Publications by authors named "Ryan E McNamee"

Prediction of the outcome of ring opening of small organic rings under cationic conditions can be challenging due to the intermediacy of nonclassical carbocations. For example, the solvolysis of cyclobutyl or cyclopropylmethyl derivatives generates up to four products on nucleophilic capture or elimination via cyclopropylcarbinyl and bicyclobutonium ions. Here, we show that such reaction outcomes can be controlled by subtle changes to the structure of nonclassical carbocation.

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Bicyclo[1.1.0]butanes (BCBs), strained carbocycles comprising two fused cyclopropane rings, have become well-established building blocks in organic synthesis, medicinal chemistry, and chemical biology due to their diverse reactivity profile with radicals, nucleophiles, cations, and carbenes.

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Bicyclo[1.1.0]butanes (BCBs) have gained growing popularity in "strain release" chemistry for the synthesis of four-membered-ring systems and - and -disubstituted arene bioisosteres as well as applications in chemoselective bioconjugation.

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Sulfonylated aromatics are commonplace motifs in drugs and agrochemicals. However, methods for the direct synthesis of sulfonylated non-classical arene bioisosteres, which could improve the physicochemical properties of drug and agrochemical candidates, are limited. Here we report a solution to this challenge: a one-pot halosulfonylation of [1.

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Bicyclo[1.1.0]butanes (BCBs) are valuable substrates in the "strain release" synthesis of polysubstituted four-membered ring systems, with applications including bioconjugation agents.

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Bicyclo[1.1.0]butanes (BCBs) are increasingly valued as intermediates in 'strain release' chemistry for the synthesis of substituted four membered rings and bicyclo[1.

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Cascade reactions (also known as domino reactions) are arguably the most powerful means to achieve the construction of multiple ring systems in a single step. In this Tutorial Review, highlights in cascade polycyclizations applied to natural product syntheses over the last five years are discussed, including pericyclic, ionic, metal-catalyzed, organocatalytic, and radical processes. Significant developments in each of these fields that have advanced the state-of-the-art are a particular focus, including photochemical and electrochemical methods, novel biomimetic routes, and enantioselective cascades.

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