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Dive into the research topics where Matthew S. Sigman is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew S. Sigman.


Chemical Communications | 2009

Recent advancements and challenges of palladiumII-catalyzed oxidation reactions with molecular oxygen as the sole oxidant

Keith M. Gligorich; Matthew S. Sigman

During the past 10 years there have been significant advances in Pd(II)-catalyzed oxidation reactions where the use of ligands has led to the development of catalytic systems capable of achieving high turnover numbers, which employ molecular oxygen as the sole stoichiometric oxidant. This Feature article will highlight some of the recent developments in direct molecular oxygen-coupled Pd(II)-catalyzed oxidation reactions with an emphasis on enhanced catalytic systems and new reactions. Additionally, limitations of current catalytic systems, such as ligand oxidation, are presented and their implications for the development of new reactions are discussed.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2008

Mechanistic approaches to palladium-catalyzed alkene difunctionalization reactions.

Katrina H. Jensen; Matthew S. Sigman

Alkene difunctionalization, the addition of two functional groups across a double bond, exemplifies a class of reactions with significant synthetic potential. This emerging area examines recent developments of palladium-catalyzed difunctionalization reactions, with a focus on mechanistic strategies that allow for functionalization of a common palladium alkyl intermediate.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011

Applications of ortho-Quinone Methide Intermediates in Catalysis and Asymmetric Synthesis

Tejas P. Pathak; Matthew S. Sigman

Ortho-quinone methides are important synthetic intermediates and widely implicated in biological processes. In this Synopsis, recent advances concerning the synthesis and utility of these intermediates are discussed with a particular emphasis on metal-catalyzed formation of quinone methide intermediates. Additionally, applications of these intermediates as partners in asymmetric synthesis will be discussed including methods we have developed that involve the enantioselective Pd-catalyzed formation of ortho-quinone methides and the trapping of aforementioned intermediates with diverse nucleophiles.


Science | 2012

Enantioselective Heck Arylations of Acyclic Alkenyl Alcohols Using a Redox-Relay Strategy

Erik W. Werner; Tian Sheng Mei; Alexander J. Burckle; Matthew S. Sigman

From C=C to C=O The palladium-catalyzed Heck reaction is widely used to form carbon-carbon bonds between aryl rings and olefins, after which elimination of a hydrogen atom restores the olefins double bond. Werner et al. (p. 1455; see the Perspective by Gilbertson) present a variant of this reaction in which a hydrogen atom is instead lost from an alcohol center elsewhere in the molecule, yielding a ketone and a chiral center where the arene is bound. The process is highly enantioselective and also versatile: The alcohol can be sited one, two, or even three carbons away from the olefin. A widely used coupling reaction is adapted by pairing formation of a carbon–carbon bond with oxidation of a nearby alcohol. Progress in the development of asymmetric Heck couplings of arenes and acyclic olefins has been limited by a tenuous understanding of the factors that dictate selectivity in migratory insertion and β-hydride elimination. On the basis of key mechanistic insight recently garnered in the exploration of selective Heck reactions, we report here an enantioselective variant that delivers β-, γ-, or δ-aryl carbonyl products from acyclic alkenol substrates. The catalyst system imparts notable regioselectivity during migratory insertion and promotes the migration of the alkene’s unsaturation toward the alcohol to ultimately form the ketone product. The reaction uses aryldiazonium salts as the arene source, yields enantiomeric products from opposite starting alkene configurations, and uses a readily accessible ligand. The racemic nature of the alkenol substrate does not bias the enantioselection.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Synthesis and Preliminary Biological Studies of 3-Substituted Indoles Accessed by a Palladium-Catalyzed Enantioselective Alkene Difunctionalization Reaction

Tejas P. Pathak; Keith M. Gligorich; Bryan E. Welm; Matthew S. Sigman

A unique alkene difunctionalization reaction that allows rapid construction of molecular complexity around the biologically relevant indole framework has been developed. The reaction proceeds with up to 87% yield, 99:1 er, and >20:1 dr. Evaluation of several of the compounds revealed promising anticancer activity against MCF-7 cells.


Nature | 2014

Enantioselective construction of remote quaternary stereocentres

Tian Sheng Mei; Harshkumar H. Patel; Matthew S. Sigman

Small molecules that contain all-carbon quaternary stereocentres—carbon atoms bonded to four distinct carbon substituents—are found in many secondary metabolites and some pharmaceutical agents. The construction of such compounds in an enantioselective fashion remains a long-standing challenge to synthetic organic chemists. In particular, methods for synthesizing quaternary stereocentres that are remote from other functional groups are underdeveloped. Here we report a catalytic and enantioselective intermolecular Heck-type reaction of trisubstituted-alkenyl alcohols with aryl boronic acids. This method provides direct access to quaternary all-carbon-substituted β-, γ-, δ-, ε- or ζ-aryl carbonyl compounds, because the unsaturation of the alkene is relayed to the alcohol, resulting in the formation of a carbonyl group. The scope of the process also includes incorporation of pre-existing stereocentres along the alkyl chain, which links the alkene and the alcohol, in which the stereocentre is preserved. The method described allows access to diverse molecular building blocks containing an enantiomerically enriched quaternary centre.


