Waiting
Login processing...

Trial ends in Request Full Access Tell Your Colleague About Jove

Chemistry

A Direct, Regioselective and Atom-Economical Synthesis of 3-Aroyl-N-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles by Cycloaddition of 4-Nitronitrosobenzene with Alkynones

Published: January 21, 2020 doi: 10.3791/60201

Summary

3-Aroyl-N-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles were synthesized by cycloaddition of 4-nitronitrosobenzene with a conjugated terminal alkynone in a one-step thermal procedure. Preparation of the nitrosoarene and of the alkynones were adequately reported and respectively through oxidation procedures on the corresponding aniline and on the alkynol.

Abstract

We introduced a regioselective and atom-economical procedure for the synthesis of 3-substituted indoles by annulation of nitrosoarenes with ethynyl ketones. The reactions were carried out achieving indoles without any catalyst and with excellent regioselectivity. No traces of 2-aroylindole products were detected. Working with 4-nitronitrosobenzene as starting material, the 3-aroyl-N-hydroxy-5-nitroindole products precipitated from the reaction mixtures and were isolated by filtration without any further purification technique. Differently from the corresponding N-hydroxy-3-aryl indoles that, spontaneously in solution, give dehydrodimerization products, the N-hydroxy-3-aroyl indoles are stable and no dimerization compounds were observed.

Introduction

Aromatic C-nitroso compounds1 and alkynones2 are versatile reactants that are continuously and deeply used and studied as starting materials for the preparation of high valuable compounds. Nitrosoarenes play an ever-growing role in the organic synthesis. They are used for many different purposes (e.g., hetero Diels-Alder reaction3,4, Nitroso-Aldol reaction5,6, Nitroso-Ene reaction7, synthesis of azocompounds8,9,10). Very recently they were even used as starting materials to afford different heterocyclic compounds11,12,13. In the last decades, conjugated ynones were investigated for their role as very interesting and useful scaffolds in the achievement of many high valuable derivatives and heterocyclic products14,15,16,17,18. C-Nitrosoaromatics can be afforded by oxidation reactions of the corresponding and commercially available anilines using different oxidizing agents as potassium peroxymonosulfate (KHSO5·0.5KHSO4·0.5K2SO4)19, Na2WO4/H2O220, Mo(VI)-complexes/H2O221,22,23, selenium derivatives24. Alkynones are easily prepared by the oxidation of the corresponding alkynols using various oxidants (CrO325 even known as Jones' reagent or mild reactants as MnO226 and Dess-Martin periodinane27). The alkynols can be achieved by direct reaction of ethynylmagnesium bromide with commercially available arylaldehydes or heteroarylaldehydes28.

Indole is probably the most studied heterocyclic compound and indole derivatives have wide and various applications in many different research fields. Both medicinal chemists and material scientists produced many indole-based products that cover different functions and potential activities. Indole compounds have been investigated by many research groups and both naturally occurring products and synthetic derivatives containing the indole framework show relevant and peculiar properties29,30,31,32. Among the plethora of indole compounds, the 3-aroylindoles have a relevant role among molecules that show biological activities (Figure 1). Different indole products belong to diverse classes of pharmaceutical candidates to become potential novel drugs33. Synthetic and naturally occurring 3-aroylindoles are known to play a role as antibacterial, antimitotic, analgesic, antiviral, anti-inflammatory, antinociceptic, antidiabetic and anticancer34,35. The '1-hydroxyindole hypothesis' was provocatively introduced by Somei and coworkers as an interesting and stimulating supposition to support the biological role of N-hydroxyindoles in the biosynthesis and functionalization of indole alkaloids36,37,38,39. This assumption was recently reinforced by the observation of many endogen N-hydroxy heterocyclic compounds that show relevant biological activities and an interesting role for many purposes as pro-drugs40. In the recent years, the search for novel active pharmaceutical ingredients revealed that different N-hydroxyindole fragments were detected and discovered in natural products and bioactive compounds (Figure 2): Stephacidin B41 and Coproverdine42 are known as antitumor alkaloids, Thiazomycins43 (A and D), Notoamide G44 and Nocathacins45,46,47 (I, III, and IV) are deeply studied antibiotics, Opacaline B48 is a natural alkaloid from ascidian Pseudodistoma opacum and Birnbaumin A and B are two pigments from Leucocoprinus birnbaumii49. New and efficient N-hydroxyindole-based inhibitors of LDH-A (Lactate DeHydrogenase-A) and their ability to reduce the glucose to lactate conversion inside the cell were developed50,51,52,53,54,55,56. Other researchers repeated that indole compounds, that did not show biological activities, became useful pro-drugs after the insertion of a N-hydroxy group57.

A motif of debate was the stability of N-hydroxyindoles and some of these compounds gave easily a dehydrodimerization reaction that leads to the formation of a class of novel compounds, subsequently renamed as kabutanes58,59,60,61, by the formation of a new C-C bond and two new C-O bonds. Due to the importance of stable N-hydroxyindoles the study of different synthetic approaches for the easy preparation of such compounds becomes a fundamental topic. In a previous research by some of us, an intramolecular cyclization by a Cadogan-Sundberg-type reaction was reported using nitrostyrenes and nitrostilbene as starting materials62. In the last decades we developed a novel cycloaddition between nitro- and nitrosoarenes with different alkynes in an intermolecular fashion affording indoles, N-hydroxy- and N-alkoxyindoles as major products (Figure 3).

