhang, J. Kua, and J. A. McCammon, "Role of the catalytic triad and oxyanion hole in acetylcholinesterase catalysis: an ab initio QM/MM study," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 35, pp. 10572-10577, 2002.
[37] J. T. Yli-Kauhaluoma, J. A. Ashley, L. C. Lo Chih-Hung, L. Tucker, M. M. Wolfe, and K. D. Janda, "Anti-metallocene antibodies: a new approach to enantioselective catalysis of the diels-alder reaction," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 117, no. 27, pp. 7041-7047,1995.
[38] C. Gioia, A. Hauville, L. Bernardi, F. Fini, and A. Ricci, "Organocatalytic asymmetric diels-Alder reactions of 3-vinylindoles," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 47, no. 48, pp. 9236-9239, 2008.
[39] M. Hesse, Alkaloids, Nature Curse or Blessing? Wiley-VCH, New York, NY, USA, 2002.
[40] J. E. Saxton, "Recent progress in the chemistry of the monoter-penoid indole alkaloids," Natural Product Reports, vol. 14, no. 6, pp. 559-590,1997.
[41] G. Abbiati, V. Canevari, D. Facoetti, and E. Rossi, "Diels-alder reactions of 2-vinylindoles with open-chain C=C dienophiles," European Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 2007, no. 3, pp. 517525, 2007.
[42] K. S. Gunmudsson, P. R. Sebahar, L. D'Aurora Richardson et al., "Substituted tetrahydrocarbazoles with potent activity against human papillomaviruses," Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters, vol. 19, no. 13, pp. 3489-3492, 2009.
[43] S. Shimizu, K. Ohori, T. Arai, H. Sasai, and M. Shibasaki, "A catalytic asymmetric synthesis of tubifolidine," Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 63, no. 21, pp. 7547-7551,1998.
[44] Y. Hoashi, T. Yabuta, and Y. Takemoto, "Bifunctional thiourea-catalyzed enantioselective double Michael reaction of y,S-unsaturated ^-ketoester to nitroalkene: asymmetric synthesis of (-)-epibatidine," Tetrahedron Letters, vol. 45, no. 50, pp. 91859188, 2004.
[45] P. S. Haynes, P. A. Stupple, and D. J. Dixon, "Organocatalytic asymmetric total synthesis of (R)-rolipram and formal synthesis
of (3S,4R)-paroxetine," Organic Letters, vol. 10, no. 7, pp. 13891391, 2008.
[46] R. P. Herrera, V. Sgarzani, L. Bernardi, and A. Ricci, "Catalytic enantioselective Friedel-Crafts alkylation of indoles with nitroalkenes by using a simple thiourea organocatalyst," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 44, no. 40, pp. 65766579, 2005.
[47] K. Maruoka, "Practical aspects of recent asymmetric phasetransfer catalysis," Organic Process Research & Development,vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 679-697, 2008.
[48] T. Shioiri, "Chiral phase transfer catalysis," in Handbook of Phase Transfer Catalysis, Y. Sasson and R. Nuemann, Eds., chapter 14, pp. 462-479, Blackie Academic & Professional, London, UK, 1997.
[49] A. Nelson, "Asymmetric phase-transfer catalysis," Angewandte Chemie International Edition,vol. 38, no. 11, pp. 1583-1585,1999.
[50] K. Maruoka and T. Ooi, "Enantioselective amino acid synthesis by chiral phase-transfer catalysis," Chemical Reviews, vol. 103, no. 8, pp. 3013-3028, 2003.
[51] M. J. O'Donnell, "The enantioselective synthesis of a-amino acids by phase-transfer catalysis with achiral schiff base esters," Accounts of Chemical Research, vol. 37, no. 8, pp. 506-517, 2004.
[52] B. Lygo and B. I. Andrews, "Asymmetric phase-transfer catalysis utilizing chiral quaternary ammonium salts: asymmetric alkylation of glycine imines," Accounts of Chemical Research, vol. 37, no. 8, pp. 518-525, 2004.
[53] S. Shirakawa and K. Maruoka, in Catalytic Asymmetric Synthesis, I. Ojima, Ed., chapter 2C, p. 95, Wiley, Hoboken, NJ, USA, 3rd edition, 2010.
[54] K. Maruoka, "Highly practical amino acid and alkaloid synthesis using designer chiral phase transfer catalysts as highperformance organocatalysts," The Chemical Record, vol. 10, no. 5, pp. 254-259, 2010.
