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Azomethine ylide

Azomethine ylides are nitrogen-based 1,3-dipoles, consisting of an iminium ion next to a carbanion. They are used in 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions to form five-membered heterocycles, including pyrrolidines and pyrrolines.[1][2][3] These reactions are highly stereo- and regioselective, and have the potential to form four new contiguous stereocenters. Azomethine ylides thus have high utility in total synthesis, and formation of chiral ligands and pharmaceuticals. Azomethine ylides can be generated from many sources, including aziridines, imines, and iminiums. They are often generated in situ, and immediately reacted with dipolarophiles.

Azomethine ylide

Structure edit

The resonance structures below show the 1,3-dipole contribution, in which the two carbon atoms adjacent to the nitrogen have a negative or positive charge.[1] The most common representation of azomethine ylides is that in which the nitrogen is positively charged, and the negative charge is shared between the two carbon atoms. The relative contributions of the different resonance structures depend on the substituents on each atom. The carbon containing electron-withdrawing substituents will have a more partial negative charge, due to the ability of the nearby electron-withdrawing group to stabilize the negative charge.

 
Resonance structures

Three different ylide shapes are possible, each leading to different stereochemistry in the products of 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions. W-shaped, U-shaped, and S-shaped ylides are possible.[1] The W- and U-shaped ylides, in which the R substituents are on the same side, result in syn cycloaddition products, whereas S-shaped ylides result in anti products. In the examples below, where the R3 substituent ends up in the product depends on the substituent's steric and electronic nature (see regioselectivity of 1,3 dipolar cycloadditions). The stereochemistry of R1 and R2 in the cycloaddition product is derived from the dipole. The stereochemistry of R3 is derived from the dipolarophile—if the dipolarophile is more than mono-substituted (and prochiral), up to four new stereocenters can result in the product.

 
Azomethine ylide shapes

Generation edit

From aziridines edit

Azomethine ylides can be generated from ring opening of aziridines.[4][5] In accordance with the Woodward–Hoffmann rules, the thermal four-electron ring opening proceeds via a conrotatory process, whereas the photochemical reaction is disrotatory.

 
Ring opening of aziridine to form azomethine ylide.

In this ring opening reaction, there is an issue of torquoselectivity. Electronegative substituents prefer to rotate outwards, to the same side as the R substituent on the nitrogen, whereas electropositive substituents prefer to rotate inwards.[6]

Note that with aziridines, ring opening can result in a different 1,3-dipole, in which a C–N bond (rather than the C–C bond) breaks.[7]

By condensation of aldehyde with amine edit

 
Azomethine ylide from condensation

One of the easiest methods of forming azomethine ylides is by condensation of an aldehyde with an amine. If the amine contains an electron-withdrawing group on the alpha carbon, such as an ester, the deprotonation occurs readily. A possible disadvantage of using this method is that the ester ends up in the cycloaddition product. An alternative is to use a carboxylic acid, which can easily be removed during the cycloaddition process by decarboxylation.[8]

From imines and iminiums edit

 
Deprotonation of iminium to form azomethine ylide.

Azomethine ylides can also be formed directly by deprotonation of iminiums.

By N-metallation edit

 
Formation of azomethine ylides by N-metallation.

The metal reagents used in this reaction include lithium bromide and silver acetate.[1] In this method, the metal coordinates to the nitrogen in order to activate the substrate for deprotonation. Another way to form azomethine ylides from imines is by prototropy and by alkylation.

From münchnones edit

Ylides can be formed from münchnones, which are mesoionic heterocycles, and act as cyclic azomethine ylides.[9]

 
Formation of azomethine ylide from munchnone.

1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions edit

 
General cycloaddition reaction of azomethine ylide with alkene.

As with other cycloaddition reactions of a 1,3-dipole with a π-system, 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition using an azomethine ylide is a six-electron process. According to the Woodward–Hoffmann rules, this addition is suprafacial with respect to both the dipole and dipolarophile. The reaction is generally viewed as concerted, in which the two carbon-carbon bonds are being formed at the same time, but asynchronously. However, depending on the nature of the dipole and dipolarophile, diradical or zwitterionic intermediates are possible.[10] The endo product is generally favored, as in the isoelectronic Diels–Alder reaction. In these reactions, the azomethine ylide is typically the HOMO, and the electron-deficient dipolarophile the LUMO, although cycloaddition reactions with unactivated π-systems are known to occur, especially when the cyclization is intramolecular.[11] For a discussion of frontier molecular orbital theory of 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions, see 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition#Frontier molecular orbital theory.

