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Late-stage oxidative C(sp(3))-H methylation 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7805) : 621-+
作者:  Fessler, Evelyn;  Eckl, Eva-Maria;  Schmitt, Sabine;  Mancilla, Igor Alves;  Meyer-Bender, Matthias F.;  Hanf, Monika;  Philippou-Massier, Julia;  Krebs, Stefan;  Zischka, Hans;  Jae, Lucas T.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:46/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Frequently referred to as the '  magic methyl effect'  , the installation of methyl groups-especially adjacent (alpha) to heteroatoms-has been shown to dramatically increase the potency of biologically active molecules(1-3). However, existing methylation methods show limited scope and have not been demonstrated in complex settings(1). Here we report a regioselective and chemoselective oxidative C(sp(3))-H methylation method that is compatible with late-stage functionalization of drug scaffolds and natural products. This combines a highly site-selective and chemoselective C-H hydroxylation with a mild, functional-group-tolerant methylation. Using a small-molecule manganese catalyst, Mn(CF3PDP), at low loading (at a substrate/catalyst ratio of 200) affords targeted C-H hydroxylation on heterocyclic cores, while preserving electron-neutral and electron-rich aryls. Fluorine- or Lewis-acid-assisted formation of reactive iminium or oxonium intermediates enables the use of a mildly nucleophilic organoaluminium methylating reagent that preserves other electrophilic functionalities on the substrate. We show this late-stage C(sp(3))-H methylation on 41 substrates housing 16 different medicinally important cores that include electron-rich aryls, heterocycles, carbonyls and amines. Eighteen pharmacologically relevant molecules with competing sites-including drugs (for example, tedizolid) and natural products-are methylated site-selectively at the most electron rich, least sterically hindered position. We demonstrate the syntheses of two magic methyl substrates-an inverse agonist for the nuclear receptor RORc and an antagonist of the sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor-1-via late-stage methylation from the drug or its advanced precursor. We also show a remote methylation of the B-ring carbocycle of an abiraterone analogue. The ability to methylate such complex molecules at late stages will reduce synthetic effort and thereby expedite broader exploration of the magic methyl effect in pursuit of new small-molecule therapeutics and chemical probes.


A manganese-catalysed oxidative C(sp(3))-H methylation method allows a methyl group to be selectively installed into medicinally important heterocycles, providing a way to improve pharmaceuticals and better understand the '  magic methyl effect'  .


  
Hidden diversity of vacancy networks in Prussian blue analogues 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7794) : 256-+
作者:  Hendrickx, N. W.;  Franke, D. P.;  Sammak, A.;  Scappucci, G.;  Veldhorst, M.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:15/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Prussian blue analogues (PBAs) are a diverse family of microporous inorganic solids, known for their gas storage ability(1), metal-ion immobilization(2), proton conduction(3), and stimuli-dependent magnetic(4,5), electronic(6) and optical(7) properties. This family of materials includes the double-metal cyanide catalysts(8,9) and the hexacyanoferrate/ hexacyanomanganate battery materials(10,11). Central to the various physical properties of PBAs is their ability to reversibly transport mass, a process enabled by structural vacancies. Conventionally presumed to be random(12,13), vacancy arrangements are crucial because they control micropore-network characteristics, and hence the diffusivity and adsorption profiles(14,15). The long-standing obstacle to characterizing the vacancy networks of PBAs is the inaccessibility of single crystals(16). Here we report the growth of single crystals of various PBAs and the measurement and interpretation of their X-ray diffuse scattering patterns. We identify a diversity of non-random vacancy arrangements that is hidden from conventional crystallographic powder analysis. Moreover, we explain this unexpected phase complexity in terms of a simple microscopic model that is based on local rules of electroneutrality and centrosymmetry. The hidden phase boundaries that emerge demarcate vacancynetwork polymorphs with very different micropore characteristics. Our results establish a foundation for correlated defect engineering in PBAs as a means of controlling storage capacity, anisotropy and transport efficiency.