[55] S. Shirakawa and K. Maruoka, "Recent developments in asymmetric phase-transfer reactions," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 52, no. 16, pp. 4312-4348, 2013.
[56] U. H. Dolling, P. Davis, and E. J. J. Grabowski, "Efficient catalytic asymmetric alkylations. 1. Enantioselective synthesis of (+)-indacrinone via chiral phase-transfer catalysis," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 106, no. 2, pp. 446-447,1984.
[57] R. S. E. Conn, A. V. Lovell, S. Karaday, and L. M. Weinstock, "Chiral Michael addition: methyl vinyl ketone addition catalyzed by Cinchona alkaloid derivatives," Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 51, no. 24, pp. 4710-4711,1986.
[58] E. J. Cragoe Jr., O. W. WoltersdorfJr., N. P. Gould et al., "Agents for the treatment of brain edema. 2. [(2,3,9,9a-tetrahydro-3-oxo-9a-substituted-1H-fluoren-7-yl)oxy]alkanoic acids and some of their analogues," Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 29, no. 5, pp. 825-841,1986.
[59] J. P. Scott, M. S. Ashwood, K. M. J. Brands et al., "Development of a phase transfer catalyzed asymmetric synthesis for an estrogen receptor beta selective agonist," Organic Process Research and Development, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 723-730, 2008.
[60] A. Baschieri, L. Bernardi, A. Ricci, S. Suresh, and M. F. A. Adamo, "Catalytic asymmetric conjugate addition of nitroalka-nes to 4-nitro5-styrylisoxazoles," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 48, no. 49, pp. 9342-9345, 2009.
[61] S. France, D. J. Guerin, S. J. Miller, and T. Letchka, "Nucleophilic chiral amines as catalysts in asymmetric synthesis," Chemical Reviews, vol. 103, no. 8, pp. 2985-3012, 2003.
[62] T. Marcelli and H. Hiemstra, "Cinchona alkaloids in asymmetric organocatalysis," Synthesis, no. 8, Article ID E26109SS, pp. 1229-1279, 2010.
[63] H. Hiemstra and H. Wynberg, "Addition of aromatic thiols to conjugated cycloalkenones, catalyzed by chiral .beta.-hydroxy amines. A mechanistic study of homogeneous catalytic asymmetric synthesis," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 103, no. 2, pp. 417-430,1981.
[64] M. Bella and K. A. J0rgensen, "Organocatalytic enantioselective conjugate addition to alkynones," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 126, no. 18, pp. 5672-5673, 2004.
[65] H. Li, Y. Wang, L. Tang et al., "Stereocontrolled creation of adjacent quaternary and tertiary stereocenters by a catalytic conjugate addition," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 44, no. 1, pp. 105-108, 2004.
[66] X. D. Liu, L. J. Deng, H. J. Song, H. Z. Jia, and R. Wang, "Asymmetric Aza-Mannich addition: synthesis of modified chiral 2-(Ethylthio)-thiazolone derivatives with anticancer potency," Organic Letters, vol. 13, no. 6, pp. 1494-1497, 2011.
[67] L. E. Brown, K. C. Cheng, W. Wei et al., "Discovery of new antimalarial chemotypes through chemical methodology and library development," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 108, no. 17, pp. 67756780, 2011.
[68] S. Kaneko, T. Yoshino, T. Katoh, and S. Terashima, "Synthetic studies of huperzine A and its fluorinated analogues. 1. Novel asymmetric syntheses of an enantiomeric pair of huperzine A," Tetrahedron, vol. 54, no. 21, pp. 5471-5484,1998.
[69] T. Akiyama, J. Itoh, K. Yokota, and K. Fuchibe, "Enantioselective mannich-type reaction catalyzed by a chiral Br0nsted acid," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 43, no. 12, pp. 1566-1568, 2004.
[70] D. Uraguchi and M. Terada, "Chiral Brensted acid-catalyzed direct mannich reactions via electrophilic activation," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 126, no. 17, pp. 5356-5357, 2004.
[71] S. Hoffmann, A. M. Seyad, and B. List, "A powerful Brensted acid catalyst for the organocatalytic asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of imines," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 44, no. 45, pp. 7424-7427, 2005.
[72] M. Rueping, J. Dufour, and F. R. Schoepke, "Advances in catalytic metal-free reductions: from bio-inspired concepts to applications in the organocatalytic synthesis of pharmaceuticals and natural products," Green Chemistry, vol. 13, no. 5, pp. 10841105, 2011.