 
Azomethine ylide cyclization example.

1,3-Dipolar cycloaddition reactions of azomethine ylides commonly use alkenes or alkynes as dipolarophiles, to form pyrrolidines or pyrrolines, respectively. A reaction of an azomethine ylide with an alkene is shown above, and results in a pyrrolidine.[12] This kind of reactions can be used to synthesis Ullazine.[13] While dipolarophiles are typically α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds, there have been many recent advances in developing new types of dipolarophiles.[14]

When the dipole and dipolarophile are part of the same molecule, an intramolecular cyclization reaction can lead to a polycyclic product of considerable complexity.[1] If the dipolarophile is tethered to a carbon of the dipole, a fused bicycle is formed. If it is tethered to the nitrogen, a bridged structure results. The intramolecular nature of the reaction can also be useful in that regioselectivity is often constrained. Another advantage to intramolecular reactions is that the dipolarophile need not be electron-deficient—many examples of cyclization reactions with electron-rich, alkyl-substituted dipolarophiles have been reported, including the synthesis of martinellic acid shown below.

Stereoselectivity of cycloadditions edit

Unlike most 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions, in which the stereochemistry of the dipole is lost or non-existent, azomethine ylides are able to retain their stereochemistry. This is generally done by ring opening of an aziridine, and subsequent trapping by a dipolarophile before the stereochemistry can scramble.

Like other 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions, azomethine ylide cycloadditions can form endo or exo products. This selectivity can be tuned using metal catalysis.[15][16]

Enantioselective synthesis edit

Enantioselective cycloaddition of azomethine ylides using chiral catalysts was first described in a seminal work by Allway and Grigg in 1991.[17] This powerful method was further developed by Jørgensen and Zhang. These reactions generally use zinc, silver, copper, nickel, and calcium complexes.

Using chiral phosphine catalysts, enantiomerically pure spiroindolinones can be synthesized. The method described by Gong, et al. leads to an unexpected regiochemical outcome that does not follow electronic effects. This is attributed to favorable pi stacking with the catalyst.[18]

Other reactions edit

Electrocyclizations edit

Conjugated azomethine ylides are capable of [1,5]- and [1,7]-electrocyclizations.[19] An example of a [1,7]-electrocyclization of a diphenylethenyl-substituted azomethine ylide is shown below. This conrotatory ring-closing is followed by a suprafacial [1,5]-hydride shift, which affords the rearomatized product. The sterics and geometry of the reacting phenyl ring play a major role in the success of the reaction.[20]

 
1,7 electrocyclization of azomethine ylide

The compounds resulting from this type of electrocyclization have been used as dienes in Diels–Alder reactions to attach compounds to fullerenes.[21]

Use in synthesis edit

Total synthesis of martinellic acid edit

 
Step of martinellic acid synthesis using azomethine ylide.

A cycloaddition of an azomethine ylide with an unactivated alkene was used in total synthesis of martinellic acid. The cycloaddition step formed two rings, including a pyrrolidine, and two stereocenters.[22]

Total synthesis of spirotryprostatin B edit

 
Step of spirotryprostatin synthesis using azomethine ylide.

In the synthesis of spirotryprostatin B, an azomethine ylide is formed from condensation of an amine with an aldehyde. The ylide then reacts with an electron-deficient alkene on an indolinone, resulting in formation of a spirocyclic pyrrolidine and four contiguous stereocenters.[23]

