cis-1,2-Dihydrocatechols 5 (X = Me and Cl), which are available in the homochiral form through the whole-cell biotransformation of toluene and chlorobenzene, respectively, undergo Diels-Alder cycloaddition reactions with a range of electron-deficient dienophiles at 19 kbar (1.9 GPa). The favored products of such reactions are adducts of the general form 7 and that arise through the operation of a contrasteric or syn-addition pathway. In contrast, the acetonide derivatives of metabolites 5 undergo anti-selective addition reactions under the same conditions and so producing adducts of the general form 11. Bicyclo[2.2.2]octenes 7 and 11, which embody carbocyclic frameworks of opposite enantiomeric form, are useful scaffolds for chemical synthesis. Computational studies reveal that syn-adduct formation is kinetically and normally thermodynamically favored over anti-adduct formation when the free diols 5 are involved, but the reverse is so when the corresponding acetonides participate as the 4π-addend. Furthermore, the reactions become more exothermic as pressure increases while, concurrently, the activation barrier diminishes and at 6 GPa (60 kbar) almost vanishes.
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