At the beginning, using aromatic and aliphatic alkynes63,64,65,66,67 the reactions were carried out in large excess of alkyne (10 or 12-fold) and sometimes under alkylative conditions to avoid the formation of kabutanes. 3-Substituted indole products were achieved regioselectively in moderate to good yields. Using electron poor alkynes, like 4-ethynylpyrimidine derivatives as privileged substrates we could carry out the reactions for this one-pot synthetic protocol using a 1/1 nitrosoarene/alkyne molar ratio68. With this protocol, an interesting class of kinase inhibitors as meridianins, marine alkaloids isolated from Aplidium meridianum69, was prepared showing a different approach to meridianins through an indolization procedure (Figure 4)68. Meridianins were generally produced so far with synthetic tools starting from preformed indole reactants. To the best of our knowledge, only a couple of methodologies reported the total synthesis of meridianins or meridianin derivatives through an indolization procedure68,70.

In a more recent development on the use of electron poor alkynes it was worthwhile to test the employ of terminal alkynones as substrates for the indolization procedure and this led us to disclose an intermolecular synthetic technique to afford 3-aroyl-N-hydroxyindole products71,72. Analogously to the process studied for the preparation of meridianins, using terminal arylalkynone compounds the 1/1 Ar-N=O/Ar-(C=O)-C≡CH molar ratio was used (Figure 5). Working with alkynones as privileged starting materials, the general indole synthesis was performed with different reactants exploring a wide substrate survey and changing the nature of the substituents both on nitrosoarenes and on the aromatic ynones. Electron-withdrawing groups on the C-nitrosaromatic compound led us to observe an improvement both in reaction times and in products yields. An interesting synthetic approach that makes easily available a stable library of these compounds could be very useful and, after a preliminary study, we optimized our synthetic protocol using this stoichiometric reaction between alkynones and 4-nitronitrosobenzene to afford stable 3-aroyl-N-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles. Basically, this easy access to N-hydroxyindoles led us to evidence as the cycloaddition reaction between nitrosoarene and alkynone is a very atom-economical process.

Subscription Required. Please recommend JoVE to your librarian.

Protocol

1. Preliminary preparation of the Jones Reagent

  1. Add 25 g (0.25 mol) of chromium trioxide using a spatula in a 500 mL beaker that contains a magnetic stirring bar.
  2. Add 75 mL of water and keep the solution under magnetic stirring.
  3. Add slowly 25 mL of concentrated sulfuric acid with careful stirring and cooling in an ice-water bath.
    NOTE: Now the solution is ready and is stable and usable for many oxidation procedures; the concentration of the solution prepared by this procedure is 2.5 M.

2. Synthesis of 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one

  1. Add 75 mL of acetone in an open-air round bottom flask that contains a magnetic stirring bar.
  2. Add 2.0 g (15.13 mmol) of 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-ol via a glass Pasteur pipette.
  3. Keep the reaction mixture at 0 °C and under magnetic stirring.
  4. Add a solution of Jones reagent dropwise till the presence of a persistent orange color.
  5. Add 2-propanol dropwise till the excess of Cr(VI) reactant is consumed to the point of a green color.
  6. Filter the solution through a pad of diatomaceous earth.
  7. Concentrate the washings by rotary evaporation obtaining an oil.
  8. Dissolve the oil in 100 mL of CH2Cl2 and put in a separatory funnel.
  9. Wash this organic phase with a saturated solution of NaHCO3 (2 x 125 mL).
  10. Wash the organic layer with brine (125 mL).
  11. Dry the organic solution over anhydrous Na2SO4 and filter it.
  12. Evaporate the solution obtaining 1.77 g of 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one as a yellow solid (quantitative yield).
  13. Leave the solid to dry in vacuum.
  14. Analyze and characterize by 1H-NMR.

3. Preparation of 4-nitronitrosobenzene

  1. Add 16 g of potassium peroxymonosulfate (2KHSO5·KHSO4·K2SO4) (26 mmol) using a spatula in a beaker, open to air that contains a magnetic stirring bar.
  2. Add 150 mL of water and keep the solution at 0 °C under magnetic stirring.
  3. Add 3.6 g of 4-nitroaniline (26 mol) using a spatula.
  4. Stir the suspension at room temperature.
  5. Check the reaction by TLC till the complete conversion of 4-nitroaniline (Rf4-Nitroaniline = 0.44, Rf4-Nitronitrosobenzene = 0.77; CH2Cl2 as eluent).
  6. Filter the crude reaction mixture on a Buchner after 48 h.
  7. Put the solid in a one-neck round bottom flask.
  8. Recrystallize the solid in methanol (50 mL).
  9. Warm the suspension using a heat gun till boiling point of methanol and filter immediately the hot suspension.
  10. Discard the solid and reuse it eventually for another recrystallization.
  11. Filter the second precipitate formed in the Erlenmeyer flask when the solution reaches room temperature.
  12. Leave the solid to dry in vacuum on a Buchner funnel.
  13. Characterize the solid by 1H-NMR.

4. Synthesis of 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole

  1. Connect all the oven dried glassware (a 250 mL two neck round bottom flask containing a magnetic stirring bar, a stopcock, a refrigerant and a joint to connect to vacuum/nitrogen system) and put under vacuum for 30 min.
  2. At room temperature, after some cycles of vacuum/nitrogen, flush all the glassware with nitrogen and leave it under inert atmosphere.
  3. Add 1.52 g (10 mmol) of 4-nitronitrosobenzene under inert atmosphere.
  4. Add 1.30 g (10 mmol) of 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one.
  5. Add 80 mL of toluene via a syringe and keep the reaction mixture under magnetic stirring at 80 °C.
  6. After few minutes, check the complete solubilization of the reactants.
  7. Verify the formation of an orange precipitate after about 30-40 min at 80 °C.
  8. After the complete precipitation of an orange solid (about 2.5 h), turn off the heating and leave the reaction to reach room temperature.
  9. Filter the mixture and collect 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole as an orange solid on a Buchner funnel.
  10. Keep under vacuum to dryness.
  11. Analyze and characterize the solid product by 1H- and 13C-NMR, FT-IR, and HRMS.

Subscription Required. Please recommend JoVE to your librarian.

Representative Results

The preparation of 4-nitronitrosobenzene 2 was achieved by oxidation of 4-nitroaniline 1 by reaction with potassium peroxymonosulfate as reported in Figure 6. The product 2 was obtained in 64% yield after recrystallization in MeOH (twice) with 3-5% contamination of 4,4'-bis-nitro-azoxybenzene 6. The structure of product 2 was confirmed by 1H-NMR (Figure 7). 1H-NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 8.53 (d, J = 8.8 Hz, 2H), 8.07 (d, J = 8.8 Hz, 2H).

The preparation of 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one 4 was afforded by oxidation of 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-ol 3 with Jones reagent as reported in Figure 8. The product 4 was isolated as a yellow solid in 90% yield and the structure was confirmed by 1H-NMR (Figure 9). 1H-NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 8.10 (d, J = 7.4 Hz, 2H), 7.57 (t, J = 7.4 Hz, 1H), 7.43 (t, J = 7.4 Hz, 2H), 3.36 (s, 1H).

The synthesis of 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole was accomplished by thermal reaction of 4-nitronitrosobenzene 2 and 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one 4 in toluene at 80 °C as reported in Figure 10. Indole compound 5 was isolated in 58% yield by filtration after 2.5 h. The azoxy derivative 6 was isolated in 22% yield as the major product of the mother liquor after chromatography (Rf = 0.36) using CH2Cl2/hexane = 6/4 as eluent. The structure of product 6 was confirmed by 1H-NMR (Figure 11). 1H-NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3): δ = 8.47 (d, J = 9.2 Hz, 2H), 8.35 (d, J = 9.2 Hz, 2H), 8.30 (d, J = 9.2 Hz, 2H), 8.23 (d, J = 9.2 Hz, 2H). The structure of compound 5 was determined by FT-IR, 1H-NMR (Figure 12), 13C-NMR (Figure 13) and HRMS (Figure 14 and Figure 15).

FT-IR (KBr disk): 1619, 1560, 1518, 1336, 850, 817, 740, 700 cm-1. 1H-NMR (400 MHz, DMSO-d6): δ = 12.68 (s, 1H, bs), 9.16 (d, J = 2.3 Hz, 1H), 8.38 (s, 1H), 8.22 (dd, J = 9.0 Hz, J = 2.3 Hz, 1H), 7.85 (d, J = 7.2 Hz, 2H), 7.74 (d, J = 9.0 Hz, 1H), 7.66 (t, J = 7.2 Hz, 1H), 7.58 (t, J = 7.2 Hz, 2H). 13C-NMR (400 MHz, DMSO-d6): δ = 188.94, 143.24, 139.19, 136.58, 136.40, 131.81, 128.61, 128.53, 122.05, 118.81, 118.25, 110.96, 110.19. HRMS (ESI-) calcd for C15H10N2O4: 281.0562 ([M-1]); found: 281.0565. HRMS (ESI+) calcd for C15H10N2O4: 283.0719 ([M+1]), 305.0538 [M+Na]; found: 283.0713, 305.0532.

1H-NMR spectra were obtained for compounds 2, 4, 5 and 6; 13C-NMR were obtained for compound 5. Unless differently stated, all the spectra were collected at room temperature. High Resolution Mass spectra were obtained for compound 5 with ESI ionization (positive and negative). IR spectrum was obtained for compound 5.

Figure 1
Figure 1: Different 3-aroylindole compounds showing biological activities. Clometacin (anti-inflammatory drug), Pravadoline (analgesic), JWH-018 (agonist of CB1 and CB2 receptors) and BPR0L075 (antimitotic and antivascular agent). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 2
Figure 2: Some example of natural and synthetic N-hydroxy indoles. Birnbaumins A and B are two toxic yellow pigment compounds, Lactate DeHydrogenase inhibitors, Coproverdine a cytotoxic marine alkaloid from a New Zealand ascidian, Stephacidin B an antitumor alkaloid isolated from the fungus Aspergillus ochraceus. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 3
Figure 3: Previous research results in the intermolecular indolization procedure. Synthesis of indoles, N-hydroxyindoles and N-alkoxyindoles by cycloaddition of nitro- and nitrosoarenes with alkynes Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 4
Figure 4: Application of the synthetic approach to the preparation of natural products. Synthesis of Meridianins and analogues through the annulation of C-nitrosoaromatics with ethynylpyrimidine compounds. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 5
Figure 5: Recent developments using alkynones. Synthesis of 3-aroyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles by cyclization of 4-nitronitrosobenzene with conjugated ynones. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 6
Figure 6: Preparation of 4-Nitro-nitrosobenzene by oxidation of 4-Nitroaniline. A selective oxidation of the amino group to nitroso group. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 7
Figure 7: 1H-NMR spectrum of 4-nitronitrosobenzene (2). A typical AA'BB' splitting pattern is shown here. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 8
Figure 8: Preparation of 1-Phenyl-2-propyne-1-one by oxidation of 1-Phenyl-2-propyne-1-ol. A selective oxidation of the alcohol to a ketone. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 9
Figure 9: 1H-NMR spectrum of 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one (4). A spectrum of a monosubstituted aromatic compound with a single of a terminal alkyne. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 10
Figure 10: Synthesis of 3-Benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole (5) by cycloaddition of 2 and 4. The regioselective synthesis of indoles starting from a terminal ynone and a nitrosoarene. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 11
Figure 11: 1H-NMR spectrum of 4,4'-bis-nitroazoxybenzene (6). A typical double AA'BB' splitting pattern is shown here for the major byproduct. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 12
Figure 12: 1H-NMR spectrum of 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole (5). The spectrum shows the aromatic substitution pattern of a 3,5-disubstituted-N-hydoxyindole. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 13
Figure 13: 13C-NMR spectrum of 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole (5). Six signals for quaternary carbon atoms and seven signals for tertiary carbon atoms. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 14
Figure 14: HRMS (ESI-) spectrum of 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole (5). Negative ionization mode mass spectrometry of the target compound. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 15
Figure 15: HRMS (ESI+) spectrum of 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole (5). Positive ionization mode mass spectrometry of the target compound. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Subscription Required. Please recommend JoVE to your librarian.

