retrosynthesis concept
DESCRIPTION
Retrosynthesis. Conceptos de retrosíntesis, retrón, sintón, desconecciones, etc.TRANSCRIPT
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Retrosynthetic Analysis. E.J Coreys definition of retrosynthetic analysis: it is a problem solving technique for transforming the structure of synthetic target molecule (TM) to a sequence of progressively simpler structures along the pathway which ultimately leads to simple or commercially available starting materials for a chemical synthesis.
The transformation of a molecule to a synthetic precursor is accomplished by
Disconnection: the reverse operation to a synthetic reaction, the imagined cleavage of a bond,
Functional Group Interconversion (FGI): the process of converting one functional group into another by substitution, addition, elimination, reduction, or oxidation.
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Each structure thus derived from TM then itself becomes a TM for further
analysis. Repetition of the process eventually produces a tree of intermediates having chemical structures in the nodes and possible chemical transformations as pathways from bottom to TM. One should avoid excessive branching and proliferation of useless pathways. Strategies for control and guidance are of the utmost importance.
Synthetic Strategies: Choosing the way along the retrosynthetic tree, synthetic planning. Synthetic Tactics: How a specific bond or set of bonds at a given site can be efficiently created.
Tactics of synthesis. Retron The minimal substructural element in a target structure which keys the direct application of a disconnection to generate a synthetic precursor. For instance, in Diels-Alder reaction the retron, a minimal keying element, is 6-membered ring with a -bond:
+
Synthon An idealised fragment, usually cation or anion, resulting from a disconnection. May or may not be an intermediate in the corresponding reaction. Reagent compound used in practice for a synthon.
Synthon
Reagent
O+
O-
O
Cl
S
S Li
-
Disconnections
Basic Guidelines: 1. Use disconnections corresponding to known reliable reactions, choose disconnection corresponding to the highest yielding reaction.
baa
bPhCH2
PhCH2
+
-
+
+
-
+
Ph
Ph
+
-CH2
CH2
-
+
+
+
2. Disconnect C-C bond according to the present FGs in the molecule, few examples:
R R' R C R'
R OH O H+
R C
R RC+
R
O
R'
OH
R C
OC
+
R'
OH
+
R
O
NO2R C
O
NO2R
O
NO2
a. C-C bond with no neighbouring functional groups
++
b. C-C bond with one oxygen substituent
++ +
c. Allylic C-C bond
+
d. C-C bond with two oxygen substituents in positions 1,3
++
e. C-C bond with two heteroatom substituents in positions 1,2 or 1,4. Umpolung methods.
a ba b+
+ - +- +-
-
3. Aim for simplification: a) Disconnect C-X bond (RCO-X)
O
O
O OH
O
OQuadrone
b) disconnect in the middle of the molecule
CHO OCHO
Ph3P+
MgBr*CuBr O O
O
O
O
O
OHOH
O
O
OHEtO
O
IEtO
-+protection neededC9 C7
C9:EtMgBr.CuBr
+ +
C7:1. LiAiH4
2. MsCl3. LiAlH4
KMnO4 1.EtOH/H+
2.BH3/THF
1. TsCl
2. NaI
Tetrahedron Lett. 1981, 22, 5001
Faranal, Pharaoh's ant trail pheromone
c) disconnect at a branch point d) use symmetry
OHMgBr MgBr
O
O
OH
OH
OH
O
O
O
O
OH
OH
OHOH OH
OH
O
O
OMe
OMe
MeO
MeCOOEt + +
K.C.NicolaouAngew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2001, 40, 761( )-Hybocarpone
SET
+-
-
e) disconnect rings from chain
N
OH
OMe
OMe
BrMgN
O
+
f) use rearrangements
OO
O O
OH +O O
OEt
O
O O
O
OH O
OOH
O
O
Claisen
O
H
H
Oxy-Cope OHO
Cl CN+
4. Carbocyclic Rings:
If one or more 6-membered carbocyclic unit present in the molecule consider a set of
disconnection available for construction of 6-membered rings: Diels-Alder, Robinson annulation, aldol, Dieckmann, internal SN2, Birch reduction, etc. Some types of Diels-Alder disconnections:
O
O O
O
XY
XY
O
O
O
O
OR
OR
O
+ +
+ +
++
-
5. Examples of cleavage of C-C bond as a retrosynthetic reconnection
O OO OH CO2H
O CO2H
O CO2Me
OTsNHN O
O
OHBr
Me
OH
HOTs
O
H
H
OMe
O
OMe
OH
O OO
NOH
CO2Me
AcOH/H2O
h
h
MeOH
Base
ZnBr2
t-BuOK
1. O3
2. NaBH4
NOCl
H2O
-
Examples of effective disconnections:
OH
OH
OH
OHBr
Tago K and Kogen H Tetrahedron, 2000, 56, 8825
+
Plaunotol
OH Geraniol
Key stepOH
OHBrO OH
P
Br
CO2MeO
(RO)2
THF, -78 oC, t-BuOK18-crown-6, 30 min. R = Et mixture E:Z
R = CF3CH2 exclusively E
OOOH
HOH
OH
OH OH Tetracyclic Tigliane ring system
Phorbol
ClaisenO OH
anioniccyclisation
Ovaska TV et al, Org. Lett. 2001, 3, 115
MeLi cat., Ph2O, heat
O
NMe
O
O
O
COOH
COOH
O MeHN
Tropinone
+ +MeNH2
Robinson, 1917, yield 17%Willstatter, 1902, 19 steps, yield 0.75%
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Functional Group Interconversion (FGI): Classification of functional groups by oxidation state of carbon atoms: Oxidation state of carbon in alkanes (cycloalkanes ) is 0, the carbon in the fragment C-H is approximated as carbanion
Oxidation level 1 (alkane 2e): C-X (X = Hal, OH, OR, OAc, OTs, NR2, NO2, SR, etc); C=C Oxidation level 2 (alkane 4e): C=X (X = O, NR); CXY (X, Y = Hal, OR, SR); C=C-X (X = Hal, OR, OSiR3); CC; X-C-C-Y; epoxides. Oxidation level 3 (alkane 6e): COOH, COX (X = OR, Hal, OCOR, NR2);CN, C=C-C=O, C=C-CC
C C C +.- e - e
H
H
H
O H
H
O
O
O H
- 2 e- 2 e - 2 e
CH
+C
+C
2+O
2-C
3+O
2-O H
_
O H
_
L e v e l 0 L e v e l 1L e v e l 2 L e v e l 3
H
HH
H
- 2 e
HH
- 2 e
C C
H H
C
C
H H
C C
.. ..