[73] M. Rueping, M. Stoeckel, E. Sugiono, and T. Theissmann, "Asymmetric metal-free synthesis of fluoroquinolones by organocatalytic hydrogenation," Tetrahedron, vol. 66, no. 33, pp. 6565-6568, 2010.
[74] I. Hayakawa, S. Atarashi, S. Yokohama, M. Imamura, K. Sakano, and M. Furukawa, "Synthesis and antibacterial activities ofopti-cally active ofloxacin," Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 163-164,1986.
[75] D. Seiyaku, "The s-(-) isomer of 7,8-difluoro-2,3-dihydro-3-methyl-4H-1,4-benzoxazine can be utilized in the synthesis of the optically active form of Ofloxacin known as Levofloxacin. Levofloxacin is 8 to 128 times more active than Ofloxacin depending upon the bacteria tested," Drugs Future, vol. 17, no. 7, pp. 559-563,1992.
[76] M. Rueping, A. P. Antonchick, and T. Theissmann, "A highly enantioselective Br0nsted acid catalyzed cascade reaction:
organocatalytic transfer hydrogenation of quinolines and their application in the synthesis of alkaloids," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 45, no. 22, pp. 3683-3686, 2006.
[77] X. Chen, X. Xu, H. Liu, L. Cun, and L. Gong, "Highly enantioselective organocatalytic Biginelli reaction," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 128, no. 46, pp. 14802-14803, 2006.
[78] Y. Huang, F. Yang, and C. Zhu, "Highly enantioseletive biginelli reaction using a new chiral ytterbium catalyst: asymmetric synthesis of dihydropyrimidines," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 127, no. 47, pp. 16386-16387, 2005.
[79] P. Melchiorre, M. Marigo, A. Carlone, and G. Bartoli, "Asymmetric aminocatalysis-gold rush in organic chemistry," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 47, no. 33, pp. 61386171, 2008.
[80] C. F. Barbas III, "Organocatalysis lost: modern chemistry, ancient chemistry, and an unseen biosynthetic apparatus," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 47, no. 1, pp. 4247, 2008.
[81] Z. G. Hajos and D. R. Parrish, "Asymmetric synthesis of bicyclic intermediates of natural product chemistry," Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 39, no. 12, pp. 1615-1621,1974.
[82] U. Eder, G. Sauer, and R. Wiechert, "New type of asymmetric cyclization to optically active steroid CD partial structures," Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English, vol. 10, no. 7, pp. 496-497, 1971.
[83] B. List, R. A. Lerner, and C. F. Barbas III, "Proline-catalyzed direct asymmetric aldol reactions," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 122, no. 10, pp. 2395-2396, 2000.
[84] W. Notz, F. Tanaka, and C. F. Barbas III, "Enamine-based organocatalysis with proline and diamines: the development of direct catalytic asymmetric aldol, mannich, Michael, and diels-alder reactions," Accounts of Chemical Research, vol. 37, no. 8, pp. 580-591, 2004.
[85] W. Notz and B. List, "Catalytic asymmetric synthesis of anti-1,2-diols," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 122, no. 30, pp. 9336-7387, 2000.
[86] A. B. Northrup and D. W. C. MacMillan, "The first direct and enantioselective cross-aldol reaction of aldehydes," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 24, pp. 6798-6799, 2002.
[87] B. List, "Direct catalytic asymmetric a-amination of aldehydes," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 20, pp. 5656-5657, 2002.
[88] N. Kumaragurubaran, K. Juhl, W. Zhuang, A. B0gevig, and K. A. J0rgensen, "Direct l-proline-catalyzed asymmetric a-amination of ketones," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 22, pp. 6254-6255, 2002.
[89] A. B. Northrup and D. W. C. MacMillan, "The first general enantioselective catalytic Diels-Alder reaction with simple (a,ß-unsaturated ketones," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 11, pp. 2458-2460, 2002.
[90] R. M. Wilson, W. S. Jen, and D. W. C. MacMillan, "Enantios-elective organocatalytic intramolecular Diels-Alder reactions. The asymmetric synthesis of solanapyrone D," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 127, no. 33, pp. 11616-11617,2005.
[91] J. F. Austin and D. W. C. MacMillan, "Enantioselective organocatalytic indole alkylations. Design of a new and highly effective chiral amine for iminium catalysis," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 7, pp. 1172-1173, 2002.
