Calix[3]pyrrole: A Missing Link in Porphyrin-Related Chemistry

A long-standing question in porphyrin chemistry is why pyrrole monomers selectively form tetrapyrrolic macrocycles, whereas the corresponding tripyrrolic macrocycles are never observed. Calix[3]­pyrrole, a tripyrrolic porphyrinogen-like macrocycle bearing three sp3-carbon linkages, is a missing link...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2021-08, Vol.143 (31), p.12355-12360
Hauptverfasser: Inaba, Yuya, Nomata, Yu, Ide, Yuki, Pirillo, Jenny, Hijikata, Yuh, Yoneda, Tomoki, Osuka, Atsuhiro, Sessler, Jonathan L, Inokuma, Yasuhide
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A long-standing question in porphyrin chemistry is why pyrrole monomers selectively form tetrapyrrolic macrocycles, whereas the corresponding tripyrrolic macrocycles are never observed. Calix[3]­pyrrole, a tripyrrolic porphyrinogen-like macrocycle bearing three sp3-carbon linkages, is a missing link molecule that might hold the key to this enigma; however, it has remained elusive. Here we report the synthesis and strain-induced transformations of calix[3]­pyrrole and its furan analogue, calix[3]­furan. These macrocycles are readily accessed from cyclic oligoketones. Crystallographic and theoretical analyses reveal that these three-subunit systems possess the largest strain energy among known calix­[n]-type macrocycles. The ring-strain triggers transformation of calix[3]­pyrrole into first calix[6]­pyrrole and then calix[4]­pyrrole under porphyrin cyclization conditions. The present results help explain the absence of naturally occurring three-pyrrole macrocycles and the fact that they are not observed as products or intermediate during classic porphyrin syntheses.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.1c06331