Iterative
Suzuki Miyaura Coupling Reactions
The Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling
reaction of boronic acids is one of the most important and highly utilized
reactions in the organic chemistry toolbox, with applications in polymer
science as well as in the fine chemicals and pharmaceutical industries. However,
many boronic acids are extremely unstable and susceptible to decomposition that
renders them inefficient in coupling reactions or makes long-term storage
difficult.
Iteration (lat. “iterare”=to repeat) is a powerful strategy employed in the biosynthesis of complex molecules. In these controlled iterative reactions, di- and multifunctional building blocks are employed that contain only one reactive functional group (“ON”), while all other groups are unreactive (“OFF”) thereby suppressing uncontrolled polymerization (Scheme 1). After the selective coupling of the reactive group, another, previously unreactive functional group is activated/deprotected (“ON”) and the coupling sequence repeated, thus allowing the efficient formation of defined oligomers from readily available building blocks. This enables even nonexperts to synthesize complex molecules in a short time, and promotes the rapid investigation and application of these compounds in chemistry and biology. An ideal iterative coupling would meet the following criteria:
Iteration (lat. “iterare”=to repeat) is a powerful strategy employed in the biosynthesis of complex molecules. In these controlled iterative reactions, di- and multifunctional building blocks are employed that contain only one reactive functional group (“ON”), while all other groups are unreactive (“OFF”) thereby suppressing uncontrolled polymerization (Scheme 1). After the selective coupling of the reactive group, another, previously unreactive functional group is activated/deprotected (“ON”) and the coupling sequence repeated, thus allowing the efficient formation of defined oligomers from readily available building blocks. This enables even nonexperts to synthesize complex molecules in a short time, and promotes the rapid investigation and application of these compounds in chemistry and biology. An ideal iterative coupling would meet the following criteria:
ü Many
differently substituted building blocks are readily available and inexpensive;
ü Coupling
and activation/deprotection step are high yielding, are tolerant of many
different functional groups, and do not require nor produce toxic compounds;
ü Handling,
separation, and purification are facile;
ü The
iterative coupling sequence is reliable and predictable, which are important
aspects for applications in natural product synthesis and in industry;
ü The
sequence is suitable for solid phase synthesis and automation.
Here you may get the recent literature
on Iterative Suzuki Miyaura Coupling reaction.
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