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Modular Access to P(V)‐Stereogenic Compounds via Cu‐Catalyzed Desymmetrization of (Thio)Phosphonic Dichlorides

Hong-Qing Yao, Yueming Cai, Tian Xie, Ji-Yuan Lv, Shuai-Shuai Fang, Ming‐Hong Li, Ming Shang

2025Angewandte Chemie International Edition15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Chiral phosphorus(V) centers-particularly those bearing fully heteroatom-substituted frameworks-are key stereochemical motifs in pharmaceuticals, nucleic acid therapeutics, and functional materials. However, their stereoselective construction remains a long-standing challenge in synthetic chemistry. Here, we report a copper-catalyzed desymmetrization strategy enabled by rationally engineered PIM ligands that affords broad and modular access to structurally diverse P(V)-stereogenic compounds. By harnessing the tunable Lewis acidity and well-defined chiral environment of the catalyst-together with the distinct mechanistic features of chiral Lewis acid catalysis-this strategy overcomes the substrate scope limitations that have constrained traditional approaches. The method demonstrates broad functional group tolerance and delivers high levels of stereocontrol across seven distinct substitution patterns, including the efficient construction of chiral P═S motifs previously considered synthetically challenging. Importantly, the approach enables efficient late-stage derivatization of nucleosides and their analogs, thereby providing a general entry point to stereodefined P(V)-containing bioactive molecules. This work not only expands the utility of transition-metal Lewis acid catalysis in phosphorus chemistry, but also establishes a versatile framework for applications in drug discovery and nucleic acid-based therapeutics where precise stereochemical control is essential.

Topics & Concepts

StereocenterDesymmetrizationChemistryLewis acids and basesCombinatorial chemistryThio-Frustrated Lewis pairCatalysisStereochemistryEnantioselective synthesisAllylic rearrangementLewis acid catalysisOrganic chemistryAsymmetric Hydrogenation and CatalysisOrganoboron and organosilicon chemistrySynthetic Organic Chemistry Methods