Citation
Cowper, Nicholas Glenn William (2019) The Development of a Synthetic Strategy Toward Oxazine-Containing Natural Products Enabled by Novel Copper Catalysis. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Y9WZ-TZ31. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06022019-233820328
Abstract
1,2-oxazine natural products are a small closely related family of highly oxidized compounds. Herein, the development of a synthetic strategy toward gliovirin and the trichodermamides is described which enabled the synthesis of the western fragments of gliovirin and trichodermamide B. To that end, we developed two novel copper-catalyzed transformations:the asymmetric propargylation of an oxime and the diasteroeselective oxidative cyclization of hydroxamic acid with a diene.
The challenge of working with tetrahydro-1,2-oxazines is their sensitivity to a variety of reaction conditions and purification methods. Extensive optimization of each transformation was accomplished, bringing to bear the state-of-the-art in oxidative modifications, including a palladium-catalyzed direct desaturation of an epoxy ketone. As well as this work led to the rare observation of a vinylogous Payne rearrangement.
The successful synthesis of the fully functionalized western and eastern fragments of gliovirin are described toward a late-stage diketopiperazine formation and thiolation. Interrogation of our late-stage strategy with these fragments demonstrates that the coupling of the fully functionalized western and eastern fragments is not an effective strategy toward gliovirin proof-of-concept experiments suggest this chemistry could be used toward the synthesis of the trichodermamides.
Item Type: | Thesis (Dissertation (Ph.D.)) |
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Subject Keywords: | organic synthesis catalysis |
Degree Grantor: | California Institute of Technology |
Division: | Chemistry and Chemical Engineering |
Major Option: | Chemistry |
Thesis Availability: | Public (worldwide access) |
Research Advisor(s): |
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Thesis Committee: |
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Defense Date: | 6 July 2018 |
Record Number: | CaltechTHESIS:06022019-233820328 |
Persistent URL: | https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06022019-233820328 |
DOI: | 10.7907/Y9WZ-TZ31 |
Default Usage Policy: | No commercial reproduction, distribution, display or performance rights in this work are provided. |
ID Code: | 11606 |
Collection: | CaltechTHESIS |
Deposited By: | Nicholas Cowper |
Deposited On: | 04 Jun 2019 15:52 |
Last Modified: | 26 May 2021 00:04 |
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