[92] N. A. Paras and D. W. C. MacMillan, "The enantioselective organocatalytic 1,4-addition of electron-rich benzenes to a,ß-unsaturated aldehydes," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 27, pp. 7894-7895, 2002.
[93] S. P. Brown, N. C. Goodwin, and D. W. C. MacMillan, "The first enantioselective organocatalytic Mukaiyama-Michael reaction: a direct method for the synthesis of enantioenriched y-butenolide architecture," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 125, no. 5, pp. 1192-1194, 2003.
[94] S. G. Ouellet, J. B. Tuttle, and D. W. C. MacMillan, "Enantioselective organocatalytic hydride reduction," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 127, no. 1, pp. 32-33, 2005.
[95] J. F. Austin, S. G. Kim, C. J. Sinz, W. J. Xiao, and D. W. C. MacMillan, "Enantioselective organocatalytic construction of pyrroloindolines by a cascade addition-cyclization strategy: synthesis of (-)-flustramine B," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 101, no. 15, pp. 5482-5487, 2004.
[96] H. P. Rang, M. M. Dale, J. M. Ritter, and P. Gardner, Pharmacology, Churchill Livingstone, Philadelphia, Pa, USA, 4th edition, 2001.
[97] H. J. Bardsley and A. K. Daly, "The therapeutic use of r-warfarin as anticoagulant," Patent Cooperation Treaty International Application WO, 0043003, 2000.
[98] A. Robinson and H. Y. Li, "The first practical asymmetric synthesis of R and S-Warfarin," Tetrahedron Letters, vol. 37, no. 46, pp. 8321-8324, 1996.
[99] Y. Tsuchiya, Y. Hamashima, and M. Sodeoka, "A new entry to Pd-H chemistry: catalytic asymmetric conjugate reduction of enones with EtOH and a highly enantioselective synthesis of warfarin," Organic Letters, vol. 8, no. 21, pp. 4851-4854, 2006.
[100] N. Halland, T. Hansen, and K. A. J0rgensen, "Organocatalytic asymmetric Michael reaction of cyclic 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds and a ^-unsaturated ketones-a highly atom-economic catalytic one-step formation of optically active warfarin anticoagulant," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 42, no. 40, pp. 4955-4957, 2003.
[101] N. Halland, K. A. J0rgensen, and T. Hansen, Patent Cooperation Treaty International Application, WO 03/050105, 9, 413, 2003.
[102] H. Kim, C. Yen, P. Preston, and J. Chin, "Substrate-directed stereoselectivity in vicinal diamine-catalyzed synthesis of warfarin," Organic Letters, vol. 8, no. 23, pp. 5239-5242, 2006.
[103] H. Yang, L. Li, K. Jiang, J. Jiang, G. Lai, and L. Xu, "Highly enantioselective synthesis of warfarin and its analogs by means of cooperative LiClO4/DPEN-catalyzed Michael reaction: enan-tioselectivity enhancement and mechanism," Tetrahedron, vol. 66, no. 51, pp. 9708-9713, 2010.
[104] M. Rogozinska, A. Adamkiewicz, and J. Mlynarsky, "Efficient "on water" organocatalytic protocol for the synthesis of optically pure warfarin anticoagulant," Green Chemistry, vol. 13, no. 5, pp. 1155-1157, 2011.
[105] X. Zhu, A. Lin, Y. Shi, J. Guo, C. Zhu, and Y. Cheng, "Enantios-elective synthesis of polycyclic coumarin derivatives catalyzed by an in situ formed primary amine-imine catalyst," Organic Letters, vol. 13, no. 16, pp. 4382-4385, 2011.
[106] J. Dong and D. M. Du, "Highly enantioselective synthesis of warfarin and its analogs catalysed by primary amine-phosphinamide bifunctional catalysts," Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry, vol. 10, no. 40, pp. 8125-8131, 2012.
[107] M. Leven, J. M. Neudörfl, and B. Goldfuss, "Metal-mediated aminocatalysis provides mild conditions: enantioselective
Michael addition mediated by primary amino catalysts and alkali-metal ions," Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 9, pp. 155-165, 2013.
[108] J. W. Xie, L. Yue, W. Chen et al., "Highly enantioselective Michael addition of cyclic 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds to аф-unsaturated ketones," Organic Letters, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 413-415, 2007.
