Enzyme-like Supramolecular Iridium Catalysis Enabling C-H Bond Borylation of Pyridines with meta-Selectivity.
Jonathan TrouvéPaolo ZardiShaymaa Al-ShehimyThierry RoisnelRafael Gramage-DoriaPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
The use of secondary interactions between substrates and catalysts is a promising strategy to discover selective transition metal catalysts for atom-economy C-H bond functionalization. The most powerful catalysts are found via trial-and-error screening due to the low association constants between the substrate and the catalyst in which small stereo-electronic modifications within them can lead to very different reactivities. To circumvent these limitations and to increase the level of reactivity prediction in these important reactions, we report herein a supramolecular catalyst harnessing Zn⋅⋅⋅N interactions that binds to pyridine-like substrates as tight as it can be found in some enzymes. The distance and spatial geometry between the active site and the substrate binding site is ideal to target unprecedented meta-selective iridium-catalyzed C-H bond borylations with enzymatic Michaelis-Menten kinetics, besides unique substrate selectivity and dormant reactivity patterns.
Keyphrases
- transition metal
- room temperature
- structural basis
- highly efficient
- ionic liquid
- visible light
- reduced graphene oxide
- blood brain barrier
- carbon dioxide
- clinical trial
- study protocol
- metal organic framework
- molecular dynamics
- water soluble
- hydrogen peroxide
- amino acid
- randomized controlled trial
- heavy metals
- energy transfer
- nitric oxide
- electron transfer
- open label