Heterocyclic Chemistry
Fifth Edition
John A. Joule
School of Chemistry, The University of Manchester, UK
Keith Mills
Chemistry Consultant, Ware, UK
A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Fifth Edition
John A. Joule
School of Chemistry, The University of Manchester, UK
Keith Mills
Chemistry Consultant, Ware, UK
A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication
This edition first published 2010
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Joule, J. A. (John Arthur)
Heterocyclic chemistry / John A. Joule, Keith Mills. – 5th ed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-4051-9365-8 (pbk.) – ISBN 978-1-4051-3300-5 (pbk.)
(Keith) II. Title.
QD400.J59 2009
547′.59–dc22
1. Heterocyclic chemistry.
I. Mills, K.
2009028759
ISBN Cloth: 978-1-405-19365-8
ISBN Paper: 978-1-405-13300-5
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Set in 10 on 12 pt Times by Toppan Best-set Premedia Limited
Printed and bound in Singapore by Fabulous Printers Pte Ltd
Contents
Preface to the Fifth Edition
P.1 Hazards
P.2 How to Use This Textbook
Acknowledgements
References
Web Site
xix
xxi
xxi
xxii
xxii
xxii
Biography
xxiii
Definitions of Abbreviations
xxv
1
Heterocyclic Nomenclature
2
Structures and Spectroscopic Properties of Aromatic Heterocycles
2.1
Carbocyclic Aromatic Systems
2.1.1
Structures of Benzene and Naphthalene
2.1.2
Aromatic Resonance Energy
2.2
Structure of Six-Membered Heteroaromatic Systems
2.2.1
Structure of Pyridine
2.2.2
Structure of Diazines
2.2.3
Structures of Pyridinium and Related Cations
2.2.4
Structures of Pyridones and Pyrones
2.3
Structure of Five-Membered Heteroaromatic Systems
2.3.1
Structure of Pyrrole
2.3.2
Structures of Thiophene and Furan
2.3.3
Structures of Azoles
2.3.4
Structures of Pyrryl and Related Anions
2.4
Structures of Bicyclic Heteroaromatic Compounds
2.5
Tautomerism in Heterocyclic Systems
2.6
Mesoionic Systems
2.7
Some Spectroscopic Properties of Some Heteroaromatic Systems
2.7.1
Ultraviolet/Visible (Electronic) Spectroscopy
2.7.2
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy
References
5
5
5
6
7
7
7
8
8
9
9
10
10
11
11
12
12
13
13
14
17
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
3.1
Electrophilic Addition at Nitrogen
3.2
Electrophilic Substitution at Carbon
3.2.1
Aromatic Electrophilic Substitution: Mechanism
3.2.2
Six-Membered Heterocycles
3.2.3
Five-Membered Heterocycles
19
19
20
20
21
22
3
1
vi
Contents
3.3
Nucleophilic Substitution at Carbon
3.3.1
Aromatic Nucleophilic Substitution: Mechanism
3.3.2
Six-Membered Heterocycles
3.3.3
Vicarious Nucleophilic Substitution (VNS Substitution)
3.4
Radical Substitution at Carbon
3.4.1
Reactions of Heterocycles with Nucleophilic Radicals
3.4.2
Reactions with Electrophilic Radicals
3.5
Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen
3.6
Oxidation and Reduction of Heterocyclic Rings
3.7
ortho-Quinodimethanes in Heterocyclic Compound Synthesis
References
24
24
24
26
27
27
30
30
31
31
33
4
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry
4.1
Preparation and Reactions of Organometallic Compounds
4.1.1
Lithium
4.1.2
Magnesium
4.1.3
Zinc
4.1.4
Copper
4.1.5
Boron
4.1.6
Silicon and Tin
4.1.7
Mercury
4.1.8
Palladium
4.1.9
Side-Chain Metallation (‘Lateral Metallation’)
4.2
Transition Metal-Catalysed Reactions
4.2.1
Basic Palladium Processes
4.2.2
Catalysts
4.2.3
The Electrophilic Partner; The Halides/Leaving Groups
4.2.4
Cross-Coupling Reactions
4.2.5
The Nucleophilic (Organometallic) Partner
4.2.6
Other Nucleophiles
4.2.7
The Ring Systems in Cross-Coupling Reactions
4.2.8
Organometallic Selectivity
4.2.9
Direct C–H Arylation
4.2.10
N-Arylation
4.2.11
Heck Reactions
4.2.12
Carbonylation Reactions
References
37
37
37
45
47
48
48
52
