Copper catalyzed C-O cross-coupling synthesis of structurally complex vinylic ethers: enabling technology for the non-traditional synthesis of various glycosides Restricted; Files Only

Kim, Taehee (Spring 2025)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/n583xw653?locale=fr
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Abstract

Carbohydrates are the most abundant macromolecules that participate in various biological activities and have shown therapeutic effects, such as antibacterial vaccines, tumor-associated carbohydrate antigens, and diabetes treatment. Accessing a large quantity of structurally defined glycosides is critical in a comprehensive understanding of this macromolecule. Due to the heterogeneous nature of carbohydrates, it is often impractical to extract them from natural sources. The chemical synthesis of glycosides is an alternative to provide structurally defined glycosides. Although traditional glycosylation is well developed, the field of glycosylation still suffers from a lack of uniform methodology to form a glycosidic bond due to its complicated mechanism that varies from SN2 and SN1 mechanism. An alternative approach is an electrophile-promoted intramolecular oxacyclization of carbohydrate-derived acyclic vinylic ethers. However, we discovered a gap in knowledge regarding an efficient synthetic method for vinylic ethers with structural complexity on both sides of the ether linkages.

 Addressing the lack of efficient synthesis of structurally complex vinylic ethers, we developed an efficient synthesis of vinylic ethers via the C-O cross-coupling catalyzed by Cu(I) and cyclic (±)-N,N’-dimethylethylenediamine (CyDMEDA) as a ligand. The substrate scope of this cross-coupling included polyhydroxy alcohols, unsaturated alcohols, tertiary amine containing alcohol, and reducible anomeric alcohol,

 Our C-O cross coupling method enabled the synthesis of acyclic vinylic ethers from monosaccharide building blocks, namely from D-lyxose, D-ribose, and D-arabinose. This was the first example of synthesizing 1,2-disubstituted vinylic ethers with structural and stereochemical complexity on both sides of the ether linkage via cross-coupling. The cross-coupling method provided stereospecific 1,2-disubstituted vinylic ethers, unlike previously used Horner-Wittig olefination or Julia-Kocienski olefination. Upon epoxidation / in-situ oxacyclization of each acyclic vinylic ether product, we have synthesized disaccharides with α-D-talo-, β-D-allo-, and α-D-altropyranoside stereochemistry.

 Subsequently, we began expanding the electrophile-promoted oxacyclization of acyclic vinylic ether intermediates toward the synthesis of 6-deoxy- and 2,6-dideoxyglycosides. The preliminary investigation with D-ribo stereoisomer showed that the acid-catalyzed intramolecular oxacyclization can form 2,6-dideoxyglycosides directly from acyclic vinylic ether intermediates. Further investigation of this transformation is warranted, with other diastereomers and protective group patterns.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction   1

1.1 Carbohydrates   1

1.1.1 Background   1

1.1.2 Traditional glycosylation   2

1.1.3 Controlling stereoselectivity in traditional glycosylation   4

1.1.4 Intramolecular Glycosylation   7

1.1.4.1 Electrophile-promoted oxacyclization and the synthesis of carbohydrate-derived acyclic vinyl ethers   8

1.2 Vinylic Ethers   13

1.2.1 Background   13

1.2.2 Previous methods to synthesize vinylic ethers   15

1.2.3 Copper-catalyzed C(sp2)-O cross coupling   16

1.3 Motivation   21

1.3.2 Acid-catalyzed glycosylation   23

1.3.3 This project   24

Chapter 2 Cu(I)-catalyzed cross-coupling synthesis of vinylic ethers   27

2.1 Introduction   27

2.2 Results and discussion   27

2.2.1 Optimization   27

2.2.1.1 Proposed mechanism   30

2.2.2 Substrate scope   31

2.3 Concurrent methods of vinylic ether synthesis   35

2.4 Conclusion   36

Chapter 3 Non-traditional approach toward disaccharides via acyclic vinylic ether intermediates   38

3.1 Background   38

3.2 Results and Discussion   39

3.2.1. Synthesis of vinylic iodides from monosaccharide building blocks   39

3.2.2 Vinylic ethers via Cu(I) catalyzed cross-coupling   43

3.2.3. Electrophile promoted oxacyclization of carbohydrate-derived vinylic ethers   45

3.2.3.1. Proposed mechanism   45

3.2.3.2 Results   46

3.2.4 Structural determination of disaccharides   54

3.3 Conclusion   57

Chapter 4 Synthesis of 6-deoxy and 2,6-dideoxy glycosides via acyclic vinylic ether intermediates   59

4.1 Background   59

4.2 Results and Discussion   60

4.2.1 Synthesis of E-vinylic iodides from D-ribo-alkynes   60

4.2.2. Synthesis of hydroxy vinylic ether intermediates via Cu-catayzed cross-coupling followed by debenzoylation   61

4.2.2.1. Synthesis of vinylic ethers via Cu(I)-catalyzed cross-coupling   61

4.2.2.2 Attempt at the synthesis of vinylic boronate and Cu(II)-catalyzed cross-coupling   63

4.2.3. Electrophile-promoted oxacyclization of acyclic vinylic ether intermediates   65

4.2.3.1 Synthesis of 6-deoxyglycosides via m-CPBA promoted oxacyclization   65

4.2.3.2 Synthesis of 2,6-dideoxyglycosides via acid-catalyzed oxacyclization   68

4.3 Conclusion and future works   73

References   75

Experimental Sections   90

General Considerations   90

Experimental for Chapter 2   92

NMR Spectra of E-vinylic ethers   114

Experimental for Chapter 3   153

Experimental for vinylic iodides   153

Experimental for the vinylic ethers   165

Experimental for disaccharides   177

NMR Spectra for Chapter 3   187

Experimental for Chapter 4   264

Experimental for vinylic iodides   264

Experimental for the vinylic ethers   268

Experimental for the 6-deoxy- and 2,6-dideoxy glycosides   273

NMR spectra for Chapter 4   277

References   282

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