Synthesis of benzodiazepinones edit

 
Synthesis of benzodiazepinones from azomethine ylide cyclizations

Cyclization of an azomethine ylide with a carbonyl affords a spirocyclic oxazolidine, which loses CO2 to form a seven-membered ring. These high-utility decarboxylative multi-step reactions are common in azomethine ylide chemistry.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Coldham, Iain; Hufton, Richard (2005). "Intramolecular Dipolar Cycloaddition Reactions of Azomethine Ylides". Chemical Reviews. 105 (7): 2765–2809. doi:10.1021/cr040004c. PMID 16011324.
  2. ^ Padwa, Albert; Pearson, William H.; Harwood, L. M.; Vickers, R. J. (2003). "Chapter 3. Azomethine Ylides". Synthetic Applications of 1,3-Dipolar Cycloaddition Chemistry Toward Heterocycles and Natural Products. Chemistry of Heterocyclic Compounds: A Series of Monographs. Vol. 59. pp. 169–252. doi:10.1002/0471221902.ch3. ISBN 9780471387268.
  3. ^ Adrio, Javier; Carretero, Juan C. (2011). "Novel dipolarophiles and dipoles in the metal-catalyzed enantioselective 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of azomethine ylides". Chemical Communications. 47 (24): 6784–6794. doi:10.1039/c1cc10779h. PMID 21472157.
  4. ^ Dauban, Philippe; Guillaume, Malik (2009). "A Masked 1,3-Dipole Revealed from Aziridines". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 48 (48): 9026–9029. doi:10.1002/anie.200904941. PMID 19882612.
  5. ^ Huisgen, Rolf; Scheer, Wolfgang; Huber, Helmut (1967). "Stereospecific Conversion of cis-trans Isomeric Aziridines to Open-Chain Azomethine Ylides". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 89 (7): 1753–1755. doi:10.1021/ja00983a052.
  6. ^ Banks, Harold D. (2010). "Torquoselectivity Studies in the Generation of Azomethine Ylides from Substituted Aziridines". Journal of Organic Chemistry. 75 (8): 2510–2517. doi:10.1021/jo902600y. PMID 20329779.
  7. ^ Cardoso, Ana L.; Pinho e Melo, Teresa M. V. D. (2012). "Aziridines in Formal [3+2]Cycloadditions: Synthesis of Five-Membered Heterocycles". European Journal of Organic Chemistry (33): 6479–6501. doi:10.1002/ejoc.201200406.
  8. ^ Huie, Edward (1983). "Intramolecular [3+2]cycloaddition routes to carbon-bridged dibenzocycloheptanes and dibenzazepines". Journal of Organic Chemistry. 48 (18): 2994–2997. doi:10.1021/jo00166a011.
  9. ^ Padwa, Albert; Gingrich, Henry L.; Lim, Richard (1982). "Regiochemistry of intramolecular munchnone cycloadditions: preparative and mechanistic implications". Journal of Organic Chemistry. 47 (12): 2447–2456. doi:10.1021/jo00133a041.
  10. ^ Li, Yi; Houk, Kendall N.; González, Javier (1995). "Pericyclic Reaction Transition States". Accounts of Chemical Research. 20 (2): 81–90. doi:10.1021/ar00050a004.
  11. ^ Heathcock, Clayton H.; Henke, Brad R.; Kouklis, Andrew J. (1992). "Intramolecular 1,3-Dipolar Cycloaddition of Stabilized Azomethine Ylides to Unactivated Dipolarophiles". Journal of Organic Chemistry. 57 (56): 7056–7066. doi:10.1021/jo00052a015.
