Bioinspired Site-Selective Hydroperoxidation of Unactivated C(sp3)–H Bonds Useful for Late-Stage Functionalization

20 December 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Organic hydroperoxides are a class of important compounds existing ubiquitously in natural products and biologically significant molecules. The ideal preparation method towards this compound class is direct hydroperoxidation of C(sp3)–H bonds. Despite significant advances in C(sp3)–H functionalization, the site-selective hydroperoxidation of unactivated C(sp3)–H bonds remains a substantial challenge. Inspired by the biosynthetic catalysis of cyclooxygenase, we developed a general and practical method for the direct and site-selective hydroperoxidation of unactivated C(sp3)–H bonds enabled by a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) strategy involving O2 as the oxidant and bromine radical as the HAT catalyst under mild photochemical conditions. The reaction results of diverse substrates, such as alkanes, alcohols, ketones, terpenoids, and derivatives of amino acids, peptides, glucose, ribofuranose, phosphonates, and drugs, showed that this method is robust and efficient, and is useful for the late-stage C–H functionalization of drugs and natural products.

Keywords

Bioinspired catalysis
C-H Oxidation
Organic hydroperoxides

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Supporting Information for Bioinspired Site-Selective Hydroperoxidation of Unactivated C(sp3)–H Bonds Useful for Late-Stage Functionalization
Description
General information, detailed experimental procedures, and characterization data for all new compounds
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