Multigram synthesis of stellane 1,5-dicarbonic acid as a key precursor for the ortho-benzene mimics

19 July 2023, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Herein we present previously unavailable C(sp3)-rich polycyclic hydrocarbon scaffolds which have a potential to become valuable tools in medicinal chemistry and crop science as saturated bioisosteres of benzenoids. We have developed a scalable protocol (up to 50 g from a single synthetic run) for the synthesis of tricyclo[3.3.0.03,7]octane (bisnoradamantane or stellane) 1,5-dicarbonic acid derivatives. X-ray crystallographic analysis of the stellane 1,5-dicarbonic acid dimethyl ester has revealed that this scaffold is an optimal saturated isostere for ortho-disubstituted benzene where substituents exhibit the in-plane topology. The synthetic protocol is based on the oxidative cyclization of dimethyl octahydropentalene-2,5-dicarboxylate (DMOD) through lithiation followed by I2 oxidation. The reaction outcome is determined by the stereochemistry of the substrate. While the endo,endo cis-DMOD, exclusively gives the "unwanted" Claisen cyclization product the exo,endo cis- and exo,exo cis- stereoisomers afford the desired stellane 1,5-dicarbonic acid dimethyl ester quantitatively. DFT computations have revealed that the reaction proceeds via the dianion of dimethyl octahydropentalene-2,5-dicarboxylate, which undergoes SET oxidation by I2 to form a radical anion. The subsequent cyclization followed by a second SET oxidation gives desired stellane derivative.

Keywords

Benzene bioisosteres
tricyclo[3.3.0.0(3.7)]octane
stellane
oxidative cyclization
DFT calculation

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Details of experiments and syntheses; spectral and analytical data for the synthesized compounds; copies of NMR spectra; X-Ray diffraction data; Diastereomeric di-esters cyclization experiments; Cartesian coordinates of all optimized structures.
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Graphical Abstract
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Graphical Abstract
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