  12. ^ Streiber, S. L. (2003). "Catalytic asymmetric [3+2]cycloaddition of azomethine ylides. Development of a versatile stepwise, three-component reaction for diversity-oriented synthesis". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 125 (34): 10174–10175. doi:10.1021/ja036558z. PMID 12926931.
  13. ^ R. Berger, M. Wagner, X. Feng, K. Müllen. “Polycyclic aromatic azomethine ylides: a unique entry to extended polycyclic heteroaromatics”. 2014. 436–441.doi: 10.1039/C4SC02793K
  14. ^ Adrio, Javier; Carreter, Juan C. (2011). "Novel dipolarophiles and dipoles in the metal-catalyzed enantioselective 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of azomethine ylides". Chemical Communications. 47 (24): 6784–6794. doi:10.1039/c1cc10779h. PMID 21472157.
  15. ^ Zhang, Xumu; Raghunath, Malati; Gao, Wenzhong (2005). "Cu(I)-Catalyzed Highly Exo-selective and Enantioselective [3+2]Cycloaddition of Azomethine Ylides with Acrylates". Organic Letters. 7 (19): 4241–4244. doi:10.1021/ol0516925. PMID 16146397.
  16. ^ Fukuzawa, Shin-ichi; Oura, Ichiro; Shimizu, Kenta; Ogata, Kenichi (2010). "Highly Endo-Selective and Enantioselective 1,3-Dipolar Cycloaddition of Azomethine Ylide with α-Enones Catalyzed by a Silver(I)/ThioClickFerrophos Complex". Organic Letters. 12 (8): 1752–1755. doi:10.1021/ol100336q. PMID 20232852.
  17. ^ Allway, Philip; Grigg, Ronald (1991). "Chiral cobalt(II) and manganese(II) catalysts for the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions of azomethine ylides derived from arylidene imines of glycine". Tetrahedron Letters. 32 (41): 5817–5820. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(00)93563-9.
  18. ^ Gong, Liu-Zhu; Chen, Xiao-Hua; Wei, Qiang; Luo, Shi-Wei; Xiao, Han (2009). "Organocatalytic Synthesis of Spiro[pyrrolidin-3,3′-oxindoles] with High Enantiopurity and Structural Diversity". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 131 (38): 13819–13825. doi:10.1021/ja905302f. PMID 19736987.
  19. ^ Nedolya, N. A.; Trofimov, B. A. (2013). "[1,7]-Electrocyclization reactions in the synthesis of azepine derivatives". Chemistry of Heterocyclic Compounds. 49 (1): 152–176. doi:10.1007/s10593-013-1236-y. S2CID 96192354.
  20. ^ Nyerges, Miklós (2006). "1,7-Electrocyclization reactions of stabilized α,β:γ,δ-unsaturated azomethine ylides". Tetrahedron. 16 (24): 5725–5735. doi:10.1016/j.tet.2006.03.088.
  21. ^ Nierengarten, Jean-François (2002). "An unexpected Diels–Alder reaction on the fullerene core rather than an expected 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition". Chem. Commun. (7): 712–713. doi:10.1039/B201122K. PMID 12119686.
  22. ^ Snider, B. B.; Ahn, Y.; O'Hare, S. M. (2001). "Total synthesis of (±)-martinellic acid". Organic Letters. 3 (26): 4217–4220. doi:10.1021/ol016884o. PMID 11784181.
  23. ^ Williams, Robert (2003). "Concise, Asymmetric Total Synthesis of Spirotryprostatin A". Organic Letters. 5 (17): 3135–3137. doi:10.1021/ol0351910. PMID 12917000.
  24. ^ Ryan, John H. (2011). "1,3-Dipolar cycloaddition-decarboxylation reactions of an azomethine ylide with isatoic anhydrides: formation of novel benzodiazepinones". Organic Letters. 13 (3): 486–489. doi:10.1021/ol102824k. PMID 21175141.

