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Multicomponent alkene azidoarylation by anion-mediated dual catalysis

Author

Listed:
  • Ala Bunescu

    (University of Cambridge)

  • Yusra Abdelhamid

    (University of Cambridge)

  • Matthew J. Gaunt

    (University of Cambridge)

Abstract

Molecules that contain the β-arylethylamine motif have applications in the modulation of pain, treatment of neurological disorders and management of opioid addiction, among others, making it a privileged scaffold in drug discovery1,2. De novo methods for their assembly are reliant on transformations that convert a small class of feedstocks into the target compounds via time-consuming multistep syntheses3–5. Synthetic invention can drive the investigation of the chemical space around this scaffold to further expand its capabilities in biology6–9. Here we report the development of a dual catalysis platform that enables a multicomponent coupling of alkenes, aryl electrophiles and a simple nitrogen nucleophile, providing single-step access to synthetically versatile and functionally diverse β-arylethylamines. Driven by visible light, two discrete copper catalysts orchestrate aryl-radical formation and azido-group transfer, which underpin an alkene azidoarylation process. The process shows broad scope in alkene and aryl components and an azide anion performs a multifaceted role both as a nitrogen source and in mediating the redox-neutral dual catalysis via inner-sphere electron transfer10,11. The synthetic capabilities of this anion-mediated alkene functionalization process are likely to be of use in a variety of pharmaceutically relevant and wider synthetic applications.

Suggested Citation

  • Ala Bunescu & Yusra Abdelhamid & Matthew J. Gaunt, 2021. "Multicomponent alkene azidoarylation by anion-mediated dual catalysis," Nature, Nature, vol. 598(7882), pages 597-603, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:598:y:2021:i:7882:d:10.1038_s41586-021-03980-8
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03980-8
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    Cited by:

    1. Meng He & Rui Li & Chuanqi Cheng & Cuibo Liu & Bin Zhang, 2024. "Microenvironment regulation breaks the Faradaic efficiency-current density trade-off for electrocatalytic deuteration using D2O," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-10, December.

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