Discussion

The reaction for the indole synthesis between nitrosoarenes and alkynones shows a very high versatility and a strong and wide application. In a previous report, we could generalize our synthetic protocol working with different C-nitrosoaromatics and substituted terminal arylalkynones or heteroarylalkyones72. The procedure shows a deep substrate survey and a high functional group tolerance and both electron-withdrawing groups and electron-donor groups were present both in nitrosoarene and in the alkynone.

A single procedure for the indolization by cycloaddition of 4-nitro-nitrosobenzene with 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one was here reported as a representative reaction. After a partial survey, toluene, was found as the best solvent. Carrying out our protocol, 3-benzoyl-1-hydroxy-5-nitroindole 5 precipitated from the reaction mixture. The indole product was the only compound found in the solid that was isolated by filtration without any further purification. The analysis of the mother liquors led us to find and detect the only presence of 4,4'-dinitroazoxybenzene 6 as a major nitrogen-containing byproduct together with the unreacted alkynone 4 and the products were isolated and purified by chromatography (Rfazoxyarene = 0.36 and Rfalkynone = 0.30 using CH2Cl2 / Hexane = 6/4 as eluent). Azoxybenzenes are typical side products of the reactions with nitrosoarenes as starting materials. Very recently it was reported as this class of compounds can be selectively obtained as the major products of thermal reactions carried out in a wide variety of organic solvents through a reductive deoxygenative coupling of C-nitrosoaromatics73. In the procedure introduced by us72, using 4-nitronitrosobenzene with different alkynones the precipitation of 3-aroyl(heteroaroyl)-N-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles was always observed obtaining more than a dozen compounds. Other C-nitrosoaromatics showing strong electron withdrawing substituents gave prevalently the formation of 3-aroyl-1-hydroxyindoles and/or 3-aroylindole products. Employing electron rich nitrosoarenes, only 3-aroylindoles were detected. All the indoles were produced in moderate to good yields. A parallel study recently started in our lab devoted to the investigation of the reaction mechanism and to the optimization of the conditions trying to afford target compounds in higher yields. It could be possible to rise the product yields, after the filtration of the first precipitate, and adding another equivalent of 4-nitronitrosobenzene to the mother liquors of the reaction and heating the mixture. This addition and a second run lead to the formation of further precipitation, achieving another aliquote of indole product. It is well known that nitrosoarenes, both in solution and even as solids, could be present as dimers74. This is probably the way that favors the formation of azoxyarenes. The formation of this side product subtracts two equivalents of nitrosoarene to the cycloaddition with the alkynone. A mechanistic hypothesis for the preparation of azoxy compounds was proposed by Chuang and coworkers73. In principle, the indolization procedure works probably better in high dilution of nitrosoaromatic compound. The high concentration could be an Achille's heel for the competitive dimerization that is strongly connected with the formation of the azoxy compound. On this topic we are planning to try to run the reaction with slow addition of nitrosoarene and it could be useful to set an apparatus to experimentally carry out a flow reaction procedure. Further experiments will be carried out in the near future. We did not build yet a solid mechanistic conjecture to explain the formation of 3-aroylindoles. Nevertheless, in a previous report, working with arylacetylenes, we could study the mechanism of the formation of 3-arylindoles determining that the most plausible intermediate is probably a diradical specie67. The carbon-nitrogen bond forms first, followed by the cyclization through the formation of a carbon-carbon bond.

The use of the alkynone is a key point for our current study and the preparation of terminal ynones is an easy procedure. 1-Phenyl-2-propyne-1-ol is the only commercially available arylalkynol. The preparation of different arylalkynones and heteroarylalkynones was easily carried out starting from different commercially available aromatic and heteroaromatic aldehydes. These last compounds were treated with ethynyl magnesium bromide to generate alkynols by reactions often carried out at -78 °C. The obtained secondary propargyl alchohols were oxidized by reaction with different agents25,26,27. This procedure led us to afford terminal ynones as stable and solid compounds. Nitrosoarenes, differently from the corresponding nitroaromatics and anilines, are not easily commercially available and were prepared by the oxidation of the corresponding anilines19,20,21,22,23,24. It could be useful to study our synthetic approach by an in situ formation of nitroso compounds by oxidation or by reduction. Recent studies by Ragaini and coworkers reported the formation of C-nitrosoaromatics starting from nitroaromatic precursors75,76,77,78. The discovery, introduction, study and application of novel indolization protocols that could produce indoles regioselectively and with very high atom-economy, are relevant topics in synthetic organic chemistry and we are confident that this methodology through cyclization between nitrosoarenes and alkynones could be useful for different research groups.