azomethine, ylide, nitrogen, based, dipoles, consisting, iminium, next, carbanion, they, used, dipolar, cycloaddition, reactions, form, five, membered, heterocycles, including, pyrrolidines, pyrrolines, these, reactions, highly, stereo, regioselective, have, p. Azomethine ylides are nitrogen based 1 3 dipoles consisting of an iminium ion next to a carbanion They are used in 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition reactions to form five membered heterocycles including pyrrolidines and pyrrolines 1 2 3 These reactions are highly stereo and regioselective and have the potential to form four new contiguous stereocenters Azomethine ylides thus have high utility in total synthesis and formation of chiral ligands and pharmaceuticals Azomethine ylides can be generated from many sources including aziridines imines and iminiums They are often generated in situ and immediately reacted with dipolarophiles Azomethine ylide Contents 1 Structure 2 Generation 2 1 From aziridines 2 2 By condensation of aldehyde with amine 2 3 From imines and iminiums 2 3 1 By N metallation 2 4 From munchnones 3 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition reactions 3 1 Stereoselectivity of cycloadditions 3 2 Enantioselective synthesis 4 Other reactions 4 1 Electrocyclizations 5 Use in synthesis 5 1 Total synthesis of martinellic acid 5 2 Total synthesis of spirotryprostatin B 5 3 Synthesis of benzodiazepinones 6 ReferencesStructure editThe resonance structures below show the 1 3 dipole contribution in which the two carbon atoms adjacent to the nitrogen have a negative or positive charge 1 The most common representation of azomethine ylides is that in which the nitrogen is positively charged and the negative charge is shared between the two carbon atoms The relative contributions of the different resonance structures depend on the substituents on each atom The carbon containing electron withdrawing substituents will have a more partial negative charge due to the ability of the nearby electron withdrawing group to stabilize the negative charge nbsp Resonance structuresThree different ylide shapes are possible each leading to different stereochemistry in the products of 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition reactions W shaped U shaped and S shaped ylides are possible 1 The W and U shaped ylides in which the R substituents are on the same side result in syn cycloaddition products whereas S shaped ylides result in anti products In the examples below where the R3 substituent ends up in the product depends on the substituent s steric and electronic nature see regioselectivity of 1 3 dipolar cycloadditions The stereochemistry of R1 and R2 in the cycloaddition product is derived from the dipole The stereochemistry of R3 is derived from the dipolarophile if the dipolarophile is more than mono substituted and prochiral up to four new stereocenters can result in the product nbsp Azomethine ylide shapesGeneration editFrom aziridines edit See also Aziridine 1 3 dipole formation Azomethine ylides can be generated from ring opening of aziridines 4 5 In accordance with the Woodward Hoffmann rules the thermal four electron ring opening proceeds via a conrotatory process whereas the photochemical reaction is disrotatory nbsp Ring opening of aziridine to form azomethine ylide In this ring opening reaction there is an issue of torquoselectivity Electronegative substituents prefer to rotate outwards to the same side as the R substituent on the nitrogen whereas electropositive substituents prefer to rotate inwards 6 Note that with aziridines ring opening can result in a different 1 3 dipole in which a C N bond rather than the C C bond breaks 7 By condensation of aldehyde with amine edit nbsp Azomethine ylide from condensationOne of the easiest methods of forming azomethine ylides is by condensation of an aldehyde with an amine If the amine contains an electron withdrawing group on the alpha carbon such as an ester the deprotonation occurs readily A possible disadvantage of using this method is that the ester ends up in the cycloaddition product An alternative is to use a carboxylic acid which can easily be removed during the cycloaddition process by decarboxylation 8 From imines and iminiums edit nbsp Deprotonation of iminium to form azomethine ylide Azomethine ylides can also be formed directly by deprotonation of iminiums By N metallation edit nbsp Formation of azomethine ylides by N metallation The metal reagents used in this reaction include lithium bromide and silver acetate 1 In this method the metal coordinates to the nitrogen in order to activate the substrate for deprotonation Another way to form azomethine ylides from imines is by prototropy and by alkylation From munchnones edit Ylides can be formed from munchnones which are mesoionic heterocycles and act as cyclic azomethine ylides 9 nbsp Formation of azomethine ylide from munchnone 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition reactions editMain article 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition nbsp General cycloaddition reaction of azomethine ylide with alkene As with other cycloaddition reactions of a 1 3 dipole with a p system 