Philip E. Sonnet
Temple University
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Organic Letters | 2010
Grant R. Krow; Nian Liu; Matthew Sender; Guoliang Lin; Ryan A. Centafont; Philip E. Sonnet; Charles DeBrosse; Charles W. Ross; Patrick J. Carroll; Matthew D. Shoulders; Ronald T. Raines
CD spectra for homooligomers (n = 4, 6, 8) of (1S,4R,5R)-5-syn-carboxy-2-azabicyclo[2.1.1]hexane (MPCA), a methano-bridged pyrrolidine β-carboxylic acid, suggest an ordered secondary structure. Even in the absence of internal hydrogen bonding, solution NMR, X-ray, and in silico analyses of the tetramer are indicative of conformations with trans-amides and C(5)-amide-carbonyls oriented toward the C(4) bridgehead. This highly constrained β-amino acid could prove useful in the ongoing development of well-defined foldamers.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008
Grant R. Krow; Deepa Gandla; Weiwei Guo; Ryan A. Centafont; Guoliang Lin; Charles DeBrosse; Philip E. Sonnet; Charles W. Ross; Harri G. Ramjit; Kevin C. Cannon
The ability of Selectfluor to act as a nucleofuge for hydrolysis of beta-anti-halides was investigated with N-alkoxycarbonyl derivatives of 6-anti-Y-7-anti-X-2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]heptanes and 4-anti-Y-8-anti-X-6-azabicyclo[3.2.1]octanes. The azabicycles contained X = I or Br groups in the methano bridge and Y = F, Br, Cl, or OH substituents in the larger bridge. The relative reactivities of the halides were a function of the azabicycle, the halide, and its bridge and the addition of Selectfluor or HgF(2) as a nucleofuge. All halide displacements occurred with retention of stereochemistry. Selectfluor with sodium bromide or sodium chloride, but not sodium iodide, competitively oxidized some haloalcohols to haloketones. A significant 15.6 Hz F...HO NMR coupling was observed with 4-anti-fluoro-8-anti-hydroxy-6-azabicyclo[3.2.1]octane.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011
Grant R. Krow; Ram Edupuganti; Deepa Gandla; Fang Yu; Matthew Sender; Philip E. Sonnet; Michael J. Zdilla; Charles DeBrosse; Kevin C. Cannon; Charles W. Ross; Amit Choudhary; Matthew D. Shoulders; Ronald T. Raines
N-acetylmethanopyrrolidine methyl ester and its four 5-syn/anti-fluoro and hydroxy derivatives have been synthesized from 2-azabicyclo[2.2.0]hex-5-ene, a 1,2-dihydropyridine photoproduct. These conformationally constrained mimics of idealized C(β)-gauche and C(β)-anti conformers of pyrrolidines were prepared in order to determine the inherent bridge bias and subsequent heteroatom substituent effects upon trans/cis amide preferences. The bridgehead position and also the presence of gauche(syn)/anti-5-fluoro or 5-hydroxy substituents have minimal influence upon the K(T/C) values of N-acetylamide conformers in both CDCl(3) (43-54% trans) and D(2)O (53-58% trans). O-Benzoylation enhances the trans amide preferences in CDCl(3) (65% for a syn-OBz, 61% for an anti-OBz) but has minimal effect in D(2)O. The synthetic methods developed for N-BOC-methanopyrrolidines should prove useful in the synthesis of more complex derivatives containing α-ester substituents. The K(T/C) results obtained in this study establish baseline amide preferences that will enable determination of contributions of α-ester substituents to trans-amide preferences in methanoprolines.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012
Grant R. Krow; Matthew D. Shoulders; Ramakrishna Edupuganti; Deepa Gandla; Fang Yu; Philip E. Sonnet; Matthew Sender; Amit Choudhary; Charles DeBrosse; Charles W. Ross; Patrick J. Carroll; Ronald T. Raines
