The Emergence of Anion-π Catalysis.
Yingjie Zhao
1
,
Yoann Cotelle
1
,
Le Liu
1
,
Javier López Andarias
1
,
Anna Bea Bornhof
1
,
Masaaki Akamatsu
1
,
NAOMI SAKAI
1
,
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2018-09-06
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 5.433
CiteScore: 30.7
Impact factor: 17.7
ISSN: 00014842, 15204898
PubMed ID:
30188692
General Chemistry
General Medicine
Abstract
The objective of this Account is to summarize the first five years of anion-π catalysis. The general idea of anion-π catalysis is to stabilize anionic transition states on aromatic surfaces. This is complementary to the stabilization of cationic transition states on aromatic surfaces, a mode of action that occurs in nature and is increasingly used in chemistry. Anion-π catalysis, however, rarely occurs in nature and has been unexplored in chemistry. Probably because the attraction of anions to π surfaces as such is counterintuitive, anion-π interactions in general are much younger than cation-π interactions and remain under-recognized until today. Anion-π catalysis has emerged from early findings that anion-π interactions can mediate the transport of anions across lipid bilayer membranes. With this evidence for stabilization in the ground state secured, there was no reason to believe that anion-π interactions could not also stabilize anionic transition states. As an attractive reaction to develop anion-π catalysis, the addition of malonic acid half thioesters to enolate acceptors was selected. This choice was also made because without enzymes decarboxylation is preferred and anion-π interactions promised to catalyze selectively the disfavored but relevant enolate addition. Concerning anion-π catalysts, we started with naphthalene diimides (NDIs) because their intrinsic quadrupole moment is highly positive. The NDI scaffold was used to address questions such as the positioning of substrates on the catalytic π surface or the dependence of activity on the π acidity of this π surface. With the basics in place, the next milestone was the creation of anion-π enzymes, that is, enzymes that operate with an interaction rarely used in biology, at least on intrinsically π-acidic or highly polarizable aromatic amino-acid side chains. Electric-field-assisted anion-π catalysis addresses topics such as heterogeneous catalysis on electrodes and remote control of activity by voltage. On π-stacked foldamers, anion-(π) n-π catalysis was discovered. Fullerenes emerged as the scaffold of choice to explore contributions from polarizability. On fullerenes, anionic transition states are stabilized by large macrodipoles that appear only in response to their presence. With this growing collection of anion-π catalysts, several reactions beyond enolate addition have been explored so far. Initial efforts focused on asymmetric anion-π catalysis. Increasing enantioselectivity with increasing π acidity of the active π surface has been exemplified for enamine and iminium chemistry and for anion-π transaminase mimics. However, the delocalized nature of anion-π interactions calls for the stabilization of charge displacements over longer distances. The first step in this direction was the formation of cyclohexane rings with five stereogenic centers from achiral acyclic substrates on π-acidic surfaces. Moreover, the intrinsically disfavored exo transition state of anionic Diels-Alder reactions is stabilized selectively on π-acidic surfaces; endo products and otherwise preferred Michael addition products are completely suppressed. Taken together, we hope that these results on catalyst design and reaction scope will establish anion-π catalysis as a general principle in catalysis in the broadest sense.
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Zhao Y. et al. The Emergence of Anion-π Catalysis. // Accounts of Chemical Research. 2018. Vol. 51. No. 9. pp. 2255-2263.
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Zhao Y., Cotelle Y., Liu L., López Andarias J., Bornhof A. B., Akamatsu M., SAKAI N., Matile S. The Emergence of Anion-π Catalysis. // Accounts of Chemical Research. 2018. Vol. 51. No. 9. pp. 2255-2263.
Cite this
RIS
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1021/acs.accounts.8b00223
UR - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.8b00223
TI - The Emergence of Anion-π Catalysis.
T2 - Accounts of Chemical Research
AU - Zhao, Yingjie
AU - Cotelle, Yoann
AU - Liu, Le
AU - López Andarias, Javier
AU - Bornhof, Anna Bea
AU - Akamatsu, Masaaki
AU - SAKAI, NAOMI
AU - Matile, Stefan
PY - 2018
DA - 2018/09/06
PB - American Chemical Society (ACS)
SP - 2255-2263
IS - 9
VL - 51
PMID - 30188692
SN - 0001-4842
SN - 1520-4898
ER -
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@article{2018_Zhao,
author = {Yingjie Zhao and Yoann Cotelle and Le Liu and Javier López Andarias and Anna Bea Bornhof and Masaaki Akamatsu and NAOMI SAKAI and Stefan Matile},
title = {The Emergence of Anion-π Catalysis.},
journal = {Accounts of Chemical Research},
year = {2018},
volume = {51},
publisher = {American Chemical Society (ACS)},
month = {sep},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.8b00223},
number = {9},
pages = {2255--2263},
doi = {10.1021/acs.accounts.8b00223}
}
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MLA
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Zhao, Yingjie, et al. “The Emergence of Anion-π Catalysis..” Accounts of Chemical Research, vol. 51, no. 9, Sep. 2018, pp. 2255-2263. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.8b00223.
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