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      Retooling Asymmetric Conjugate Additions for Sterically Demanding Substrates with an Iterative Data-Driven Approach

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          Abstract

          The development of catalytic enantioselective methods is routinely carried out using easily accessible and prototypical substrates. This approach to reaction development often yields asymmetric methods that perform poorly using substrates that are sterically or electronically dissimilar to those used during the reaction optimization campaign. Consequently, expanding the scope of previously optimized catalytic asymmetric reactions to include more challenging substrates is decidedly nontrivial. Here, we address this challenge through the development of a systematic workflow to broaden the applicability and reliability of asymmetric conjugate additions to substrates conventionally regarded as sterically and electronically demanding. The copper-catalyzed asymmetric conjugate addition of alkylzirconium nucleophiles to form tertiary centers, although successful for linear alkyl chains, fails for more sterically demanding linear α,β-unsaturated ketones. Key to adapting this method to obtain high enantioselectivity was the synthesis of modified phosphoramidite ligands, designed using quantitative structure–selectivity relationships (QSSRs). Iterative rounds of model construction and ligand synthesis were executed in parallel to evaluate the performance of 20 chiral ligands. The copper-catalyzed asymmetric addition is now more broadly applicable, even tolerating linear enones bearing tert-butyl β-substituents. The presence of common functional groups is tolerated in both nucleophiles and electrophiles, giving up to 99% yield and 95% ee across 20 examples.

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          The Importance of Being Earnest: Validation is the Absolute Essential for Successful Application and Interpretation of QSPR Models

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            Profound methyl effects in drug discovery and a call for new C-H methylation reactions.

            The methyl group is one of the most commonly occurring carbon fragments in small-molecule drugs. This simplest alkyl fragment appears in more than 67 % of the top-selling drugs of 2011 and can modulate both the biological and physical properties of a molecule. This Review focuses on so-called magic methyl effects on binding potency, where the seemingly mundane change of CH to CMe improves the IC50  value of a drug candidate more than 100-fold. This discussion is followed by a survey of recent advances in synthetic chemistry that allow the direct methylation of C(sp(2) )H and C(sp(3) )H bonds. It is our hope that the relevance of the meager methyl group to drug discovery as presented herein will inspire reports on new CH methylation reactions.
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              Expanding the medicinal chemistry synthetic toolbox

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                ACS Catal
                ACS Catal
                cs
                accacs
                ACS Catalysis
                American Chemical Society
                2155-5435
                02 July 2019
                02 August 2019
                : 9
                : 8
                : 7179-7187
                Affiliations
                []Chemistry Research Laboratory, University of Oxford , Mansfield Road, Oxford OX1 3TA, United Kingdom
                []Department of Chemistry, Colorado State University , Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, United States
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/acscatal.9b01814
                7011729
                32064147
                c7decd5c-839f-4210-9b67-67e6893cee8b
                Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.

                History
                : 02 May 2019
                : 27 June 2019
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                cs9b01814
                cs9b01814

                asymmetric catalysis,phosphoramidite,ligand design,quantitative structure−selectivity relationship,linear free energy relationship,asymmetric conjugate addition,multivariate modeling,copper

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