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Dive into the research topics where Phil S. Baran is active.

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Featured researches published by Phil S. Baran.


Angewandte Chemie | 2011

If CH Bonds Could Talk: Selective CH Bond Oxidation

Timothy R. Newhouse; Phil S. Baran

C-H oxidation has a long history and an ongoing presence in research at the forefront of chemistry and interrelated fields. As such, numerous highly useful articles and reviews have been written on this subject. Logically, these are generally written from the perspective of the scope and limitations of the reagents employed. This Minireview instead attempts to emphasize chemoselectivity imposed by the nature of the substrate. Consequently, many landmark discoveries in the field of C-H oxidation are not discussed, but hopefully the perspective taken herein will allow C-H oxidation reactions to be more readily incorporated into synthetic planning.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Innate C-H trifluoromethylation of heterocycles

Yining Ji; Tobias Brueckl; Ryan D. Baxter; Yuta Fujiwara; Shun Su; Donna G. Blackmond; Phil S. Baran

Direct methods for the trifluoromethylation of heteroaromatic systems are in extremely high demand in nearly every sector of chemical industry. Here we report the discovery of a general procedure using a benchtop stable trifluoromethyl radical source that functions broadly on a variety of electron deficient and rich heteroaromatic systems and demonstrates high functional group tolerance. This C-H trifluoromethylation protocol is operationally simple (avoids gaseous CF3I), scalable, proceeds at ambient temperature, can be used directly on unprotected molecules, and is demonstrated to proceed at the innately reactive positions of the substrate. The unique and orthogonal reactivity of the trifluoromethyl radical relative to aryl radicals has also been investigated on both a complex natural product and a pharmaceutical agent. Finally, preliminary data suggest that the regioselectivity of C-H trifluoromethylation can be fine-tuned simply by judicious solvent choice.


Nature | 2012

Practical and innate carbon-hydrogen functionalization of heterocycles

Yuta Fujiwara; Janice A. Dixon; Fionn O’Hara; Erik Daa Funder; Darryl D. Dixon; Rodrigo A. Rodriguez; Ryan D. Baxter; Bart Herlé; Neal W. Sach; Michael Raymond Collins; Yoshihiro Ishihara; Phil S. Baran

Nitrogen-rich heterocyclic compounds have had a profound effect on human health because these chemical motifs are found in a large number of drugs used to combat a broad range of diseases and pathophysiological conditions. Advances in transition-metal-mediated cross-coupling have simplified the synthesis of such molecules; however, C–H functionalization of medicinally important heterocycles that does not rely on pre-functionalized starting materials is an underdeveloped area. Unfortunately, the innate properties of heterocycles that make them so desirable for biological applications—such as aqueous solubility and their ability to act as ligands—render them challenging substrates for direct chemical functionalization. Here we report that zinc sulphinate salts can be used to transfer alkyl radicals to heterocycles, allowing for the mild (moderate temperature, 50 °C or less), direct and operationally simple formation of medicinally relevant C–C bonds while reacting in a complementary fashion to other innate C–H functionalization methods (Minisci, borono-Minisci, electrophilic aromatic substitution, transition-metal-mediated C–H insertion and C–H deprotonation). We prepared a toolkit of these reagents and studied their reactivity across a wide range of heterocycles (natural products, drugs and building blocks) without recourse to protecting-group chemistry. The reagents can even be used in tandem fashion in a single pot in the presence of water and air.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2009

The economies of synthesis

Timothy R. Newhouse; Phil S. Baran; Reinhard W. Hoffmann

In this tutorial review the economies of synthesis are analysed from both detailed and macroscopic perspectives, using case-studies from complex molecule synthesis. Atom, step, and redox economy are more than philosophical constructs, but rather guidelines, which enable the synthetic chemist to design and execute an efficient synthesis. Students entering the field of synthesis might find this tutorial helpful for understanding the subtle differences between these economic principles and also see real-world situations where such principles are put into practice.


Angewandte Chemie | 2000

The Art and Science of Total Synthesis at the Dawn of the Twenty-First Century.

