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Communication
Communication | Regular issue | Vol. 78, No. 9, 2009, pp. 2201-2208
Received, 8th April, 2009, Accepted, 21st May, 2009, Published online, 21st May, 2009.
DOI: 10.3987/COM-09-11728
Transformation of Hydroxycycloalkanones to Oxabicycloalkenes

Guido Krämer, Heiner Detert, and Herbert Meier*

Institute of Organic Chemistry, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Duesbergweg 10-14, D-55128, Mainz, Germany

Abstract
Oxabicycloalkenes, which represent anti-Bredt enol ethers, can be generated by catalytic dehydration of the hemiacetals of hydroxycycloalkanones (Method I). Another option is provided by the transformation of hydroxycycloalkanones to the corresponding 1,2,3-selenadiazoles and their thermal fragmentation on Cu powder (Method II). The intermediate hydroxycycloalkynes show a transannular addition of the OH group to the triple bond. Altogether seven new oxabicycloalk-1-enes were obtained by this methods.

In recent years an increasing number of natural products and closely related synthetic analogues, which have the structures of oxabicycloalk-1-enes with an anti-Bredt enol ether functionality, have been studied.1 The majority of them has the scaffold of 10-oxabicyclo [4.3.1]dec-1(9)-enes1a,e,f,i,j,k,p or 11-oxabicyclo[6.2.1]undec-1(10)-enes.1c,d,l,m,n,r,t,u,v,w Another interesting realization of such enol ether structures was achieved in the series of fullerenes.2 The preparation of these compounds requires multi-step syntheses in which the formation of a strained enol ether double bond is a special challenge. Bridgehead olefins with this substructure can have pyramidalized and/or twisted double bonds.
Hydroxycycloalkanones
1 provide an easy access to anti-Bredt enol ethers. Scheme 1 summarizes the possible reaction routes. The cyclic hemiacetals 8, tautomers of 1, can be catalytically dehydrated to 11 and/or 12 (route I). Alternatively, 1 can be transformed to the stereoisomeric semicarbazones 2/3, for which cyclic tautomers 4 exist as well. The subsequent ring closure reaction with SeO2 yields the 1,2,3-selenadiazoles 5/6. The regioselectivity of the ring closure does not depend on the preferred isomer 2, 3 or 4. Thermal cleavage of 5/6 on cupper powder gives the hydroxycycloalkynes 7/9, which perform transannular addition reactions: 710, 11 and 912, 13 (route II). Symmetric ketones 1 (m = n) yield only one enol ether 1112 and only one semicarbazone 23, selenadiazole 56 and hydroxycycloalkyne 79, but then two transannular addition products 1013 and 1112 can be formed. Two enol ethers can result in the case n = m-1 (7 → 10≡11) and (912≡13). In all other cases (m-n > 1), the ketones 1 can serve for the generation of four isomeric oxabicycloalkenes 1013. Of course, steric and/or electronic effects can influence the regioselectivity in all unsymmetrical cases, and can lead to uniform products.

The β-elimination of H2O can be performed by heating 1a-d 8a-d4-9 in the presence of catalytic amounts of p-toluenesulfonic acid to 90-120 oC at 1 kPa (Scheme 2). In a typical procedure, 5-6 mmol of starting compound was treated with 10 mg (0.05 mmol) p-toluenesulfonic acid monohydrate. The generated water was removed under reduced pressure, so that the reverse reaction, the addition of water to the reactive double bond of the anti-Bredt enol ether, can not take place. The anti-Bredt enol ethers were then condensed in a cold trap. The residue contains bimolecular condensation products, derived from two molecules 1 or from 1 and 8.3 These competing reactions decrease the yields - in particular for the smaller and therefore more strained enol ethers. Due to symmetry reasons, the reactions of 8a and 8d are leading to single enol ethers, whereas 8b and 8c generate the mixtures 11b/12b and 11c/12c, respectively. However, the dehydration of 8b is highly regioselective in favor of 8b12b. Such a strong selectivity can not be found in the case 8c11c, 12c.

Method II in Scheme 1 makes use of the transannular addition of hydroxy groups to triple bonds in cycloalkynols.10 Scheme 3 summarizes the generation of 10b, 10d, 10e, 11d, 11e, 12b and 13b. The corresponding hydroxycycloalkanones 1 are transformed via the (Z/E)-semicarbazones 2/3 and their bicyclic isomers 4 to the 1,2,3-selenediazoles 5 and/or 6. Thermal cleavage of 5 and/or 6 on Cu powder yields at 160-180 oC the hydroxycycloalkynes 7 and/or 9. At 180-200 oC, the resulting anti-Bredt enol ethers are formed in situ by the quantitative isomerization 7/91013. It is not necessary to isolate the hydroxycycloalkynes. The cupper powder enhances the yields of the alkynes. It has no influence on the transannular cyclization.
1,2,3-Selenediazole
5e11 was obtained in a yield of 90% by reaction of the corresponding oxo-compound12 and H3CMgCl. 5-Hydroxycyclononanone 1b yielded via its semicarbazone 2b/3b/4b
44% of a 80:20 mixture of the 1,2,3-selenediazoles
5b and 6b.13 Accordingly, 6-hydroxycyclodecanone 1d furnishes 47% of 1,2,3-selenediazole 5d.14
The hydroxycycloalkynes (
7b,d,e; 9b) and the oxabicycloalkenes (10b,d,e; 11a,c,d,e; 12b,c; 13b) are colorless oils. To our best knowledge, 7b, 7e, 9b, and 10b, 10e, 11c, 11e, 12b, 12c and 13b are new compounds. The separation of enol ether mixtures by GC or HPLC seems to be feasible. We succeeded in the separation of 11c and 12c by column chromatography on SiO2. However, a contact of pure 11c or 12c with SiO2 in CDCl3 over several days led again to a catalytic equilibration (11c : 12c = 45 : 55).

Table 1 summarizes the characteristic NMR data of the hydroxycycloalkynes and the oxabicycloalkenes. The δ(13C) values of the olefinic double bonds in the anti-Bredt compounds show a significant variation. High δ values for both olefinic carbon atoms were found for the systems 11a and 11e, which have the highest strain. The double bond has therein trans configuration related to the 8-membered ring and cis configuration related to the 6-membered ring. The column RS in Table 1 contains the size of the rings in which the double bonds have trans configuration. Compared to normal enol ethers, such as (Z)-2-methoxy-2-butene15, β-C has in 11a,e a δ value of 120.0 ± 0.3 ppm, which is about 17 ppm down-field shifted. We attribute this effect to a low interaction of the p(Ο) orbital with the olefinic π bond, that means to a low electron density on β-C. A complete correlation of the 1H and 13C chemical shifts is given for 12b in Figure 1.

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