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Dive into the research topics where Shun Su is active.

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Featured researches published by Shun Su.


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.


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.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

Total Synthesis of Palau’amine

Shun Su; Ian S. Young; Chad A. Lewis; Junichiro Yamaguchi; Phil S. Baran

Polycyclic dimeric pyrrole-imidazole alkaloids such as palau’amine (1, Figure 1),1 axinellamine A (2),2 and massadine chloride (3)3 possess daunting structural and physical attributes, including nine or more nitrogen atoms, eight contiguous stereogenic centers, reactive (hemi)aminal moieties, oxidation-prone pyrroles, and highly polar, non-crystalline morphologies. Their unique structures have been the focus of numerous publications from many groups worldwide, and have led to notable advances in synthetic methodology.4 Among the more complex members of this class, only the axinellamines (e.g. 2)5 and the massadines (e.g. 3)6 have succumbed to total synthesis, aided by the invention of a highly chemoselective and controllable late-stage oxidation reaction. Figure 1 Selected pyrrole-imidazole alkaloids, and retrosynthetic analysis of palau’amine (1). Ar = 2-(4,5-dibromopyrrole). In contrast to its siblings (2 and 3), palau’amine (1) possesses a unique chemical challenge: one of the pyrrole-amide sidechains is embedded in an exquisite, hexacyclic core architecture which contains a highly strained trans-azabicyclo[3.3.0]octane substructure (unprecedented among natural products). This is undoubtedly a central reason why the synthesis of palau’amine (1) has thus far eluded organic chemists despite the dozens of Ph.D. theses7 and studies towards publications8 that have appeared since its isolation in 1993 and structural reassignment in 2007.1 Many well-founded and logical plans to secure the idiosyncratic trans-5,5 core of 1 in our laboratory resulted in unfortunate empirical realities. Presumably, the high degree of strain implicit in the hexacyclic architecture thwarted all attempts at a biomimetic closure (N14-C10 and N1-C6 simultaneously)4 or a stepwise closure (N14-C10 followed by N1-C6).9 The lessons learned during those initial attempts inspired an alternative strategy that ultimately led to the total synthesis of 1 presented herein. As depicted in Figure 1, our retrosynthetic analysis relied upon a speculation that hypothetical macrocycle 4, dubbed “macro-palau’amine”, would be a kinetically stable isomer of the natural product core found in 1. It was predicted that an irreversible transannular ring-chain tautomerization would convert 4 into its consitutional isomer 1 via a dynamic equilibrium involving amidine tautomer 4′. Handheld molecular models suggested that 4 might adopt a folded conformation wherein N14 and C10 would be in close proximity to facilitate such a ring closure. A conceptually related late-stage shift of topology between constitutional isomers through dynamic equilibration was a key design element of our recent synthesis of the kapakahines.10 As with 1, “macro palau’amine” (4) exhibits a high level of strain and was believed to be accessible via macrolactamization of the diamine derived from diazide 5. This intermediate was envisioned to arise from the SNAr of a pyrrole (or surrogate thereof) to the bromo-aminoimidazole 6. The total synthesis of 1, outlined in Scheme 1, commences with the readily-available cyclopentane core 7, an intermediate enlisted in the synthesis of the massadines and available in 19 steps from commercially available materials in 1% overall yield.6 Treatment of 7 with aqueous TFA unveiled aminoguanidine 8, which was directly converted in unprotected form to the hemiaminal 10 in 64% isolated yield (along with 17% recovered 8, 130 mg scale)11 using silver(II)-picolinate (9). It is notable that this oxidation reaction takes place with precise regioselectivity – no oxidation of the primary amine is observed under these acidic reaction conditions. Construction of the remaining 2-aminoimidazole took place in 65% yield (251 mg scale)11 to afford 11 using cyanamide in brine (sat. aq. NaCl), a solvent that minimizes displacement of the highly labile chlorine atom.3,6 Subsequent bromination using Br2 in a 1:1 mixture of TFA:TFAA delivered the desired 2-amino-4-bromoimidazole 6 in 54% yield (150 mg scale).11 The introduction of the pyrrole moiety proved challenging, as standard conditions to couple amines to aryl halides using transition metal catalysis failed to produce any detectible amounts of product (even on the Boc-shielded 2-amino-4-bromoimidazole derivatives). In principle, the inherent ambiphilicity of the 2-aminoimidazole could lend itself to a unique reactivity pattern, one that would allow for uncatalyzed nucleophilic attack on the 2-amino-4-bromoimidazole as a possible direct route to the pyrrole-acid intermediate 5. Scheme 1 Total synthesis of palau’amine (1). Counterions are CF3CO2− and are omitted for clarity. Reagents and conditions: a) TFA/H2O (1/1), 50 °C, 12 h, then silver(II)picolinate (2.4 equiv), TFA/H2O (1/9), 23 °C, 5 min, 64% + ... In the event, the nucleophilic pyrrole surrogate 1212 was reacted with 2-amino-4-bromoimidazole 6 buffered with AcOH, followed by treatment with TFA, to deliver the desired N-coupled pyrrole-2-carboxylic acid 5 in a one-pot operation in 44% yield (91 mg scale).11 Presumably, facile N–C bond formation is observed due to the high reactivity of its tautomeric amidine form (6′). This reaction appears to be general and its scope will be reported in the full account of this work. The pyrrole-forming step, mediated by TFA and traversing through oxonium 14, involves no less than five chemical transformations occurring in tandem to deliver 5. In preparation for the key macrolactamization step, the azide groups of 5 were reduced to afford highly polar diamine 15 (4.0 mg scale). The synthesis of “macro-palau’amine” 4 was effected using EDC and HOBt. Heating of the crude reaction mixture in TFA (70 °C) elicited the crucial transannular cyclization (presumably proceeding via amidine tautomer 4′) that fastened the remaining two stereocenters and cemented the hallmark trans-5,5 ring system to deliver palau’amine (1) in 17% overall yield from 5 (one-pot, average of 55% per operation) after repeated purification with reverse phase HPLC (spectroscopically identical to that reported for 1 with the exception of optical rotation).13 Optimization and mechanistic investigation of this final sequence (5 Π 1) is currently underway.9 The journey to 1 (25 steps from commercial material, 0.015% overall yield with current procedures)9 has led not only to useful strategies and methods, but also to an empirical demonstration of numerous guiding principles for synthesis design at the frontiers of chemical complexity.14 Over six years ago our lab embarked on the synthesis of dimeric pyrrole-imidazole alkaloids by methodically applying the logic of biosynthesis where appropriate during the syntheses of sceptrin, oxysceptrin, nakamuric acid, ageliferin, nagelamide, the axinellamines (e.g. 2), and the massadines (e.g. 3).5,6,15 The synthesis of 1 benefited from a tremendous amount of chemical reactivity learned during those endeavours. Our 2004 biosynthetic hypothesis15b led us to pursue the true structure of 1 prior to the realization of its revised structure.1 In an effort to apply redox economic principles16 to this chemical synthesis program, a late-stage, chemoselective, silver-mediated oxidation was invented to circumvent laborious routes to the key hemiaminal unit expressed in 1–3 (C–20, Figure 1). Cascade reactions were incorporated to rapidly assemble complexity (e.g. 6 Π 5 Π 1). Finally, innate reactivity was embraced so as to minimize the use of redundant and orthogonal protecting group operations,17 and instead maximize the discovery of interesting chemical reactivity such as the direct coupling of nucleophiles to unprotected 2-amino-4-bromoimidazoles. An enantioselective, scalable variant of the current synthesis, as well as a full account of this work will be forthcoming.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Ligand-Accelerated ortho-C–H Alkylation of Arylcarboxylic Acids using Alkyl Boron Reagents

