Quick question - is the starting material enantiopure and if so do we know whether the stereochemistry at the tertiary centre is retained?
No, interestingly enough, as this was the total synthesis of a molecule which contains two chiral centres. I did look, many years ago, at trying to attempt this with an enantiopure starting material but never got round to it.
I am also very skeptical of this deprotonation, especially given the pKa of the H flanked by 3 carbonyls is probably somewhere around 8!
I very much doubt that this would even exist exclusively as the tricarbonyl (this is a paper from the 1960's not many high res NMR's around in those days), more likely one of the ketones would predominantly enolise. I have seen enol protons from these types of substances with chemical shifts of δ=19 ppm, that's a pretty desheilded proton!
No one is more skeptical than me about this mechanism, what I have put here is the best anyone could come up with and I think "dubious" is an understatement.
No one I have spoken to has been able to suggest anything else though, in fact most people question whether or not I have written the structure incorrectly!
It is a very academic excercise as the end prodcut was a seven step reaction with an overall yield <1% but the authors must have had some reason to believe that this would work (which of course it did) as it is step 5/7.
I am hoping for a better suggestion from someone on here.