54
54
54
56
56
59
61
64
65
70
71
77
79
83
87
89
90
5
Methods in Heterocyclic Chemistry
5.1
Solid-Phase Reactions and Related Methods
5.1.1
Solid-Phase Reactions
5.1.2
Solid-Supported Reagents and Scavengers
5.1.3
Solid-Phase Extraction (SPE)
5.1.4
Soluble Polymer-Supported Reactions
5.1.5
Phase Tags
5.2
Microwave Heating
5.3
Flow Reactors
5.4
Hazards: Explosions
References
97
97
97
99
100
100
101
103
104
105
105
Contents
6
vii
Ring Synthesis of Aromatic Heterocycles
6.1
Reaction Types Most Frequently Used in Heterocyclic Ring Synthesis
6.2
Typical Reactant Combinations
6.2.1
Typical Ring Synthesis of a Pyrrole Involving Only C–Heteroatom Bond
Formation
6.2.2
Typical Ring Synthesis of a Pyridine Involving Only C–Heteroatom Bond
Formation
6.2.3
Typical Ring Syntheses Involving C–Heteroatom C–C Bond Formations
6.3
Summary
6.4
Electrocyclic Processes in Heterocyclic Ring Synthesis
6.5
Nitrenes in Heterocyclic Ring Synthesis
6.6
Palladium Catalysis in the Synthesis of Benzo-Fused Heterocycles
References
107
107
108
109
109
111
112
113
113
114
7
Typical Reactivity of Pyridines, Quinolines and Isoquinolines
115
8
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
8.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
8.1.1
Addition to Nitrogen
8.1.2
Substitution at Carbon
8.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
8.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
8.3.1
Nucleophilic Substitution with ‘Hydride’ Transfer
8.3.2
Nucleophilic Substitution with Displacement of Good Leaving Groups
8.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated-Pyridines
8.4.1
Direct Ring C–H Metallation
8.4.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
8.5
Reactions with Radicals; Reactions of Pyridyl Radicals
8.5.1
Halogenation
8.5.2
Carbon Radicals
8.5.3
Dimerisation
8.5.4
Pyridinyl Radicals
8.6
Reactions with Reducing Agents
8.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
8.8
Photochemical Reactions
8.9
Oxy- and Amino-Pyridines
8.9.1
Structure
8.9.2
Reactions of Pyridones
8.9.3
Reactions of Amino-Pyridines
8.10
Alkyl-Pyridines
8.11
Pyridine Aldehydes, Ketones, Carboxylic Acids and Esters
8.12
Quaternary Pyridinium Salts
8.12.1
Reduction and Oxidation
8.12.2
Organometallic and Other Nucleophilic Additions
8.12.3
Nucleophilic Addition Followed by Ring Opening
8.12.4
Cyclisations Involving an α-Position or an α-Substituent
8.12.5
N-Dealkylation
8.13
Pyridine N-oxides
8.13.1
Electrophilic Addition and Substitution
8.13.2
Nucleophilic Addition and Substitution
8.13.3
Addition of Nucleophiles then Loss of Oxide
125
125
125
128
130
131
131
133
134
134
137
138
138
138
138
139
139
140
140
141
141
142
144
146
148
148
148
150
152
153
153
153
154
155
155
108
viii
Contents
8.14
Synthesis of Pyridines
8.14.1
Ring Synthesis
8.14.2
Examples of Notable Syntheses of Pyridine Compounds
Exercises
References
156
156
165
166
168
9
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
9.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
9.1.1
Addition to Nitrogen
9.1.2
Substitution at Carbon
9.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
9.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
9.3.1
Nucleophilic Substitution with ‘Hydride’ Transfer
9.3.2
Nucleophilic Substitution with Displacement of Good Leaving Groups
9.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Quinolines and Isoquinolines
9.4.1
Direct Ring C–H Metallation
9.4.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
9.5
Reactions with Radicals
9.6
Reactions with Reducing Agents
9.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
9.8
Photochemical Reactions
9.9
Oxy-Quinolines and Oxy-Isoquinolines
9.10
Amino-Quinolines and Amino-Isoquinolines
9.11
Alkyl-Quinolines and Alkyl-Isoquinolines