Peter S. Thuy-Boun; Giorgio Villa; Devin Dang; Paul F. Richardson; Shun Su; Jin-Quan Yu

A protocol for the Pd(II)-catalyzed ortho-C-H alkylation of phenylacetic and benzoic acids using alkylboron reagents is disclosed. Monoprotected amino acid ligands (MPAA) were found to significantly promote reactivity. Both potassium alkyltrifluoroborates and alkylboronic acids were compatible coupling partners. The possibility of a radical alkyl transfer to Pd(II) was also investigated.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Total Syntheses of (±)-Massadine and Massadine Chloride

Shun Su; Ian S. Young; Phil S. Baran

The total syntheses of the complex pyrrole−imidazole alkaloids (±)−massadine and (±)−massadine chloride is described using a carefully orchestrated sequence of manipulations on highly polar and structurally complex intermediates. Key to the completion of this synthetic endeavor was the exploration of a unique and chemoselective method to oxidize unprotected guanidines under aqueous conditions in air. This oxidation has been optimized and applied to a selection of spirocyclic guanidines of varying complexity. Additionally, the 3,7-epi analogues of these interesting natural products have been synthesized and fully characterized.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Axinellamines as Broad-Spectrum Antibacterial Agents: Scalable Synthesis and Biology

Rodrigo A. Rodriguez; Danielle Barrios Steed; Yu Kawamata; Shun Su; Peter A. S. Smith; Tyler Steed; Floyd E. Romesberg; Phil S. Baran

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria present an ongoing challenge to both chemists and biologists as they seek novel compounds and modes of action to out-maneuver continually evolving resistance pathways, especially against Gram-negative strains. The dimeric pyrrole–imidazole alkaloids represent a unique marine natural product class with diverse primary biological activity and chemical architecture. This full account traces the strategy used to develop a second-generation route to key spirocycle 9, culminating in a practical synthesis of the axinellamines and enabling their discovery as broad-spectrum antibacterial agents, with promising activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. While their detailed mode of antibacterial action remains unclear, the axinellamines appear to cause secondary membrane destabilization and impart an aberrant cellular morphology consistent with the inhibition of normal septum formation. This study serves as a rare example of a natural product initially reported to be devoid of biological activity surfacing as an active antibacterial agent with an intriguing mode of action.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015

Synthesis of Biologically Active Piperidine Metabolites of Clopidogrel: Determination of Structure and Analyte Development

Scott A. Shaw; Balu Balasubramanian; Samuel J. Bonacorsi; Janet Caceres Cortes; Kevin Cao; Bang-Chi Chen; Jun Dai; Carl P. Decicco; Animesh Goswami; Zhiwei Guo; Ronald L. Hanson; W. Griffith Humphreys; Patrick Y. S. Lam; Wenying Li; Arvind Mathur; Brad D. Maxwell; Quentin Michaudel; Li Peng; Andrew T. Pudzianowski; Feng Qiu; Shun Su; Dawn Sun; Adrienne A. Tymiak; Benjamin P. Vokits; Bei Wang; Ruth R. Wexler; Dauh-Rurng Wu; Yingru Zhang; Rulin Zhao; Phil S. Baran

Clopidogrel is a prodrug anticoagulant with active metabolites that irreversibly inhibit the platelet surface GPCR P2Y12 and thus inhibit platelet activation. However, gaining an understanding of patient response has been limited due to imprecise understanding of metabolite activity and stereochemistry, and a lack of acceptable analytes for quantifying in vivo metabolite formation. Methods for the production of all bioactive metabolites of clopidogrel, their stereochemical assignment, and the development of stable analytes via three conceptually orthogonal routes are disclosed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Enantioselective Total Syntheses of (−)-Palau’amine, (−)-Axinellamines, and (−)-Massadines

Shun Su; Ian S. Young; Akifumi Nakamura; Junichiro Yamaguchi; Lars Jørgensen; Rodrigo A. Rodriguez; Daniel P. O’Malley; Tanja Gaich; Matthias Köck; Phil S. Baran


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Scalable, Stereocontrolled Total Syntheses of (()-Axinellamines A and B

Shun Su; Rodrigo A. Rodriguez; Phil S. Baran


Journal of Natural Products | 2012

Palau'amine and related oroidin alkaloids dibromophakellin and dibromophakellstatin inhibit the human 20S proteasome.

Theresa A. Lansdell; Nicole M. Hewlett; Amanda P. Skoumbourdis; Matthew D. Fodor; Shun Su; Phil S. Baran; Ken S. Feldman; Jetze J. Tepe

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Phil S. Baran

Scripps Research Institute

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Ian S. Young

Scripps Research Institute

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Chad A. Lewis

Scripps Research Institute

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Yuta Fujiwara

Scripps Research Institute

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Adam L. Sobel

Scripps Research Institute

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Akifumi Nakamura

Scripps Research Institute

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