Lewis Acid Activation of Pyridines for Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution and Conjugate Addition

ChemSusChem ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 1083-1087 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Abou-Shehada ◽  
Matthew C. Teasdale ◽  
Steven D. Bull ◽  
Charles E. Wade ◽  
Jonathan M. J. Williams
ChemInform ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 46 (30) ◽  
pp. no-no
Author(s):  
Sarah Abou-Shehada ◽  
Matthew C. Teasdale ◽  
Steven D. Bull ◽  
Charles E. Wade ◽  
Jonathan M. J. Williams

Synlett ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura L. Anderson ◽  
Michael Shevlin ◽  
Neil A. Strotman

A concise new synthetic route to furo[2,3-b]indolines has been developed by taking advantage of the reactivity of N-alkenyloxyindole intermediates. These compounds spontaneously undergo [3,3]-sigmatropic rearrangement followed by cyclization to form hemiaminals as single diastereomers. Tin-promoted N-hydroxyindole formation followed by conjugate addition to activated alkynes provides simple and modular access to a diverse array of N-alkenyloxyindoles and their corresponding furo[2,3-b]indolines. Microscale high-throughput experimentation was used to facilitate investigation of the scope and tolerance of this transformation and related studies on the nucleophilic aromatic substitution and rearrangement of N-hydroxyindoles with halogenated arenes have also been evaluated.


Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (20) ◽  
pp. 4710
Author(s):  
Noeen Malik ◽  
Shreya Bendre ◽  
Ralf Schirrmacher ◽  
Paul Schaffer

Background: Temperature-sensitive radiopharmaceutical precursors require lower reaction temperatures (<100 °C) during nucleophilic radiofluorination in order to avoid compound thermolysis, often resulting in sub-optimal radiochemical yields (RCYs). To facilitate nucleophilic aromatic substitution (SNAr) of nucleofuges commonly used in radiofluorination (e.g., nitro group), we explored the use of Lewis acids as nucleophilic activators to accelerate [18F]fluoride incorporation at lower temperatures, and thereby increasing RCYs for thermolabile activated precursors. Lewis acid-assisted radiofluorination was exemplified on the temperature-sensitive compound 1-(4-(4-morpholino-7-neopentyl-7H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidin-2-yl)phenyl)-3-(6-nitropyridin-3-yl)urea (MN3PU, compound 3) targeting leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2), an important target in the study of Parkinson’s disease and various cancers. Methods: To a vessel containing dried K[18F]F-K222 complex, a solution of precursor MN3PU ((3), 1 mg; 1.8 μmol) and Lewis acid (6 μL of 0.2 μmol: chromium II chloride (A), ferric nitrite (B) or titanocene dichloride (C)) in 500 μL of N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) (with 10% t-BuOH for B) were added. Reactions were stirred for 25 min at 90 °C. In parallel, reactions were conducted without the addition of Lewis acids for baseline comparison. After purification via preconditioned Sep-Pak C18 plus cartridges, aliquots were analyzed by analytical radio-HPLC. Results: Non-decay corrected radiochemical yields (ndc RCYs) for [18F]FMN3PU (7) were improved from 1.7 ± 0.7% (no addition of Lewis acids) to 41 ± 1% using Cr(II) and 37 ± 0.7% using Ti(II)-based Lewis acids, with radiochemical purities of ≥96% and molar activities (Am) of up to 3.23 ± 1.7 Ci/μmol (120 ± 1.7 GBq/μmol). Conclusion: RCYs of [18F]FMN3PU (7) improved from ~5% using conventional nucleophilic radiofluorination, up to 41 ± 1% using Lewis-acid supported SNAr.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haley Albright ◽  
Paul S. Riehl ◽  
Christopher C. McAtee ◽  
Jolene P. Reid ◽  
Jacob R. Ludwig ◽  
...  

<div>Catalytic carbonyl-olefin metathesis reactions have recently been developed as a powerful tool for carbon-carbon bond</div><div>formation. However, currently available synthetic protocols rely exclusively on aryl ketone substrates while the corresponding aliphatic analogs remain elusive. We herein report the development of Lewis acid-catalyzed carbonyl-olefin ring-closing metathesis reactions for aliphatic ketones. Mechanistic investigations are consistent with a distinct mode of activation relying on the in situ formation of a homobimetallic singly-bridged iron(III)-dimer as the active catalytic species. These “superelectrophiles” function as more powerful Lewis acid catalysts that form upon association of individual iron(III)-monomers. While this mode of Lewis acid activation has previously been postulated to exist, it has not yet been applied in a catalytic setting. The insights presented are expected to enable further advancement in Lewis acid catalysis by building upon the activation principle of “superelectrophiles” and broaden the current scope of catalytic carbonyl-olefin metathesis reactions.</div>


Author(s):  
Kjell Jorner ◽  
Tore Brinck ◽  
Per-Ola Norrby ◽  
David Buttar

Hybrid reactivity models, combining mechanistic calculations and machine learning with descriptors, are used to predict barriers for nucleophilic aromatic substitution.


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