9.12
Quinoline and Isoquinoline Carboxylic Acids and Esters
9.13
Quaternary Quinolinium and Isoquinolinium Salts
9.14
Quinoline and Isoquinoline N-Oxides
9.15
Synthesis of Quinolines and Isoquinolines
9.15.1
Ring Syntheses
9.15.2
Examples of Notable Syntheses of Quinoline and Isoquinoline Compounds
Exercises
References
177
177
177
177
179
179
179
180
181
181
182
182
183
183
183
183
185
185
185
186
188
188
188
198
199
200
10
Typical Reactivity of Pyrylium and Benzopyrylium Ions, Pyrones and Benzopyrones
205
11
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
11.1
Reactions of Pyrylium Cations
11.1.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
11.1.2
Addition Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
11.1.3
Substitution Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
11.1.4
Reactions with Radicals
11.1.5
Reactions with Reducing Agents
11.1.6
Photochemical Reactions
11.1.7
Reactions with Dipolarophiles; Cycloadditions
11.1.8
Alkyl-Pyryliums
11.2
2-Pyrones and 4-Pyrones (2H-Pyran-2-ones and 4H-Pyran-4-ones; α- and
γ-Pyrones)
11.2.1
Structure of Pyrones
11.2.2
Reactions of Pyrones
209
209
209
210
212
212
212
212
213
213
214
214
214
Contents
ix
11.3
Synthesis of Pyryliums
11.3.1
From 1,5-Dicarbonyl Compounds
11.3.2
Alkene Acylation
11.3.3
From 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds and Ketones
11.4
Synthesis of 2-Pyrones
11.4.1
From 1,3-Keto(aldehydo)-Acids and Carbonyl Compounds
11.4.2
Other Methods
11.5
Synthesis of 4-Pyrones
Exercises
References
218
218
219
220
220
220
221
222
224
225
12
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
12.1
Reactions of Benzopyryliums
12.1.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
12.1.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
12.1.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
12.1.4
Reactions with Reducing Agents
12.1.5
Alkyl-Benzopyryliums
12.2
Benzopyrones (Chromones, Coumarins and Isocoumarins)
12.2.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
12.2.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
12.2.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
12.3
Synthesis of Benzopyryliums, Chromones, Coumarins and Isocoumarins
12.3.1
Ring Synthesis of 1-Benzopyryliums
12.3.2
Ring Synthesis of Coumarins
12.3.3
Ring Synthesis of Chromones
12.3.4
Ring Synthesis of 2-Benzopyryliums
12.3.5
Ring Synthesis of Isocoumarins
12.3.6
Notable Examples of Benzopyrylium and Benzopyrone Syntheses
Exercises
References
229
229
229
230
230
231
231
232
232
232
233
237
237
238
240
242
243
243
244
245
13
Typical Reactivity of the Diazine: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine and Pyrazine
249
14
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
14.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
14.1.1
Addition at Nitrogen
14.1.2
Substitution at Carbon
14.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
14.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
14.3.1
Nucleophilic Substitution with ‘Hydride’ Transfer
14.3.2
Nucleophilic Substitution with Displacement of Good Leaving Groups
14.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Diazines
14.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
14.4.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
14.5
Reactions with Reducing Agents
14.6
Reactions with Radicals
14.7
Electrocyclic Reactions
14.8
Diazine N-Oxides
253
253
253
255
255
255
256
256
259
259
260
261
261
261
262
x
Contents
14.9
Oxy-Diazines
14.9.1 Structure of Oxy-Diazines
14.9.2 Reactions of Oxy-Diazines
14.10 Amino-Diazines
14.11 Alkyl-Diazines
14.12 Quaternary Diazinium Salts
14.13 Synthesis of Diazines
14.13.1 Pyridazines
14.13.2 Pyrimidines
14.13.3 Pyrazines
14.13.4 Notable Syntheses of Diazines