Proline derivatives with a C(γ)-exo pucker typically display a high amide bond trans/cis (K(T/C)) ratio. This pucker enhances n→π* overlap of the amide oxygen and ester carbonyl carbon, which favors a trans amide bond. If there were no difference in n→π* interaction between the ring puckers, then the correlation between ring pucker and K(T/C) might be broken. To explore this possibility, proline conformations were constrained using a methylene bridge. We synthesized discrete gauche and anti 5-fluoro- and 5-hydroxy-N-acetylmethanoproline methyl esters from 3-syn and 3-anti fluoro- and hydroxymethanopyrrolidines using directed α-metalation to introduce the α-ester group. NBO calculations reveal minimal n→π* orbital interactions, so contributions from other forces might be of greater importance in determining K(T/C) for the methanoprolines. Consistent with this hypothesis, greater trans amide preferences were found in CDCl(3) for anti isomers en-MetFlp and en-MetHyp (72-78% trans) than for the syn stereoisomers ex-MetFlp and ex-MetHyp (54-67% trans). These, and other, K(T/C) results that we report here indicate how substituents on proline analogues can affect amide preferences by pathways other than ring puckering and n→π* overlap and suggest that caution should be exercised in assigning enhanced pyrrolidine C(γ)-exo ring puckering based solely on enhanced trans amide preference.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2009
Grant R. Krow; Ram Edupuganti; Deepa Gandla; Amit Choudhary; Guoliang Lin; Philip E. Sonnet; Charles DeBrosse; Charles W. Ross; Kevin C. Cannon; Ronald T. Raines
Nucleophilic displacements of 5(6)-anti-bromo substituents in 2-azabicyclo[2.1.1]hexanes (methanopyrrolidines) have been accomplished. These displacements have produced 5-anti-X-6-anti-Y-difunctionalized-2-azabicyclo[2.1.1]hexanes containing bromo, fluoro, acetoxy, hydroxy, azido, imidazole, thiophenyl, and iodo substituents. Such displacements of anti-bromide ions require an amine nitrogen and are a function of the solvent and the choice of metal salt. Reaction rates were faster and product yields were higher in DMSO when compared to DMF and with CsOAc compared to NaOAc. Sodium or lithium salts gave products, except with NaF, where silver fluoride in nitromethane was best for substitution by fluoride. The presence of electron-withdrawing F, OAc, N(3), Br, or SPh substituents in the 6-anti-position slows bromide displacements at the 5-anti-position.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008
Grant R. Krow; Deepa Gandla; Weiwei Guo; Ryan A. Centafont; Guoliang Lin; Charles DeBrosse; Philip E. Sonnet; Charles W. Ross; Harri G. Ramjit; Patrick J. Carroll; Kevin C. Cannon
Additions of iodonium-X reagents to N-alkoxycarbonyl-2-azabicyclo[2.2.1]hept-5-enes and the homologous 2-azabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-5-enes have been found to mirror the outcomes of additions of bromonium-X reagents. Only rearranged products were observed for reactions of either of these halonium ion reagents with the azabicylo[2.2.1]hept-5-enes. For the azabicyclo[2.2.2]oct-5-enes, nitrogen participation in addition of IOH or BrOH was dependent on the N-alkoxycarbonyl group. With larger N-Boc, N-Cbz, or N-Troc protecting groups, unrearranged 5-anti-hydroxy-6-syn-I(or Br)-2-azabicyclo[2.2.2]octanes were formed by nucleophilic attack at C(5) on syn-halonium ions. The structure of N-methyl-8-anti-bromo-4-anti-hydroxy-2-azabicyclo[3.2.1]octane has been reassigned by X-ray analysis.
Tetrahedron Letters | 2000
Yifang Huang; Philip E. Sonnet; Patrick J. Carroll; David R. Dalton
Abstract The Diels–Alder reaction between (R)-(−)-methyl (Z)-3-(4,5-dihydro-2-phenyl-4-oxazolyl)-2-propenoate (1) and cyclopentadiene in the presence of one equivalent of Et2AlCl gave stereochemical results opposite to those obtained with one equivalent of EtAlCl2. Energy minimizations of proposed complexes of these Lewis acids with the chiral dienophile at the RHF/3–21G level suggest that the aluminum is tetrahedrally complexed with Et2AlCl, but bound in a trigonal bipyramid with EtAlCl2. These complexes expose the diastereotopic faces of the dienophile to reaction with diene.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1987
Philip E. Sonnet
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1975
Meyer Schwarz; James E. Oliver; Philip E. Sonnet
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1980
Philip E. Sonnet; Robert R. Heath