[109] T. E. Kristensen, K. Vestli, F. K. Hansen, and T. Hansen, "New phenylglycine-derived primary amine organocatalysts for the preparation of optically active warfarin," European Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 2009, no. 30, pp. 5185-5191, 2009.
[110] Z. H. Dong, L. J. Wang, X. H. Chen, X. H. Liu, L. L. Lin, and X. M. Feng, "Organocatalytic enantioselective Michael addition of 4-hydroxycoumarin to a ,^-unsaturated ketones: a simple synthesis of warfarin," European Journal of Organic Chemistry, no. 30, pp. 5192-5197, 2009.
[111] D. V. Paone, A. W. Shaw, D. N. Nguyen et al., "Potent, orally bioavailable calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonists for the treatment of migraine: discovery of N-(3R,6S)-6-(2,3- difluorophenyl)-2-oxo -1-(2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)azepan-3-yl-4-(2-oxo-2, 3-dihydro-1H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridin-1-yl)piperidine-1-carboxamide (MK-0974)," Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 50, no. 23, pp. 5564-5567, 2007.
[112] M. Palucki, I. Davies, D. Steinhuebel, and J. Rosen, Patent Cooperation Treaty International Application W02007120589, 2007.
[113] F. Xu, M. Zacuto, N. Yoshikawa et al., "Asymmetric synthesis of telcagepant, a CGRP receptor antagonist for the treatment of migraine," Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 75, no. 22, pp. 7829-7841, 2010.
[114] D. P. Steinhuebel, S. W. Krska, A. Alorati et al., "Asymmetric hydrogenation of protected allylic amines," Organic Letters, vol. 12, no. 18, pp. 4201-4203, 2010.
[115] C. S. Burgey, D. V. Paone, A. W. Shaw et al., "Synthesis ofthe (3R,6S)-3-amino-6-(2,3-difluorophenyl)azepan-2-one of telcagepant (MK-0974), a calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist for the treatment of migraine headache," Organic Letters, vol. 10, no. 15, pp. 3235-3238, 2008.
[116] H. Gotoh, H. Ishikawa, and Y. Hayashi, "Diphenylprolinol silyl ether as catalyst of an asymmetric, catalytic, and direct Michael reaction of nitroalkanes with (^-unsaturated aldehydes," Organic Letters, vol. 9, no. 25, pp. 5307-5309, 2007.
[117] Y. Wang, P. Li, X. Liang, T. Y. Zhang, and J. Ye, "An efficient enantioselective method for asymmetric Michael addition of nitroalkanes to (^-unsaturated aldehydes," Chemical Communications, no. 10, pp. 1232-1234, 2008.
[118] Y. Hayashi, H. Gotoh, T. Hayashi, and M. Shoji, "Diphenylprolinol silyl ethers as efficient organocatalysts for the asymmetric Michael reaction of aldehydes and nitroalkenes," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 44, no. 27, pp. 4212-4215, 2005.
[119] M. Marigo, T. C. Wabnitz, D. Fielenbach, and K. A. J0rgensen, "Enantioselective organocatalyzed sulfenylation of aldehydes," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 44, no. 5, pp. 794-797, 2005.
[120] J. Ahman, M. Birch, S. J. Haycock-Lewandowski, J. Long, and A. Wilder, "Process research and scale-up of a commercialisable route to maraviroc (UK-427,857), a CCR-5 receptor antagonist," Organic Process Research & Development, vol. 12, no. 6, pp. 11041113, 2008.
[121] S. J. Haycock-Lewandowski, A. Wilder, and J. Ahman, "Development of a bulk enabling route to maraviroc (UK-427,857), a CCR-5 receptor antagonist," Organic Process Research & Development, vol. 12, no. 6, pp. 1094-1103, 2008.
[122] G.-L. Zhao, S. Lin, A. Korotvicka, L. Deiana, M. Kullberg, and A. Cordova, "Asymmetric synthesis of maraviroc (UK-427,857)," Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis, vol. 352, no. 13, pp. 2291-2298, 2010.
[123] M. S. Yu, I. Lantos, Z. Peng, J. Yu, and T. Cacchio, "Asymmetric synthesis of (-)-paroxetine using PLE hydrolysis," Tetrahedron Letters, vol. 41, no. 30, pp. 5647-5651, 2000.
