Computational prediction of complex cationic rearrangement outcomes.

Journal: Nature
PMID:

Abstract

Recent years have seen revived interest in computer-assisted organic synthesis. The use of reaction- and neural-network algorithms that can plan multistep synthetic pathways have revolutionized this field, including examples leading to advanced natural products. Such methods typically operate on full, literature-derived 'substrate(s)-to-product' reaction rules and cannot be easily extended to the analysis of reaction mechanisms. Here we show that computers equipped with a comprehensive knowledge-base of mechanistic steps augmented by physical-organic chemistry rules, as well as quantum mechanical and kinetic calculations, can use a reaction-network approach to analyse the mechanisms of some of the most complex organic transformations: namely, cationic rearrangements. Such rearrangements are a cornerstone of organic chemistry textbooks and entail notable changes in the molecule's carbon skeleton. The algorithm we describe and deploy at https://HopCat.allchemy.net/ generates, within minutes, networks of possible mechanistic steps, traces plausible step sequences and calculates expected product distributions. We validate this algorithm by three sets of experiments whose analysis would probably prove challenging even to highly trained chemists: (1) predicting the outcomes of tail-to-head terpene (THT) cyclizations in which substantially different outcomes are encoded in modular precursors differing in minute structural details; (2) comparing the outcome of THT cyclizations in solution or in a supramolecular capsule; and (3) analysing complex reaction mixtures. Our results support a vision in which computers no longer just manipulate known reaction types but will help rationalize and discover new, mechanistically complex transformations.

Authors

  • Tomasz Klucznik
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland.
  • Leonidas-Dimitrios Syntrivanis
    Roger Adams Laboratory, School of Chemical Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA. l.syntrivanis@unibas.ch.
  • Sebastian Baś
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland.
  • Barbara Mikulak-Klucznik
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland.
  • Martyna Moskal
    Allchemy, Highland, IN, USA.
  • Sara Szymkuć
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland.
  • Jacek Mlynarski
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland. jacek.mlynarski@gmail.com.
  • Louis Gadina
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland.
  • Wiktor Beker
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland.
  • Martin D Burke
    Department of Chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, United States.
  • Konrad Tiefenbacher
    Department of Chemistry, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland. konrad.tiefenbacher@unibas.ch.
  • Bartosz A Grzybowski
    Institute of Organic Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland. nanogrzybowski@gmail.com.