L e v e l 0 L e v e l 1
L e v e l 2
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Based on this classification FGI can be divided into two groups: Type 1. Isohypsic transformations with no change to the oxidation level of carbon Type 2. Non-isohypsic transformations, where carbon atom is either reduced or oxidised.
In general, on the same oxidation level any functional group interconversion can be performed in more or less easy way. However, transformations between levels can be achieved only on certain derivatives.
Type 1 (no change in oxidation state), Level 1. The most common functions resulting from C-C bond construction are alcohol (Grignard addition to carbonyl compounds, aldol reaction, etc) and olefin (Wittig and related processes, croton condensation, olefin methathesis, etc). In addition, FGI of type 2 often lead to alcohols and olefines (reduction of carbonyl compounds, partial hydrogention)
Conclusion: in practice all functions of oxidation level 1 are synthetically equivalent as they can be easily transformed into each other.
OR'R O
R'R
R'Obut OH
RO
R
HalHal Hal???
but
R OHR OSO2R'
R Hal
R+
sythones
R X R YY
X = Hal, OTs, OMs, OTfY = OR', OCOR', SR', NR'2, N3, NO2
XR R'
R R' R R'+
H
-HX
HHX
HXH+
HX
Markovnikov anti-Markovnikov
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Type 1 (no change in oxidation state), Level 2. The main functional groups are carbonyl compounds (aldehydes and ketones) and alkynes. Formation of synthetic equivalents of carbanions:
Formation of vinyl derivatives.
In organic synthesis vinyl halides can play a dual role: as electrophiles in reaction with organocuprates and as nucleophiles when transformed themselves into organometallic derivatives. Compounds having two functional groups of level 1 which react as a whole belong to level 2 (1,2-disubstituted compounds, oxiranes, allylic systems)
X
OH
-H+ X
O O
-X- +Y-
O
Y
OH
Y+H+
Formation of epoxides in a C-C bond forming procedure (apart from epoxidation of olefines):
O + CH2 SMe2- + O
Formation of allylic systems:
O MgX+OH
O OHH-
NBS Br
O
H
1) TMSOTf, 2) Base
Or LDA, heat
OH
CHO OBase OTMS
H C Li+
TMSCl
RLi
XO
X = Hal, OR, OCOR
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Type 1 (no change in oxidation state), Level 3. The main functional group that allows formation of any other derivative on the same level is acid halide. This is a typical electrophile used to make derivatives of carboxylic acids and in Friedel-Crafts C-C bond forming reactions.
O
X
Et3NO
Polyfunctional compounds of level 3 are ,-unsaturated aldehydes and ketones good Michael acceptors:
O HX OXX = OH, Hal, SR. NR2, etc
Type 2 transformations. Availability of methods to go from alcohol to carboxylic acid derivatives and back makes alkohol, carbonyl and carboxyl functions synthetically equivalent.
OH O OH
O
[O] [O]
OR
O
[H-]O
[H-]OH
Other important kind of transformations interconversion of nitrogen containing functions.
R
O
OH
RCN
R
O
NR2
R NH2
R NR2
NR2 NR2
R HalR NO2
R N3
R NH2
R NH2
NO2-
N3-[H]
RNH2 RNO2[O]
R NO2 OMeOMe
R
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Conclusions: 1. Many functional groups, especially on the same level of oxidation, can be considered as
synthetically equivalent so their retrosynthetic interconversions can be planned. 2. As any functional group can be removed, retrosynthetically we can put a functional group
in any position of alkane or cycloalkane chain and that would allow assembly of a given C-C fragment. Unfortunately, reverse is not achievable as yet.
Example:
Cl
NH2OH
O H
Cl
O
Cl
ONO2
Cl
PhO
O HNO2
ClHNH
O
N+
NO
Ph
HBr
GABAB receptor agonist(R)-balcofen hydrochloride
HCl.
E.J.Corey, F-Y Zhang, Org. Lett, 2000, 2, 4257
MeNO2
cat.
mCPBA
NiCl2/NaBH4 5N HCl TM
Catalyst
Retrosynthetic Analysis.Tactics of synthesis.DisconnectionsBasic Guidelines:Examples of effective disconnections:Conclusions: