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The stereochemical control and bifunctional manipulation of chiral sulfur functional groups is a long-standing challenge. Now, an enantiopure bench-stable S(VI) fluoride exchange reagent enables the asymmetric synthesis of sulfoximines, sulfonimidamides and sulfonimidoyl fluorides. The bifunctional nature of this reagent provides a practical method for the introduction of S(VI) functionality.
Skeletal editing enables diversification of compounds not possible by applying peripheral editing strategies. Now, a catalyst-free atom-pair swap strategy for pyridine editing has been developed via one-pot sequential dearomatization, cycloaddition and rearomative retrocyclization. Benzenes and naphthalenes with precisely installed functional groups are produced, and the mild conditions enable late-stage skeletal diversification of pyridine cores.
The lack of effective methods for mirror-image (d-) protein sequencing hampers the development of mirror-image biology systems and related applications. Now, total chemical synthesis of mirror-image trypsin enables the sequencing of long d-peptides and d-proteins, which may facilitate applications of d-peptides and d-proteins as potential therapeutic and informational tools.
Photon-driven dinitrogen reduction to ammonia is a promising but challenging reaction. Now it has been shown that lithium hydride undergoes photolysis upon ultraviolet illumination to yield long-lived photon-generated electrons residing in hydrogen vacancies, favouring the activation of the N≡N bond and achieving photocatalytic ammonia synthesis.
Although interfacial proton-coupled electron transfers are critical reaction steps in chemical and biological processes, studies investigating these reactions are complicated by surface heterogeneity. Now, interfacial proton-coupled electron transfer kinetics are studied and modelled at isolated, well-defined active sites to provide a foundation for understanding complex reactions involved in energy conversion and catalysis.
Single-electron-mediated difunctionalizations of internal olefins allow the simultaneous formation of two contiguous Csp3-stereocentres. Here, we describe enantioenriched arylsulfinylamides as all-in-one reagents for the efficient asymmetric, intermolecular aminoarylation of alkenes. Mechanistic studies revealed an interesting dichotomy in the initiation of the reaction depending on the olefin redox potential.
Single-step addition of an aryl ring and a protected amine across an alkene is a succinct route to valuable phenethylamine products, but existing methods suffer from limited scope. Now a family of compounds containing a sulfinamide functional group have been developed to react via electrophilic radicals to yield phenethylamines through an aryl migration with precise stereochemical control.
The synthesis, structure and reactivity of room-temperature-stable [Cp(C6F5)5]+[Sb3F16]− is presented. Coordination of the cyclopentadienyl cation by [Sb3F16]− or C6F6 stabilizes the antiaromatic singlet state in the solid state. Calculated hydride and fluoride ion affinities of the [Cp(C6F5)5]+ cation are higher than those of the tritylium cation [C(C6F5)3]+.
Photoinduced electron transfer forms the basis for photosynthesis and DNA repair. Ultrafast structural changes recorded for a DNA-repairing photolyase now reveal specific and directed protein motions accompanying the electron transfer.
The organization of electrolytes at the air/water interface affects the structure of interfacial water and therefore numerous natural processes. It has now been demonstrated that the surface of an electrolyte solution is stratified and consists of an ion-depleted outer surface and an ion-enriched subsurface layer, jointly determining the water interfacial structure.
The activation of dioxygen at metal centres, and subsequent functionalization of unactivated C‒H bonds, requires the generation of high-energy radical intermediates that often result in undesirable side reactions. Now an elusive oxygen-derived reactive iron(II)–radical intermediate is spectroscopically characterized as part of a strategy to stabilize phenoxyl radical cofactors during substrate oxidation reactions.
Selectivity of photochemical reactions is notoriously difficult to model. Now it has been shown that by employing an analogy to ground-state reactions with post-transition-state bifurcations, selectivity for a complex photochemical denitrogenation reaction can be captured and rationalized, and its dynamical origins understood.
Natural products discovery remains an ongoing challenge. Now, halide depletion offers a complementary approach to discover natural products whose biosynthesis requires halides, including products of cryptic halogenation. Halide depletion reveals that nostochlorosides, the products of an orphan biosynthetic gene cluster in Nostoc punctiforme, are polymerized by a halide-displacing etherifying enzyme.
Enantioselective transformations based on tetracoordinate borons are elusive. Now, an enantioselective nickel-catalysed strategy for the construction of axially chiral alkenes has been reported, via a 1,3-metallate shift of alkynyl tetracoordinate boron species. The reaction uses readily accessible starting materials and a cheap transition-metal catalyst, and the chemoselectivity, regioselectivity and atroposelectivity could be well controlled.
The prototypical trans–cis photoisomerization of stilbenes is thought to occur via a transient intermediate with a perpendicular conformation—often called ‘the phantom state’—but its unambiguous identification has thus far proved difficult. Now, using ultrafast ultraviolet Raman spectroscopy and ab initio molecular dynamics simulation, evidence for its existence and its perpendicular conformation has been obtained.
High-throughput experimentation (HTE) has great utility for chemical synthesis. However, robust interpretation of high-throughput data remains a challenge. Now, a flexible analyser has been developed on the basis of a machine learning-statistical analysis framework, which can reveal hidden chemical insights from historical HTE data of varying scopes, sizes and biases.
The heterogeneous catalytic dehydrogenation of hydrocarbons usually suffers from a negative pressure dependence on H2. Now it has been shown that for propane dehydrogenation on gallium oxide-based catalysts, a positive activity dependence on H2 partial pressure arises from a metastable hydride-mediated catalysis in which gallium hydrides promote C–H activation.
Cysteine bioconjugation is an important method to modify biomolecules, but synthetic efforts to diversify reactive warheads and the low reactivity of introducible linchpins often impede application in biological laboratories. Now, a thianthrenium-based reagent permits site-selective installation of episulfonium on biomacromolecules, enabling one-step addition of bioorthogonal nucleophiles and further applications in quantitative proteomics and cross-linking.
In contrast to photothermal therapy requiring high powers over extended times and photodynamic therapy being abrogated by inhibitors of reactive oxygen species, actuation of vibronic modes in single molecules—molecular jackhammers—can now induce efficient cancer cell death. Here, the mechanical disassembly of cell membranes is characterized as the underlying mechanism by which this vibronic-driven action promotes necrotic cell death.
Current proteolysis-targeting chimeras can promote the ubiquitination and subsequent degradation of both target and off-target proteins by inducing their respective proximity with the cereblon ubiquitin ligase. Now, by developing and deploying an off-target profiling platform, ‘bumped proteolysis-targeting chimeras’ can maintain on-target degradation efficacy with reduced off-targets.