Subscription Required. Please recommend JoVE to your librarian.

Disclosures

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgments

Dr. Enrica Alberti and Dr. Marta Brucka are acknowledged for the collection and registration of the NMR spectra. We thank Dr. Francesco Tibiletti and Dr. Gabriella Ieronimo for helpful discussions and experimental assistance.

Materials

Name Company Catalog Number Comments
4-Nitroaniline TCI Chemicals N0119
Acetone TCI Chemicals A0054
1-Phenyl-2-propyne-1-ol TCI Chemicals P0220
Celite 535 Fluorochem 44931
Dichloromethane TCI Chemicals D3478
Sodium hydrogen carbonate Sigma Aldrich S5761
Sodium chloride Sigma Aldrich 746398
Sodium sulfate anhydrous Sigma Aldrich 239313
Oxone TCI Chemicals O0310
Methanol TCI Chemicals M0628
Toluene TCI Chemicals T0260
Chromium Trioxide Sigma Aldrich 236470
Dichloromethane anhydrous TCI Chemicals D3478
Hexane anhydrous TCI Chemicals H1197

DOWNLOAD MATERIALS LIST

References

  1. Vančik, H. Aromatic C-nitroso Compounds. , Springer. Dordrecht. (2013).
  2. Whittaker, R. E., Dermenci, A., Dong, G. Synthesis of Ynones and Recent Application in Transition-Metal-Catalyzed Reactions. Synthesis. 48 (2), 161-183 (2016).
  3. Carosso, S., Miller, M. J. Nitroso Diels-Alder (NDA) reaction as an efficient tool for the functionalization of diene-containing natural products. Organic Biomolecular Chemistry. 12 (38), 7445-7468 (2014).
  4. Maji, B., Yamamoto, H. Catalytic Enantioselective Nitroso Diels-Alder Reaction. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 137 (50), 15957-15963 (2015).
  5. Momiyama, N., Yamamoto, H. Enantioselective O- and N-Nitroso Aldol Synthesis of Tin Enolates. Isolation of Three BINAP-Silver Complexes and Their Role in Regio- and Enantioselectivity. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 126 (17), 5360-5361 (2004).
  6. Hayashi, Y., Yamaguchi, J., Sumiya, T., Shoji, M. Direct proline-catalyzed asymmetric alpha-aminoxylation of ketones. Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 43 (9), 1112-1115 (2004).
  7. Adam, W., Krebs, O. The Nitroso Ene Reaction: A Regioselective and Stereoselective Allylic Nitrogen Functionalization of Mechanistic Delight and Synthetic Potential. Chemical Reviews. 103 (10), 4131-4146 (2003).
  8. Merino, E. Synthesis of azobenzenes: the coloured pieces of molecular materials. Chemical Society Reviews. 40 (7), 3835-3853 (2011).
  9. Yu, B. C., Shirai, Y., Tour, J. M. Syntheses of new functionalized azobenzenes for potential molecular electronic devices. Tetrahedron. 62 (44), 10303-10310 (2006).
  10. Priewisch, B., Rück-Braun, K. Efficient Preparation of Nitrosoarenes for the Synthesis of Azobenzenes. The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 70 (6), 2350-2352 (2005).
  11. Wu, M. Y., He, W. W., Liu, X. Y., Tan, B. Asymmetric Construction of Spirooxindoles by Organocatalytic Multicomponent Reactions Using Diazooxindoles. Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 54 (32), 9409-9413 (2015).
  12. Sharma, P., Liu, R. S. [3+2]-Annulations of N-Hydroxy Allenylamines with Nitrosoarenes: One-Pot Synthesis of Substituted Indole Products. Organic Letters. 18 (3), 412-415 (2016).
  13. Wróbel, Z., Stachowska, K., Grudzień, K., Kwast, A. N-Aryl-2-nitrosoanilines as Intermediates in the Two-Step Synthesis of Substituted 1,2-Diarylbenzimidazoles from Simple Nitroarenes. Synlett. 22 (10), 1439-1443 (2011).
  14. Oakdale, J. S., Sit, R. K., Fokin, V. V. Ruthenium-Catalyzed Cycloadditions of 1-Haloalkynes with Nitrile Oxides and Organic Azides: Synthesis of 4-Haloisoxazoles and 5-Halotriazoles. Chemistry a European Journal. 20 (35), 11101-11110 (2014).
  15. Abbiati, G., Arcadi, A., Marinelli, F., Rossi, E. Sequential Addition and Cyclization Processes of α,β-Ynones and α,β-Ynoates Containing Proximate Nucleophiles. Synthesis. 46 (6), 687-721 (2014).
  16. Zhang, Z., et al. Chiral Co(II) complex catalyzed asymmetric Michael reactions of β-ketoamides to nitroolefins and alkynones. Tetrahedron Letters. 55 (28), 3797-3801 (2014).
  17. Bella, M., Jørgensen, K. A. Organocatalytic Enantioselective Conjugate Addition to Alkynones. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 126 (18), 5672-5673 (2004).
  18. Karpov, A. S., Merkul, E., Rominger, F., Müller, T. J. J. Concise Syntheses of Meridianins by Carbonylative Alkynylation and a Four-Component Pyrimidine Synthesis. Angewandte Chemie Internationa Edition. 44 (42), 6951-6956 (2005).
  19. Krebs, O. Dissertation, Wurzburg. , Wurzburg. available at http://www.bibliothek.uni-wuerzburg.de from the OPUS server (2002).
  20. Mel'nikov, E. B., Suboch, G. A., Belyaev, E. Y. Oxidation of Primary Aromatic Amines, Catalyzed by Tungsten Compounds. Russian Journal of Organic Chemistry. 31 (12), 1640-1642 (1995).
  21. Porta, F., Prati, L. Catalytic synthesis of C-nitroso compounds by cis-Mo(O)2(acac)2. Journal of Molecular Catalysis. A: Chemical. 157 (1-2), 123-129 (2000).
  22. Biradar, A. V., Kotbagi, T. V., Dongare, M. K., Umbarkar, S. B. Selective N-oxidation of aromatic amines to nitroso derivatives using a molybdenum acetylide oxo-peroxo complex as catalyst. Tetrahedron Letters. 49 (22), 3616-3619 (2008).
  23. Defoin, A. Simple Preparation of Nitroso Benzenes and Nitro Benzenes by Oxidation of Anilines with H2O2 Catalysed with Molybdenum Salts. Synthesis. 36 (5), 706-710 (2004).
