Alkynyl sulfonamides undergo sequential 1,4- then 1,2-addition/rearrangement with lithium acetylides to yield enediynes in the absence of any promoters or catalysts. Mechanistic investigations suggest that the reaction proceeds via 1,4-conjugate addition of the nucleophile to the unsaturated system to give a key alkenyl lithium species which is stabilised by an intramolecular coordination effect by a sulfonamide oxygen atom. This species can be considered a vinylidene carbenoid given the carbon atom bears both an anion (as a vinyllithium) and a leaving group (the sulfonamide). The intramolecular coordination effect serves to stabilise the vinyllithium but activates the sulfonamide motif towards nucleophilic attack by a second mole of acetylide. The resulting species can then undergo rearrangement to yield the enediyne framework in a single operation with concomitant loss of aminosulfinate.
CITATION STYLE
Hayes, T. O. P., Slater, B., Horan, R. A. J., Radigois, M., & Wilden, J. D. (2017). A novel sulfonamide non-classical carbenoid: A mechanistic study for the synthesis of enediynes. Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry, 15(46), 9895–9902. https://doi.org/10.1039/c7ob02437a
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