Abstract

The boron-mediated aldol reactions of certain types of beta-alkoxy methyl ketone show remarkably high levels of stereoinduction with achiral aldehydes, leading preferentially to 1,5-anti related stereocenters. Given the low levels of asymmetric induction usually observed in acetate aldol reactions, this is of great synthetic utility and has been used successfully in the total synthesis of a number of polyketide natural products. We have investigated the effects of the alkoxy protecting group (OMe, OPMB, PMP acetal, tetrahydropyran, and OTBS) present in the boron enolate on the level and sense of remote 1,5-stereoinduction, using density functional theory calculations (B3LYP/6-31G**). Our predictions of diastereoselectivity from comparison of the competing aldol transition structures are in excellent qualitative and quantitative agreement with experimentally reported values. We conclude that the boron aldol reactions of unsubstituted boron enolates proceed via boat-shaped transition structures in which a stabilizing formyl hydrogen bond exists between the alkoxy oxygen and the aldehyde proton. It is this interaction that leads to preferential formation of the 1,5-anti adduct, by minimizing steric interactions between the beta-alkyl group and one of the ligands on boron. In the case of silyl ethers, the preference for this internal hydrogen bond is not observed due to the size of the protecting group and the electron-poor oxygen atom that donates electron density into the adjacent silicon atom. We show that this stereochemical model is also applicable in rationalizing the 1,4-syn stereoselectivity of boron aldol reactions involving certain alpha-chiral methyl ketones. These detailed results may be summarized as a conformational diagram that can be used to predict the sense of stereoinduction.

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