  24. Zhao, D., Johansson, M., Bäckvall, J. E. In Situ Generation of Nitroso Compounds from Catalytic Hydrogen Peroxide Oxidation of Primary Aromatic Amines and Their One-Pot Use in Hetero-Diels-Alder Reactions. European Journal of Organic Chemistry. (26), 4431-4436 (2007).
  25. Pigge, F. C., et al. Structural characterization of crystalline inclusion complexes formed from 1,3,5-triaroylbenzene derivatives-a new family of inclusion hosts. Journal of Chemical Society, Perkin Transactions 2. (12), 2458-2464 (2000).
  26. Scansetti, M., Hu, X., McDermott, B., Lam, H. W. Synthesis of Pyroglutamic Acid Derivatives via Double Michael Reactions of Alkynones. Organic Letters. 9 (11), 2159-2162 (2007).
  27. Ge, G. C., Mo, D. L., Ding, C. H., Dai, L. X., Hou, X. L. Palladacycle-Catalyzed Reaction of Bicyclic Alkenes with Terminal Ynones: Regiospecific Synthesis of Polysubstituted Furans. Organic Letters. 14 (22), 5756-5759 (2012).
  28. Maeda, Y., et al. Oxovanadium Complex-Catalyzed Aerobic Oxidation of Propargylic Alcohols. The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 67 (19), 6718-6724 (2002).
  29. Gribble, G. W. Indole Ring Synthesis: from Natural Products to Drug Discovery. , Wiley & Sons Ltd. Chichester. (2016).
  30. Palmisano, G., et al. Synthesis of Indole Derivatives with Biological Activity by Reactions Between Unsaturated Hydrocarbons and N-Aromatic Precursors. Current Organic Chemistry. 14 (20), 2409-2441 (2010).
  31. Youn, S. W., Ko, T. Y. Metal-Catalyzed Synthesis of Substituted Indoles. Asian Journal of Organic Chemistry. 7 (8), 1467-1487 (2018).
  32. Bugaenko, D. I., Karchava, A. V., Yurovskaya, M. A. Synthesis of indoles: recent advances. Russian Chemical Reviews. 88 (2), 99-159 (2019).
  33. Kuo, C. C., et al. BPR0L075, a Novel Synthetic Indole Compound with Antimitotic Activity in Human Cancer Cells, Exerts Effective Antitumoral Activity in Vivo. Cancer Research. 64 (13), 4621-4628 (2004).
  34. Kaushik, N. K., et al. Biomedical Importance of Indoles. Molecules. 18 (6), 6620-6662 (2013).
  35. El Sayed, M. T., Hamdy, N. A., Osman, D. A., Ahmed, K. M. Indoles as anti-cancer agents. Advances in Modern Oncology Research. 1 (1), 20-35 (2015).
  36. Somei, M., et al. The Chemistry of 1-Hydroxyindole Derivatives: Nucleophilic Substitution Reactions on Indole Nucleus. Heterocycles. 34 (10), 1877-1884 (1992).
  37. Somei, M., Fukui, Y. Nucleophilic Substitution Reaction of 1-Hydroxytryptophan and 1-Hydroxytryptamine Derivatives (Regioselective Syntheses of 5-Substituted Derivatives of Tryptophane and Tryptamine. Heterocycles. 36 (8), 1859-1866 (1993).
  38. Somei, M., Fukui, Y., Hasegawa, M. Preparations of Tryptamine-4,5-dinones, and Their Diels-Alder and Nucleophilic Addition Reactions. Heterocycles. 41 (10), 2157-2160 (1995).
  39. Somei, M. The Chemistry of 1-Hydroxyindoles and Their Derivatives. Journal of Synthetic Organic Chemistry (Japan). 49 (3), 205-217 (1991).
  40. Rani, R., Granchi, C. Bioactive heterocycles containing endocyclic N-hydroxy groups. European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 97, 505-524 (2015).
  41. Escolano, C. Stephacidin B, the avrainvillamide dimer: a formidable synthetic challenge. Angewandte Chemie, International Edition. 44 (47), 7670-7673 (2005).
  42. Blunt, J. W., Munro, M. H. G. Coproverdine, a Novel, Cytotoxic Marine Alkaloid from a New Zealand Ascidian Sylvia Urban. Journal of Natural Products. 65 (9), 1371-1373 (2002).
  43. Li, W., Huang, S., Liu, X., Leet, J. E., Cantone, J., Lam, K. S. N-Demethylation of nocathiacin I via photo-oxidation. Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry Letters. 18 (14), 4051-4053 (2008).
  44. Tsukamoto, S., et al. Notoamides F-K, Prenylated Indole Alkaloids Isolated from a Marine-Derived Aspergillus sp. Journal of Natural Products. 71 (12), 2064-2067 (2008).
  45. Nicolaou, K. C., Lee, S. H., Estrada, A. A., Zak, M. Construction of Substituted N-Hydroxyindoles: Synthesis of a Nocathiacin I Model System. Angewandte Chemie, International Edition. 44 (24), 3736-3740 (2005).
  46. Nicolaou, K. C., Estrada, A. A., Lee, S. H., Freestone, G. C. Synthesis of Highly Substituted N-Hydroxyindoles through 1,5-Addition of Carbon Nucleophiles to In Situ Generated Unsaturated Nitrones. Angewandte Chemie, International Edition. 45 (32), 5364-5368 (2006).
  47. Nicolaou, K. C., Estrada, A. A., Freestone, G. C., Lee, S. H., Alvarez-Mico, X. New synthetic technology for the construction of N-hydroxyindoles and synthesis of nocathiacin I model systems. Tetrahedron. 63 (27), 6088-6114 (2007).
  48. Chan, S. T. S., Norrie Pearce, A., Page, M. J., Kaiser, M., Copp, B. R. Antimalarial β-Carbolines from the New Zealand Ascidian Pseudodistoma opacum. Journal of Natural Products. 74 (9), 1972-1979 (2011).
  49. Bartsch, A., Bross, M., Spiteller, P., Spiteller, M., Steglich, W. Birnbaumin A and B: Two Unusual 1-Hydroxyindole Pigments from the "Flower Pot Parasol" Leucocoprinus birnbaumii. Angewandte Chemie., International Edition. 44 (19), 2957-2959 (2005).
  50. Di Bussolo, V., et al. Synthesis and biological evaluation of non-glucose glycoconjugated N-hydroyxindole class LDH inhibitors as anticancer agents. RSC Advances. 5 (26), 19944-19954 (2015).
  51. Granchi, C., et al. Discovery of N-Hydroxyindole-Based Inhibitors of Human Lactate Dehydrogenase Isoform A (LDH-A) as Starvation Agents against Cancer Cells. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 54 (6), 1599-1612 (2011).