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition using an azomethine ylide is a six electron process According to the Woodward Hoffmann rules this addition is suprafacial with respect to both the dipole and dipolarophile The reaction is generally viewed as concerted in which the two carbon carbon bonds are being formed at the same time but asynchronously However depending on the nature of the dipole and dipolarophile diradical or zwitterionic intermediates are possible 10 The endo product is generally favored as in the isoelectronic Diels Alder reaction In these reactions the azomethine ylide is typically the HOMO and the electron deficient dipolarophile the LUMO although cycloaddition reactions with unactivated p systems are known to occur especially when the cyclization is intramolecular 11 For a discussion of frontier molecular orbital theory of 1 3 dipolar cycloadditions see 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition Frontier molecular orbital theory nbsp Azomethine ylide cyclization example 1 3 Dipolar cycloaddition reactions of azomethine ylides commonly use alkenes or alkynes as dipolarophiles to form pyrrolidines or pyrrolines respectively A reaction of an azomethine ylide with an alkene is shown above and results in a pyrrolidine 12 This kind of reactions can be used to synthesis Ullazine 13 While dipolarophiles are typically a b unsaturated carbonyl compounds there have been many recent advances in developing new types of dipolarophiles 14 When the dipole and dipolarophile are part of the same molecule an intramolecular cyclization reaction can lead to a polycyclic product of considerable complexity 1 If the dipolarophile is tethered to a carbon of the dipole a fused bicycle is formed If it is tethered to the nitrogen a bridged structure results The intramolecular nature of the reaction can also be useful in that regioselectivity is often constrained Another advantage to intramolecular reactions is that the dipolarophile need not be electron deficient many examples of cyclization reactions with electron rich alkyl substituted dipolarophiles have been reported including the synthesis of martinellic acid shown below Stereoselectivity of cycloadditions edit Main article 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition Stereoselectivity Unlike most 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition reactions in which the stereochemistry of the dipole is lost or non existent azomethine ylides are able to retain their stereochemistry This is generally done by ring opening of an aziridine and subsequent trapping by a dipolarophile before the stereochemistry can scramble Like other 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition reactions azomethine ylide cycloadditions can form endo or exo products This selectivity can be tuned using metal catalysis 15 16 Enantioselective synthesis edit Enantioselective cycloaddition of azomethine ylides using chiral catalysts was first described in a seminal work by Allway and Grigg in 1991 17 This powerful method was further developed by Jorgensen and Zhang These reactions generally use zinc silver copper nickel and calcium complexes Using chiral phosphine catalysts enantiomerically pure spiroindolinones can be synthesized The method described by Gong et al leads to an unexpected regiochemical outcome that does not follow electronic effects This is attributed to favorable pi stacking with the catalyst 18 Other reactions editElectrocyclizations edit Conjugated azomethine ylides are capable of 1 5 and 1 7 electrocyclizations 19 An example of a 1 7 electrocyclization of a diphenylethenyl substituted azomethine ylide is shown below This conrotatory ring closing is followed by a suprafacial 1 5 hydride shift which affords the rearomatized product The sterics and geometry of the reacting phenyl ring play a major role in the success of the reaction 20 nbsp 1 7 electrocyclization of azomethine ylideThe compounds resulting from this type of electrocyclization have been used as dienes in Diels Alder reactions to attach compounds to fullerenes 21 Use in synthesis editTotal synthesis of martinellic acid edit nbsp Step of martinellic acid synthesis using azomethine ylide A cycloaddition of an azomethine ylide with an unactivated alkene was used in total synthesis of martinellic acid The cycloaddition step formed two rings including a pyrrolidine and two stereocenters 22 Total synthesis of spirotryprostatin B edit nbsp Step of spirotryprostatin synthesis using azomethine ylide In the synthesis of spirotryprostatin B an azomethine ylide is formed from condensation of an amine with an aldehyde The ylide then reacts with an electron deficient alkene on an indolinone resulting in formation of a spirocyclic pyrrolidine and four contiguous stereocenters 23 Synthesis of benzodiazepinones edit nbsp Synthesis of benzodiazepinones from azomethine ylide cyclizationsCyclization of an azomethine ylide with a carbonyl affords a spirocyclic oxazolidine which loses CO2 to form a seven membered ring These high utility decarboxylative multi step reactions are common in azomethine ylide chemistry 24 References edit a b c d e Coldham Iain Hufton Richard 2005 Intramolecular Dipolar Cycloaddition Reactions of