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Zusammenfassung:
Formal total syntheses of the antibiotics metacycloprodigiosin (2) and streptorubin B (3) are described, which are known to exhibit promising immunomodulating properties. The key step en route to their meta-bridged pyrrole core structures 5 and 7, respectively, consists of a metathesis reaction of electron-deficient enynes catalyzed by either platinum halides, hard Lewis acids, or HBF4. This transformation expands the pre-existing cycloalkene of the substrates by two C atoms, forges the bicyclic pyrrolophane structure of the targets, and simultaneously forms a bridgehead alkene function. The products of this skeletal rearrangement are converted into the targets by a sequence comprising (i) a stepwise reduction of their enone entity to the corresponding saturated alcohols and (ii) an aromatization of the N-tosylated dihydropyrroles 20 and 34 thus obtained via elimination of potassium sulfinate on exposure to KAPA (potassium 3-aminopropylamide). A careful analysis of the minor byproducts formed in the enyne metathesis reactions allows a mechanistic rationale to be proposed for this operationally trivial yet highly attractive transformation which involves “nonclassical” cyclopropylmethyl−homoallyl−cyclobutyl cations as key intermediates. This cationic pathway is distinctly different from mechanistic interpretations of other enyne metathesis reactions previously reported in the literature.