  52. Granchi, C., et al. N-Hydroxyindole-based inhibitors of lactate dehydrogenase against cancer cell proliferation. European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 46 (11), 5398-5407 (2011).
  53. Granchi, C., et al. Synthesis of sulfonamide-containing N-hydroxyindole-2-carboxylates as inhibitors of human lactate dehydrogenase-isoform 5. Bioorganic Medicinal Chemistry Letters. 21 (24), 7331-7336 (2011).
  54. Granchi, C., et al. Assessing the differential action on cancer cells of LDH-A inhibitors based on the N-hydroxyindole-2-carboxylate (NHI) and malonic (Mal) scaffolds. Organic Biomolecular Chemistry. 11 (38), 6588-6596 (2013).
  55. Minutolo, F., et al. Compounds Inhibitors of Enzyme Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH) and Pharmaceutical Compositions Containing These Compounds. Chemical Abstracts. , WO 2011054525 154 (2011).
  56. Granchi, C., et al. Triazole-substituted N-hydroxyindol-2-carboxylates as inhibitors of isoform 5 of human lactate dehydrogenase (hLDH5). Medicinal Chemistry Communications. 2 (7), 638-643 (2011).
  57. Kuethe, J. T. A General Approach to Indoles: Practical Applications for the Synthesis of Highly Functionalized Pharmacophores. Chimia. 60 (9), 543-553 (2006).
  58. Somei, M. 1-Hydroxyindoles. Heterocycles. 50 (2), 1157-1211 (1999).
  59. Belley, M., Beaudoin, D., Duspara, P., Sauer, E., St-Pierre, G., Trimble, L. A. Synthesis and Reactivity of N-Hydroxy-2-Amino-3-Arylindoles. Synlett. 18 (19), 2991-2994 (2007).
  60. Belley, M., Sauer, E., Beaudoin, D., Duspara, P., Trimble, L. A., Dubé, P. Synthesis and reactivity of N-hydroxy-2-aminoindoles. Tetrahedron Letters. 47 (2), 159-162 (2006).
  61. Hasegawa, M., Tabata, M., Satoh, K., Yamada, F., Somei, M. A Novel Dimerization of 1-Hydroxyindoles. Heterocycles. 43 (11), 2333-2336 (1996).
  62. Tollari, S., Penoni, A., Cenini, S. The unprecedented detection of the intermediate formation of N-hydroxy derivatives during the carbonylation of 2'-nitrochalcones and 2-nitrostyrenes catalysed by palladium. Journal of Molecular Catalysis A: Chemical. 152 (1-2), 47-54 (2000).
  63. Penoni, A., Nicholas, K. M. A novel and direct synthesis of indoles via catalytic reductive annulation of nitroaromatics with alkynes. Chemical Communication. 38 (5), 484-485 (2002).
  64. Penoni, A., Volkman, J., Nicholas, K. M. Regioselective Synthesis of Indoles via Reductive Annulation of Nitrosoaromatics with Alkynes. Organic Letters. 4 (5), 699-701 (2002).
  65. Penoni, A., Palmisano, G., Broggini, G., Kadowaki, A., Nicholas, K. M. Efficient Synthesis of N-Methoxyindoles via Alkylative Cycloaddition of Nitrosoarenes with Alkynes. The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 71 (2), 823-825 (2006).
  66. Ieronimo, G., et al. A simple, efficient, regioselective and one-pot preparation of N-hydroxy- and N-O-protected hydroxyindoles via cycloaddition of nitrosoarenes with alkynes. Synthetic scope, applications and novel by-products. Tetrahedron. 69 (51), 10906-10920 (2013).
  67. Penoni, A., Palmisano, G., Zhao, Y. L., Houk, K. N., Volkman, J., Nicholas, K. M. On the Mechanism of Nitrosoarene-Alkyne Cycloaddition. Journal of the American Chemical Society. 131 (2), 653-661 (2009).
  68. Tibiletti, F., et al. One-pot synthesis of meridianins and meridianin analogues via indolization of nitrosoarenes. Tetrahedron. 66 (6), 1280-1288 (2010).
  69. Walker, S. R., Carter, E. J., Huff, B. C., Morris, J. C. Variolins and Related Alkaloids. Chemical Reviews. 109 (7), 3080-3098 (2009).
  70. Walker, S. R., Czyz, M. L., Morris, J. C. Concise Syntheses of Meridianins and Meriolins Using a Catalytic Domino Amino-Palladation Reaction. Organic Letters. 16 (3), 708-711 (2014).
  71. Tibiletti, F., Penoni, A., Palmisano, G., Maspero, A., Nicholas, K. M., Vaghi, L. (1H-Benzo[d][1,2,3]triazol=1-yl)(5-bromo-1-hydroxy-1H-indol-3-yl)methanone. Molbank. 2014 (3), 829 (2014).
  72. Ieronimo, G., et al. A novel synthesis of N-hydroxy-3-aroylindoles and 3-aroylindoles. Organic Biomolecular Chemistry. 16 (38), 6853-6859 (2018).
  73. Chen, Y. F., Chen, J., Lin, L. J., Chuang, G. J. Synthesis of Azoxybenzenes by Reductive Dimerization of Nitrosobenzene. The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 82 (21), 11626-11630 (2017).
  74. Beaudoin, D., Wuest, J. D. Dimerization of Aromatic C-Nitroso Compounds. Chemical Reviews. 116 (1), 258-286 (2016).
  75. EL-Atawy, M. A., Formenti, D., Ferretti, F., Ragaini, F. Synthesis of 3,6-Dihydro-2H-[1, 2]-Oxazines from Nitroarenes and Conjugated Dienes, Catalyzed by Palladium/Phenanthroline Complexes and Employing Phenyl Formate as a CO Surrogate. ChemCatChem. 10 (20), 4707-4717 (2018).
  76. Formenti, D., Ferretti, F., Ragaini, F. Synthesis of N-Heterocycles by Reductive Cyclization of Nitro Compounds using Formate Esters as Carbon Monoxide Surrogates. ChemCatChem. 10 (1), 148-152 (2018).
  77. EL-Atawy, M. A., Ferretti, F., Ragaini, F. A Synthetic Methodology for Pyrroles from Nitrodienes. European Journal of Organic Chemistry. (34), 4818-4825 (2018).
  78. Ragaini, F., Cenini, S., Brignoli, D., Gasperini, M., Gallo, E. Synthesis of oxazines and N-arylpyrroles by reaction of unfunctionalized dienes with nitroarenes and carbon monoxide, catalyzed by palladium-phenanthroline complexes. The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 68 (2), 460-466 (2003).

