Publications by authors named "Takayuki Yokoe"

Glycopeptides are fragments of glycoproteins and are important in evaluating the biological roles of carbohydrates in glycoproteins. Fmoc solid-phase peptide synthesis using acetyl-protected glycosylated amino acids is a common strategy for the preparation of glycopeptides, but this approach normally requires chemical de-O-acetylation with a base that β-eliminates sugar residues and epimerizes the peptide backbone. Here we demonstrate a facile new chemoenzymatic synthetic strategy for glycopeptides, using an esterase for the de-O-acetylation of sugar residues and glycosyltransferases for successive sugar elongations at neutral pH.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rhodium(I)-catalyzed enantioselective hydroacylation of 4-allenals was found to proceed smoothly, giving six-membered ketones in good yields (up to 84% yield) with high enantiomeric excess (up to 96% ee) even from racemic allenes as substrates. Mechanistic studies revealed that racemization of the allene moiety in the substrate would occur via a dynamic kinetic resolution (DKR) process during the hydroacylation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Trifluoromethylative difunctionalization and hydrofunctionalization of unactivated alkenes have been developed into powerful synthetic methodologies. On the other hand, methylative difunctionalization of olefins remains an unexplored research field. We report in this paper the Cu-catalyzed alkoxy methylation, azido methylation of alkenes using dicumyl peroxide (DCP), and di-tert-butyl peroxide (DTBP) as methyl sources.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rhodium(I)-catalyzed cyclization of allenynes with a tethered carbonyl group was investigated. An unusual insertion of a CO bond into the C(sp(2) )-rhodium bond of a rhodacycle intermediate occurs via a highly strained transition state. Direct reductive elimination from the obtained rhodacyle intermediate proceeds to give a tricyclic product containing an 8-oxabicyclo[3.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF