Abstract

The transition metal-catalyzed allylic substitution reaction is a particularly versatile method for the construction of carbon-carbon and carbon-heteroatom bonds. In this regard, the rhodium-catalyzed variant has emerged as a powerful method for the regioselective and stereospecific allylic substitution of chiral nonracemic secondary and tertiary allylic carbonates with a variety of carbon- and heteroatom-based nucleophiles. In addition, recent developments have made the analogous enantioselective process possible using prochiral nucleophiles with achiral allylic electrophiles, which represents a significant advance in this area. In this Perspective, the discovery, development and applications of these conceptually orthogonal strategies to target-directed synthesis are discussed, with a particular emphasis given to those methods developed in our laboratory.

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