Azomethine Ylides Chemical Reviews 105 7 2765 2809 doi 10 1021 cr040004c PMID 16011324 Padwa Albert Pearson William H Harwood L M Vickers R J 2003 Chapter 3 Azomethine Ylides Synthetic Applications of 1 3 Dipolar Cycloaddition Chemistry Toward Heterocycles and Natural Products Chemistry of Heterocyclic Compounds A Series of Monographs Vol 59 pp 169 252 doi 10 1002 0471221902 ch3 ISBN 9780471387268 Adrio Javier Carretero Juan C 2011 Novel dipolarophiles and dipoles in the metal catalyzed enantioselective 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition of azomethine ylides Chemical Communications 47 24 6784 6794 doi 10 1039 c1cc10779h PMID 21472157 Dauban Philippe Guillaume Malik 2009 A Masked 1 3 Dipole Revealed from Aziridines Angewandte Chemie International Edition 48 48 9026 9029 doi 10 1002 anie 200904941 PMID 19882612 Huisgen Rolf Scheer Wolfgang Huber Helmut 1967 Stereospecific Conversion of cis trans Isomeric Aziridines to Open Chain Azomethine Ylides Journal of the American Chemical Society 89 7 1753 1755 doi 10 1021 ja00983a052 Banks Harold D 2010 Torquoselectivity Studies in the Generation of Azomethine Ylides from Substituted Aziridines Journal of Organic Chemistry 75 8 2510 2517 doi 10 1021 jo902600y PMID 20329779 Cardoso Ana L Pinho e Melo Teresa M V D 2012 Aziridines in Formal 3 2 Cycloadditions Synthesis of Five Membered Heterocycles European Journal of Organic Chemistry 33 6479 6501 doi 10 1002 ejoc 201200406 Huie Edward 1983 Intramolecular 3 2 cycloaddition routes to carbon bridged dibenzocycloheptanes and dibenzazepines Journal of Organic Chemistry 48 18 2994 2997 doi 10 1021 jo00166a011 Padwa Albert Gingrich Henry L Lim Richard 1982 Regiochemistry of intramolecular munchnone cycloadditions preparative and mechanistic implications Journal of Organic Chemistry 47 12 2447 2456 doi 10 1021 jo00133a041 Li Yi Houk Kendall N Gonzalez Javier 1995 Pericyclic Reaction Transition States Accounts of Chemical Research 20 2 81 90 doi 10 1021 ar00050a004 Heathcock Clayton H Henke Brad R Kouklis Andrew J 1992 Intramolecular 1 3 Dipolar Cycloaddition of Stabilized Azomethine Ylides to Unactivated Dipolarophiles Journal of Organic Chemistry 57 56 7056 7066 doi 10 1021 jo00052a015 Streiber S L 2003 Catalytic asymmetric 3 2 cycloaddition of azomethine ylides Development of a versatile stepwise three component reaction for diversity oriented synthesis Journal of the American Chemical Society 125 34 10174 10175 doi 10 1021 ja036558z PMID 12926931 R Berger M Wagner X Feng K Mullen Polycyclic aromatic azomethine ylides a unique entry to extended polycyclic heteroaromatics 2014 436 441 doi 10 1039 C4SC02793K Adrio Javier Carreter Juan C 2011 Novel dipolarophiles and dipoles in the metal catalyzed enantioselective 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition of azomethine ylides Chemical Communications 47 24 6784 6794 doi 10 1039 c1cc10779h PMID 21472157 Zhang Xumu Raghunath Malati Gao Wenzhong 2005 Cu I Catalyzed Highly Exo selective and Enantioselective 3 2 Cycloaddition of Azomethine Ylides with Acrylates Organic Letters 7 19 4241 4244 doi 10 1021 ol0516925 PMID 16146397 Fukuzawa Shin ichi Oura Ichiro Shimizu Kenta Ogata Kenichi 2010 Highly Endo Selective and Enantioselective 1 3 Dipolar Cycloaddition of Azomethine Ylide with a Enones Catalyzed by a Silver I ThioClickFerrophos Complex Organic Letters 12 8 1752 1755 doi 10 1021 ol100336q PMID 20232852 Allway Philip Grigg Ronald 1991 Chiral cobalt II and manganese II catalysts for the 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition reactions of azomethine ylides derived from arylidene imines of glycine Tetrahedron Letters 32 41 5817 5820 doi 10 1016 S0040 4039 00 93563 9 Gong Liu Zhu Chen Xiao Hua Wei Qiang Luo Shi Wei Xiao Han 2009 Organocatalytic Synthesis of Spiro pyrrolidin 3 3 oxindoles with High Enantiopurity and Structural Diversity Journal of the American Chemical Society 131 38 13819 13825 doi 10 1021 ja905302f PMID 19736987 Nedolya N A Trofimov B A 2013 1 7 Electrocyclization reactions in the synthesis of azepine derivatives Chemistry of Heterocyclic Compounds 49 1 152 176 doi 10 1007 s10593 013 1236 y S2CID 96192354 Nyerges Miklos 2006 1 7 Electrocyclization reactions of stabilized a b g d unsaturated azomethine ylides Tetrahedron 16 24 5725 5735 doi 10 1016 j tet 2006 03 088 Nierengarten Jean Francois 2002 An unexpected Diels Alder reaction on the fullerene core rather than an expected 1 3 dipolar cycloaddition Chem Commun 7 712 713 doi 10 1039 B201122K PMID 12119686 Snider B B Ahn Y O Hare S M 2001 Total synthesis of martinellic acid Organic Letters 3 26 4217 4220 doi 10 1021 ol016884o PMID 11784181 Williams Robert 2003 Concise Asymmetric Total Synthesis of Spirotryprostatin A Organic Letters 5 17 3135 3137 doi 10 1021 ol0351910 PMID 12917000 Ryan John H 2011 1 3 Dipolar cycloaddition decarboxylation reactions of an azomethine ylide with isatoic anhydrides formation of novel benzodiazepinones Organic Letters 13 3 486 489 doi 10 1021 ol102824k PMID 21175141 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Azomethine ylide amp oldid 1118661166, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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