Enantioselective Synthesis of Spirocyclic Nitrogen-Containing Heterocycles Catalyzed by an Iridium-Containing Cytochrome
Article 2025 en
Authors
JX
Jingtong Xu
BB
Brandon J. Bloomer
JB
John N. Brunn
Abstract
1 min read
In the past decade, thousands of synthetic building blocks, intermediates, and drug candidates containing a spirocyclopropane core with at least one nitrogen atom have been investigated for a range of biological activities. These compounds create three-dimensional architectures that maintain the rigidity of their more sp<sup>2</sup>-rich analogs. Most examples contain simple core structures with unsubstituted cyclopropyl moieties, and only one has been made enantioselectively. Therefore, a straightforward method to produce more complex spirocyclic amines with high stereoselectivity would be of great synthetic utility. Here, we report the stereoselective cyclopropanation of methylene-substituted saturated heterocycles catalyzed by an iridium-containing cytochrome. After just four rounds of mutagenesis, we identified a variant that forms spiroazetidines, spiropyrrolidines, and spiropiperidines with enantioselectivities up to 99%. These results demonstrate an expeditious route to valuable, rigid, sp<sup>3</sup>-rich amino acid linchpins.
Brandon J. Bloomer, Isaac A. Joyner, Marc Garcia‐Borràs, Derek B. Hu, Martí Garçon, Andrew F. G. Quest, Consuelo Ugarte Montero, Isaac Furay Yu, Douglas S. Clark, John F Hartwig
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