Web Release Date: July 14,
Metalloenediynes: Ligand Field Control of Thermal Bergman Cyclization Reactions
Contribution from the Department of Chemistry, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
Received May 23, 2000
Abstract:
We report the preparation and thermal reactivities of unique Cu(I) and Cu(II) metalloenediyne
complexes of the flexible 1,8-bis(pyridine-3-oxy)oct-4-ene-2,6-diyne ligand (bpod, 1). The thermal reactivities
of these metalloenediynes are intimately modulated by metal oxidation state. Using differential scanning
calorimetry (DSC), we demonstrate that the [Cu(bpod)2]+ complex (2) undergoes Bergman cyclization at 203
C, whereas the Cu(II) analogue (3) is substantially more reactive and cyclizes at 121
C. Similar results are
also observed for mixed ligand [Cu(bpod)(pyridine)2]+/2+ analogues 4 (194
C) and 5 (116
C), suggesting
that both complexes of a given oxidation state have comparable structures. The Cu(bpod)Cl2 compound (6)
exhibits a cyclization temperature (152
C) midway between the those of Cu(I) and Cu(II) complexes, which
can be explained by the propensity for cis-CuN2Cl2 structures to exhibit dihedral angle distortion. The oxidation-state-dependent thermal reactivity is unprecedented and reflects the influence of the ligand field geometry on
the barrier to enediyne cyclization. On the basis of X-ray structures of Cu(pyridine)4+ complexes, 2 and 4 are
proposed to be tetrahedral. In contrast, the electronic absorption spectra of 3 and 5 each show a broad envelope
that can be Gaussian resolved into three ligand field transitions characteristic of a Cu(II) center in a tetragonal-octahedral environment. This structural assignment is confirmed by the EPR spin Hamiltonian parameters
(g
/A
(cm) = 134 (3), 138 (5)) and is consistent with crystallographically characterized Cu(pyridine)4X2
structures. Molecular mechanics calculations have independently derived comparable tetrahedral and tetragonal
structures for 2 and 3, respectively, and determined the average alkyne termini separation to be <a> = 4.0 Å
for 2 and 3.6 Å for 3. Thus, the tetrahedral geometries of the copper centers in 2 and 4 increase the distance
between alkyne termini relative to the tetragonal Cu(II) geometries of 3 and 5, and are therefore responsible
for the increase in the thermal cyclization temperatures. The DSC and spectroscopic data for 6 support these
conclusions, as the latter suggests a distorted four-coordinate structure in the solid state, and a six-coordinate
geometry in solution, which gives rise to an intermediate Bergman cyclization temperature. Overall, our results
emphasize the utility of newly emerging metalloenediyne complexes for controlling thermal Bergman cyclization
reactions and provide insights into designing novel, pharmacologically useful metalloenediyne compounds.
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