Title: 17.14 Stereoselective Addition to Carbonyl Groups
117.14Stereoselective Addition to Carbonyl Groups
- Nucleophilic addition to carbonyl groups
sometimes leads to a mixture of stereoisomeric
products.
2Example
NaBH4
80
20
3Steric Hindrance to Approach of Reagent
this methyl group hindersapproach of
nucleophilefrom top
preferred direction of approach is to less
hindered (bottom) face of carbonyl group
4Biological reductions are highly stereoselective
- pyruvic acid Æ S-()-lactic acid
NADH
H
enzyme is lactate dehydrogenase
5Figure 17.11
O
C
H3C
O
C
carbonylbinding site
NADH
O
Pyruvate is bound at the active site of the enzyme
6Figure 17.11
O
C
H3C
O
C
carbonylbinding site
NAD
H
OH
where it is reduced to (S)-()-lactate.
717.15Oxidation of Aldehydes
OH
H2O
RCH
RCH
RCOH
OH
8Example
K2Cr2O7
H2SO4
H2O
(75)
9Example
K2Cr2O7
H2SO4
H2O
(75)
via
1017.16Baeyer-Villiger Oxidationof Ketones
- Oxidation of ketones with peroxy acidsgives
esters by a novel rearrangement.
11General
Ketone
Ester
12Example
CHCl3
(67)
- Oxygen insertion occurs between carbonyl carbon
and larger group. - Methyl ketones give acetate esters.
13Stereochemistry
CHCl3
(66)
- Reaction is stereospecific.
- Oxygen insertion occurs with retention
ofconfiguration.
14Mechanism
R"COH
15Mechanism
R"COH
First step is nucleophilicaddition of peroxy
acidto the carbonyl group of the ketone.
16Mechanism
R"COH
Second step is migrationof group R from
carbonto oxygen. The weak OO bond breaks in
thisstep.
17Biological Baeyer-Villliger Oxidation
O2.cyclohexanonemonooxygenase, coenzymes
bacterialoxidation
- Certain bacteria use hydrocarbons as a source of
carbon. Oxidation proceeds via ketones, which
then undergo oxidation of the Baeyer-Villiger
type.