Nature Chemistry | 2016

Substrate channelling as an approach to cascade reactions

Ian Wheeldon; Shelley D. Minteer; Scott Banta; Scott Calabrese Barton; Plamen Atanassov; Matthew S. Sigman

Millions of years of evolution have produced biological systems capable of efficient one-pot multi-step catalysis. The underlying mechanisms that facilitate these reaction processes are increasingly providing inspiration in synthetic chemistry. Substrate channelling, where intermediates between enzymatic steps are not in equilibrium with the bulk solution, enables increased efficiencies and yields in reaction and diffusion processes. Here, we review different mechanisms of substrate channelling found in nature and provide an overview of the analytical methods used to quantify these effects. The incorporation of substrate channelling into synthetic cascades is a rapidly developing concept, and recent examples of the fabrication of cascades with controlled diffusion and flux of intermediates are presented.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Enantioselective Redox-Relay Oxidative Heck Arylations of Acyclic Alkenyl Alcohols using Boronic Acids

Tian Sheng Mei; Erik W. Werner; Alexander J. Burckle; Matthew S. Sigman

A general, highly selective asymmetric redox-relay oxidative Heck reaction using achiral or racemic acyclic alkenols and boronic acid derivatives is reported. This reaction delivers remotely functionalized arylated carbonyl products from acyclic alkenol substrates, with excellent enantioselectivity under mild conditions, bearing a range of useful functionality. A preliminary mechanistic investigation suggests that the regioselectivity of the initial migratory insertion is highly dependent on the electronic nature of the boronic acid and more subtle electronic effects of the alkenyl alcohol.


Chemical Communications | 2002

A convenient palladium-catalyzed aerobic oxidation of alcohols at room temperatureElectronic supplementary information (ESI) available: screening procedures and optimization tables. See http://www.rsc.org/suppdata/cc/b2/b209344h/

Mitchell J. Schultz; Candice C. Park; Matthew S. Sigman

A simple Pd-catalyzed aerobic oxidation of benzylic and aliphatic alcohols to the corresponding aldehydes and ketones at room temperature is described.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2012

Imparting Catalyst-Control upon Classical Palladium-Catalyzed Alkenyl C–H Bond Functionalization Reactions

Matthew S. Sigman; Erik W. Werner

The functional group transformations carried out by the palladium-catalyzed Wacker and Heck reactions are radically different, but they are both alkenyl C-H bond functionalization reactions that have found extensive use in organic synthesis. The synthetic community depends heavily on these important reactions, but selectivity issues arising from control by the substrate, rather than control by the catalyst, have prevented the realization of their full potential. Because of important similarities in the respective selectivity-determining nucleopalladation and β-hydride elimination steps of these processes, we posit that the mechanistic insight garnered through the development of one of these catalytic reactions may be applied to the other. In this Account, we detail our efforts to develop catalyst-controlled variants of both the Wacker oxidation and the Heck reaction to address synthetic limitations and provide mechanistic insight into the underlying organometallic processes of these reactions. In contrast to previous reports, we discovered that electrophilic palladium catalysts with noncoordinating counterions allowed for the use of a Lewis basic ligand to efficiently promote tert-butylhydroperoxide (TBHP)-mediated Wacker oxidation reactions of styrenes. This discovery led to the mechanistically guided development of a Wacker reaction catalyzed by a palladium complex with a bidentate ligand. This ligation may prohibit coordination of allylic heteroatoms, thereby allowing for the application of the Wacker oxidation to substrates that were poorly behaved under classical conditions. Likewise, we unexpectedly discovered that electrophilic Pd-σ-alkyl intermediates are capable of distinguishing between electronically inequivalent C-H bonds during β-hydride elimination. As a result, we have developed E-styrenyl selective oxidative Heck reactions of previously unsuccessful electronically nonbiased alkene substrates using arylboronic acid derivatives. The mechanistic insight gained from the development of this chemistry allowed for the rational design of a similarly E-styrenyl selective classical Heck reaction using aryldiazonium salts and a broad range of alkene substrates. The key mechanistic findings from the development of these reactions provide new insight into how to predictably impart catalyst control in organometallic processes that would otherwise afford complex product mixtures. Given our new understanding, we are optimistic that reactions that introduce increased complexity relative to simple classical processes may now be developed based on our ability to predict the selectivity-determining nucleopalladation and β-hydride elimination steps through catalyst design.

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F. Dean Toste

University of California

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Bruce Eaton

Washington State University

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