Tag Archives: copper catalysis

Publication of the week, number 57, 26th December 2014

A couple of years ago Baran published an enantioselective approach to the taxane skeleton based upon a vicinal difunctionalisation/Diels-Alder strategy and an asymmetric conjugate addition forming the all carbon quaternary center. This enabled the synthesis of taxadiene, the parent taxane, in multi-gram quantities ultimately from a “simple” olefin which can be prepared from 2,3-dimethylbut-2-ene:

tax01

Now this has been carried out on scale, not just a couple of grams but several hundred by Filatov from the chemical development department of AMRI and presented in OPRD.

Following the route described by Baran they have, amongst other things, investigated the scalability of the first couple of steps in this route:

tax02

They carried out DSC studies on the cyclopropane and on the bromodiene. The first step involves dibromocarbene addition to the but-2-ene and noted that the cyclopropane decomposes at an onset temperature of 145°C releasing 360 J/g and the diene at 226°C delivering 500 J/g. Both non-trivial amounts of energy. According to their SOPs a 100°C difference between onset temperature and reaction temperature must be observed for a decent safety margin to be maintained. To get around this problem two thing were done a) the dibromocyclopropane was isolated and b) the conversion to the bromodiene was carried out in a continuous flow reactor. A further complication is that the dibromocyclopropane is sensitive to basic conditions and careful work-up conditions had to be chosen to avoid high pH. Using t-BuOK/CHBr3     in heptanes the reaction was addition controlled at 0°C and gave a 98% yield of the diene precursor.

It was determined that the bromodiene was optimally synthesised by using a reaction temperature of 150°C, 2 volumes of N,N-dimethylaniline for 10 minutes in a Hasteloy tube. This allowed 490g of dibromide to be processed within 3.5 hours with a flow rate of 10 mL/minute producing 66% yield of diene.

The copper catalysed coupling of this compound to produce the precursor of the olefin taxadiene precursor was the next problem:

tax03

Using sec-BuLi, CuBr.DMS in THF at -78°C the reaction proved uneventful. Finally an aldol reaction with acrolein catalysed by gadolinium triflate followed by Jones oxidation produced the Diels-Alder diene/dienophile:

tax04

The chirality was introduced earlier by employing a copper (I) catalyst with the chiral phosphonamidite ligand with about 93-94% ee:

tax05

Not many problems were reported in the synthesis of the Diels-Alder precursor. The aldol product was somewhat sensitive to the work-up conditions (retro-aldol). This was avoided by portion.wise work-up and dilution with acetone for the oxidation step. Treatment of the diene/dienophile compound with boron trifluoride diethyl etherate in DCM at 0°C provided the Diels-Alder product in 22% yield along with the other stereoisomer. The desired product was obtained by crystallisation from hexane:

tax06

Conversion to the final product was achieved via the enol triflate and a Negishi coupling, producing 82% yield of

tax07

So there we have it, summarised by the authors “The reported route to (+)-taxadienone  was successfully optimized and scaled-up to decagram quantity. Thermal hazards associated with the production of bromodiene  were addressed by employing a continuous flow reactor. Two cuprate additions were executed in good yield. The crystallization of the Diels-Alder product at the penultimate step proved to be a decisive factor for obtaining (+)-taxadienone  of high quality.”

A nice piece of process chemistry, with few significant problems, here nicely complementing the previous work of Baran. I hope it continues to even larger scale. Congratulations and a Merry Xmas.

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