[124] J. M. Palomo, G. Fernandez-Lorente, C. Mateo, R. Fernandez-Lafuente, and J. M. Grison, "Enzymatic resolution of (±)-trans-4-(4/-fluorophenyl)-6-oxo-piperidin-3-ethylcarboxylate, an intermediate in the synthesis of (-)-Paroxetine," Tetrahedron, vol. 13, no. 21, pp. 2375-2361, 2002.
[125] M. Amat, J. Bosch, J. Hidalgo et al., "Synthesis of enantiopure trans-3,4-disubstituted piperidines. An enantiodivergent synthesis of (+)- and (-)-paroxetine," Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 65, no. 10, pp. 3074-3084, 2000.
[126] T. A. Johnson, D. O. Jang, W. Slafer, M. D. Curtius, and P. Beak, "Asymmetric carbon-carbon bond formations in conjugate additions of lithiated N-Boc allylic and benzylic amines to nitroalkenes: enantioselective synthesis of substituted piperidines, pyrrolidines, and pyrimidinones," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 124, no. 39, pp. 11689-11698, 2002.
[127] G. Valero, J. Schimer, I. Cisarova, J. Vesely, A. Moyano, and R. Rios, "Highly enantioselective organocatalytic synthesis of piperidines. Formal synthesis of (-)-Paroxetine," Tetrahedron Letters, vol. 50, no. 17, pp. 1943-1946, 2009.
[128] S. Brandau, A. Landa, J. Franzen, M. Marigo, and K. A. Jorgensen, "Organocatalytic conjugate addition of malonates to a ,^-unsaturated aldehydes: asymmetric formal synthesis of (-)-paroxetine, chiral lactams, and lactones," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 45, no. 26, pp. 4305-4309, 2006.
[129] C. Lagisetti, A. Pourpak, Q. Jiang et al., "Antitumor compounds based on a natural product consensus pharmacophore," Journal ofMedicinal Chemistry, vol. 51, no. 19, pp. 6220-6224, 2008.
[130] X. Jiang, Y. Cao, Y. Wang, L. Liu, F. Shen, and R. Wang, "A unique approach to the concise synthesis of highly optically active spirooxazolines and the discovery of a more potent oxindole-type phytoalexin analogue," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 132, no. 43, pp. 15328-15333, 2010.
[131] S. Kotha, A. C. Deb, K. Lahiri, and E. Manivannan, "Selected synthetic strategies to spirocyclics," Synthesis, no. 2, pp. 165-193, 2009.
[132] E. J. Corey, "Catalytic enantioselective diels-alder reactions: methods, mechanistic fundamentals, pathways, and applications," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 114, pp. 1724-1741, 2002.
[133] P. R. Sebahar and R. M. Williams, "The asymmetric total synthesis of (+)- and (-)-spirotryprostatin B," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 122, no. 23, pp. 5666-5667, 2000.
[134] B. M. Trost, N. Cramer, and S. M. Silverman, "Enantioselective construction of spirocyclic oxindolic cyclopentanes by palladium-catalyzed trimethylenemethane-[3+2]-cycloaddition," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 129, no. 41, pp. 12396-12397, 2007.
[135] A. B. Dounay and L. E. Overman, "The asymmetric intramolecular heck reaction in natural product total synthesis," Chemical Reviews, vol. 103, no. 8, pp. 2945-2963, 2003.
[136] A. Madin, C. J. O'Donnell, T. Oh, D. W. Old, L. E. Overman, and M. J. Sharp, "Use of the intramolecular heck reaction for forming congested quaternary carbon stereocenters. Stereocon-trolled total synthesis of (±)-gelsemine," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 127, no. 51, pp. 18054-18065, 2005.
[137] J. J. Liu and Z. Zhang, Patent Cooperation Treaty International Application WO, 2008/055812, 2008.
[138] P. Chene, "Inhibiting the p53-MDM2 interaction: an important target for cancer therapy," Nature Reviews Cancer, vol. 3, pp. 102-109, 2003.
[139] G. Bencivenni, L. Wu, A. Mazzanti et al., "Targeting structural and stereochemical complexity by organocascade catalysis: construction of spirocyclic oxindoles having multiple stereocenters," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 48, no. 39, pp. 7200-7203, 2009.
[140] C. U. Kim, W. Lew, M. A. Williams et al., "Influenza neu-raminidase inhibitors possessing a novel hydrophobic interaction in the enzyme active site: design, synthesis, and structural analysis of carbocyclic sialic acid analogues with potent antiinfluenza activity," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 119, no. 4, pp. 681-690,1997.