K. C. Nicolaou; Dionisios Vourloumis; Nicolas Winssinger; Phil S. Baran

A new millenium has begun-grounds enough to question the present state of the total synthesis of natural products. In this review we answer this question by tracing the evolution of this fine art and science from its birth to the present time. This retrospective on total synthesis should serve to demonstrate how far we have come, yet show that the science of total synthesis is still in its infancy.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Direct C–H Arylation of Electron-Deficient Heterocycles with Arylboronic Acids

Shun Su; Rodrigo A. Rodriguez; Ryan Gianatassio; Yuta Fujiwara; Adam L. Sobel; Phil S. Baran

A direct arylation of a variety of electron-deficient heterocycles with arylboronic acids has been developed. This new reaction proceeds readily at room temperature using inexpensive reagents: catalytic silver(I) nitrate in the presence of persulfate co-oxidant. The scope with respect to heterocycle and boronic acid coupling partner is broad, and sensitive functional groups are tolerated. This method allows for rapid access to a variety of arylated heterocycles that would be more difficult to access with traditional methods.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

A New Reagent for Direct Difluoromethylation

Yuta Fujiwara; Janice A. Dixon; Rodrigo A. Rodriguez; Ryan D. Baxter; Darryl D. Dixon; Michael Raymond Collins; Donna G. Blackmond; Phil S. Baran

Molecular scaffolds containing alkylfluorine substituents are desired in many areas of chemical research from materials to pharmaceuticals. Herein, we report the invention of a new reagent (Zn(SO(2)CF(2)H)(2), DFMS) for the innate difluoromethylation of organic substrates via a radical process. This mild, operationally simple, chemoselective, and scalable difluoromethylation method is compatible with a range of nitrogen-containing heteroarene substrates of varying complexity as well as select classes of conjugated π-systems and thiols. Regiochemical comparisons suggest that the CF(2)H radical generated from the new reagent possesses nucleophilic character.


Nature | 2007

Total synthesis of marine natural products without using protecting groups

Phil S. Baran; Thomas J. Maimone; Jeremy M. Richter

The field of organic synthesis has made phenomenal advances in the past fifty years, yet chemists still struggle to design synthetic routes that will enable them to obtain sufficient quantities of complex molecules for biological and medical studies. Total synthesis is therefore increasingly focused on preparing natural products in the most efficient manner possible. Here we describe the preparative-scale, enantioselective, total syntheses of members of the hapalindole, fischerindole, welwitindolinone and ambiguine families, each constructed without the need for protecting groups—the use of such groups adds considerably to the cost and complexity of syntheses. As a consequence, molecules that have previously required twenty or more steps to synthesize racemically in milligram amounts can now be obtained as single enantiomers in significant quantities in ten steps or less. Through the extension of the general principles demonstrated here, it should be possible to access other complex molecular architectures without using protecting groups.


Nature | 2009

Total synthesis of eudesmane terpenes by site-selective C–H oxidations

Ke Chen; Phil S. Baran

From menthol to cholesterol to Taxol, terpenes are a ubiquitous group of molecules (over 55,000 members isolated so far) that have long provided humans with flavours, fragrances, hormones, medicines and even commercial products such as rubber. Although they possess a seemingly endless variety of architectural complexities, the biosynthesis of terpenes often occurs in a unified fashion as a ‘two-phase’ process. In the first phase (the cyclase phase), simple linear hydrocarbon phosphate building blocks are stitched together by means of ‘prenyl coupling’, followed by enzymatically controlled molecular cyclizations and rearrangements. In the second phase (the oxidase phase), oxidation of alkenes and carbon–hydrogen bonds results in a large array of structural diversity. Although organic chemists have made great progress in developing the logic needed for the cyclase phase of terpene synthesis, particularly in the area of polyene cyclizations, much remains to be learned if the oxidase phase is to be mimicked in the laboratory. Here we show how the logic of terpene biosynthesis has inspired the highly efficient and stereocontrolled syntheses of five oxidized members of the eudesmane family of terpenes in a modicum of steps by a series of simple carbocycle-forming reactions followed by multiple site-selective inter- and intramolecular carbon–hydrogen oxidations. This work establishes an intellectual framework in which to conceive the laboratory synthesis of other complex terpenes using a ‘two-phase’ approach.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Practical C−H Functionalization of Quinones with Boronic Acids

Yuta Fujiwara; Victoriano Domingo; Ryan Gianatassio; Matthew Del Bel; Phil S. Baran

A direct functionalization of a variety of quinones with several boronic acids has been developed. This scalable reaction proceeds readily at room temperature in an open flask using inexpensive reagents: catalytic silver(I) nitrate in the presence of a persulfate co-oxidant. The scope with respect to quinones is broad, with a variety of alkyl- and arylboronic acids undergoing efficient cross-coupling. The mechanism is presumed to proceed through a nucleophilic radical addition to the quinone with in situ reoxidation of the resulting dihydroquinone. This method has been applied to complex substrates, including a steroid derivative and a farnesyl natural product.

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Yong-Li Zhong

Scripps Research Institute

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Shun Su

Scripps Research Institute

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Jun Shi

Scripps Research Institute

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Ryan A. Shenvi

Scripps Research Institute

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Ha-Soon Choi

University of California

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Ian S. Young

Scripps Research Institute

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