Tags

Direct Regioselective Atom-economical Synthesis 3-Aroyl-N-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles Cycloaddition 4-Nitronitrosobenzene Alkynones N-hydroxy 3-aroyl Indole Compounds Antibiotics Antinociceptics Antidiabetes Drugs Anticancer Drugs Stable Library N-hydroxyindole Derivatives Nitrosamines Alkynes Substituted Indole Products Synthetic Organic Chemistry 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-one Synthesis Acetone 1-phenyl-2-propyne-1-ol Open Air Round Bottom Flask Magnetic Stirring Bar Jones Reagent 2-propanol Hexavalent Chromium Reactant Diatomaceous Earth
A Direct, Regioselective and Atom-Economical Synthesis of 3-Aroyl-<em>N</em>-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles by Cycloaddition of 4-Nitronitrosobenzene with Alkynones
Play Video
PDF DOI DOWNLOAD MATERIALS LIST

Cite this Article

Scapinello, L., Maspero, A.,More

Scapinello, L., Maspero, A., Tollari, S., Palmisano, G., Nicholas, K. M., Penoni, A. A Direct, Regioselective and Atom-Economical Synthesis of 3-Aroyl-N-hydroxy-5-nitroindoles by Cycloaddition of 4-Nitronitrosobenzene with Alkynones. J. Vis. Exp. (155), e60201, doi:10.3791/60201 (2020).

Less
Copy Citation Download Citation Reprints and Permissions
View Video

Get cutting-edge science videos from JoVE sent straight to your inbox every month.

Waiting X
Simple Hit Counter