The overarching goal of this proposal is the development of new reactions, and the reagents that control them, to generate enantioenriched organic compounds. These products are valuable precursors to more elaborate small molecules that are medicinal agents and/or more complex biologically active natural products. The proposed methods specifically target the concise synthesis of secondary amines, tertiary amines, and vicinal diamines as single stereoisomers. These methods are based on the development of bis (amidine) reagents that form chiral proton complexes (a polar ionic hydrogen bond) when a strong acid is added, or when used with acidic substrates. Exploration of a new variant is also described, which contains a single amidine in close proximity to a hydrogen bond donor (polar covalent hydrogen bond) when projected from the same chiral scaffold. These studies continue the successful application of bifunctional organocatalysts to the stereocontrolled creation of structural and functional motifs that, while common, are otherwise difficult to prepare using conventional alternatives. These studies also explore an entirely new mode of activation that involves chiral Brnsted acid mediated halogen- alkene reactions. A range of innovative multicomponent coupling reactions will be developed using chiral proton catalysis as the means to control enantioselection. These studies have the potential to impact small molecule synthesis, and ultimately the development of therapeutic agents. Moreover, the methods enable the metal-free production of functionally dense, single enantiomer (and diastereomer) organic compounds.
The development of small molecule organocatalysts based on Brnsted acid catalysis, particularly those that enable the streamlined synthesis of complex small molecule therapeutics is an activity that ultimately promises low-cost medicines.
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