[141] M. Von Itzstein, W.-Y. Wu, G. B. Kok et al., "Rational design of potent sialidase-based inhibitors of influenza virus replication," Nature, vol. 363, no. 6428, pp. 418-423,1993.
[142] V. Farina and J. D. Brown, "Tamiflu: the supply problem," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 45, no. 44, pp. 7330-7334, 2006.
[143] M. Shibasaki and M. Kanai, "Synthetic strategies for oseltamivir phosphate," European Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 2008, no. 11, pp. 1839-1850, 2008.
[144] Y. Y. Yeung, S. Hong, and E. J. Corey, "A short enantioselective pathway for the synthesis of the anti-influenza neuramidase inhibitor oseltamivir from 1,3-butadiene and acrylic acid," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 128, no. 19, pp. 6310-6311, 2006.
[145] Y. Fukuta, T. Mita, N. Fukuda, M. Kanai, and M. Shibasaki, "De novo synthesis of tamiflu via a catalytic asymmetric ring-opening of meso-aziridines with TMSN3," Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 128, no. 19, pp. 6312-6313,2006.
[146] H. Ishikawa, T. Suzuki, and Y. Hayashi, "High-yielding synthesis of the anti-influenza neuramidase inhibitor (-)-oseltamivir by three "one-pot" operations," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 48, no. 7, pp. 1304-1307, 2009.
[147] H. Ishikawa, T. Suzuki, H. Orita, T. Uchimaru, and Y. Hayashi, "High-yielding synthesis of the anti-influenza neuraminidase inhibitor (-)-oseltamivir by two "one-pot" sequences," Chemistry, vol. 16, no. 42, pp. 12616-12626, 2010.
[148] S. Zhu, S. Yu, Y. Wang, and D. Ma, "Organocatalytic Michael addition of aldehydes to protected 2-amino-1-nitroethenes: the practical syntheses of oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and substituted 3-aminopyrrolidines," Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 49, no. 27, pp. 4656-4660, 2010.
[149] J. Rehak, M. Hut'ka, A. Latika et al., "Thiol-free synthesis of oseltamivir and its analogues via organocatalytic Michael additions of oxyacetaldehydes to 2-acylaminonitroalkenes," Synthesis, vol. 44, pp. 2424-2430, 2012.
[150] J. Weng, Y. B. Li, R. B. Wang, and G. Lu, "Organocatalytic Michael reaction of nitroenamine derivatives with aldehydes:
short and efficient esymmetric eynthesis of (-)-oseltamivir," ChemCatChem, vol. 4, no. 7, pp. 1007-1012, 2012.
[151] V. Hajzer, A. Latika, J. Durmis, and R. Sebesta, "Enantioselective Michael addition of the 2-(1-ethylpropoxy)acetaldehyde to N-[(1Z)-2-nitroethenyl]acetamide-optimization of the key step in the organocatalytic oseltamivir synthesis," Helvetica Chimica Acta, vol. 95, no. 12, pp. 2421-2428, 2012.
[152] T. Muakaiyama, H. Ishikawa, H. Koshino, and Y. Hayashi, "One-pot synthesis of (-)-oseltamivir and mechanistic insights into the organocatalyzed Michael reaction," Chemistry, vol. 19, no. 52, pp. 17789-17800, 2013.
[153] K. Yamatsugu, L. Yin, S. Kamijo, Y. Kimura, M. Kanai, and M. Shibasaki, "A synthesis of tamiflu by using a barium-catalyzed asymmetric diels-alder-type reaction," Angewandte ChemieInternationalEdition,vol. 48, no. 6,pp. 1070-1076,2009.
[154] F. Cozzi, "Immobilization of organic catalysts: when, why, and how?" Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis, vol. 348, no. 12-13, pp. 1367-1390, 2006.
[155] T. E. Christensen and T. Hansen, "Polymer-supported chiral organocatalysts: synthetic strategies for the road towards affordable polymeric immobilization," European Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 17, pp. 3179-3204, 2010.
[156] A. L. W. Demuynck, L. Peng, F. De-Clippel, J. Vanderleyden, P. A. Jacobs, and B. F. Sels, "Solid acids as heterogeneous support for primary amino acid-derived diamines in direct asymmetric aldol reactions," Advanced Synthesis and Catalysis, vol. 353, no. 5, pp. 725-732, 2011.
Copyright of ISRN Otolaryngology is the property of Hindawi Publishing Corporation and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use.