RESUMEN
Medicinal chemists use vast combinatorial molecular libraries to develop leads for new pharmaceuticals. The syntheses of these compounds typically rely on coupling molecular fragments through atoms with planar (sp2) geometry. These so-called flat molecules often lack the protein binding site specificity needed to be an effective drug. Here, we demonstrate a coupling strategy in which a cyclohexene is used as a linker to connect two diverse molecular fragments while forming two new tetrahedral (sp3) stereocenters. These connections are made with the aid of a tungsten complex that activates anisole toward an unusual double protonation, followed by sequential nucleophilic additions. As a result, either cis- or trans-disubstituted cyclohexenes can be prepared with a range of chemical diversity unparalleled by other dearomatization methods.
RESUMEN
Friedel-Crafts Arylation (the Scholl reaction) is the coupling of two aromatic rings with the aid of a strong Lewis or Brønsted acid. This historically significant C-C bond forming reaction normally leads to aromatic products, often as oligomeric mixtures, dictated by the large stabilization gained upon their rearomatization. The coordination of benzene by a tungsten complex disrupts the natural course of this reaction sequence, allowing for Friedel-Crafts Arylation without rearomatization or oligomerization. Subsequent addition of a nucleophile to the coupled intermediate leads to functionalized cyclohexenes. In this work, we show that by coordinating benzene to tungsten through two carbons (dihapto-coordinate), a rarely observed double protonation of the bound benzene is enabled, allowing its subsequent coupling to a second arene without the need of a precious metal or Lewis acid catalyst.