14.14 Pteridines
Exercises
References
263
263
264
271
272
273
273
274
275
279
281
282
283
284
15
Typical Reactivity of Pyrroles, Furans and Thiophenes
289
16
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
16.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
16.1.1
Substitution at Carbon
16.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
16.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
16.4
Reactions with Bases
16.4.1
Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Pyrryl Anions
16.4.2
Lithium, Sodium, Potassium and Magnesium Derivatives
16.5
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Pyrroles
16.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
16.5.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
16.6
Reactions with Radicals
16.7
Reactions with Reducing Agents
16.8
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
16.9
Reactions with Carbenes and Carbenoids
16.10 Photochemical Reactions
16.11 Pyrryl-C-X Compounds
16.12 Pyrrole Aldehydes and Ketones
16.13 Pyrrole Carboxylic Acids
16.14 Pyrrole Carboxylic Acid Esters
16.15 Oxy- and Amino-Pyrroles
16.15.1 2-Oxy-Pyrroles
16.15.2 3-Oxy-Pyrroles
16.15.3 Amino-Pyrroles
16.16 Synthesis of Pyrroles
16.16.1 Ring Synthesis
16.16.2 Some Notable Syntheses of Pyrroles
Exercises
References
295
295
296
303
303
304
304
304
305
305
305
306
306
307
308
308
309
309
309
310
310
310
311
311
311
311
317
319
320
17
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
17.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
17.1.1
Substitution at Carbon
17.1.2
Addition at Sulfur
325
325
325
329
Contents
xi
17.2
17.3
17.4
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Thiophenes
17.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
17.4.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
17.5
Reactions with Radicals
17.6
Reactions with Reducing Agents
17.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
17.8
Photochemical Reactions
17.9
Thiophene-C–X Compounds: Thenyl Derivatives
17.10 Thiophene Aldehydes and Ketones, and Carboxylic Acids and Esters
17.11 Oxy- and Amino-Thiophenes
17.11.1 Oxy-Thiophenes
17.11.2 Amino-Thiophenes
17.12 Synthesis of Thiophenes
17.12.1 Ring Synthesis
17.12.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses of Thiophene Compounds
Exercises
References
330
330
331
331
331
333
333
333
334
334
335
335
335
336
336
336
340
342
342
18
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
18.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
18.1.1
Substitution at Carbon
18.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
18.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
18.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Furans
18.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
18.4.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
18.5
Reactions with Radicals
18.6
Reactions with Reducing Agents
18.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
18.8
Reactions with Carbenes and Carbenoids
18.9
Photochemical Reactions
18.10 Furyl-C–X Compounds; Side-Chain Properties
18.11 Furan Carboxylic Acids and Esters and Aldehydes
18.12 Oxy- and Amino-Furans
18.12.1 Oxy-Furans
18.12.2 Amino-Furans
18.13 Synthesis of Furans
18.13.1 Ring Syntheses
18.13.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses of Furans
Exercises
References
347
347
347
351
352
352
352
353
353
353
353
356
356
356
356
357
357
358
358
359
363
364
365
19
Typical Reactivity of Indoles, Benzo[b]thiophenes, Benzo[b]furans, Isoindoles,
Benzo[c]thiophenes and Isobenzofurans
369
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
20.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
20.1.1
Substitution at Carbon
373
373
373
20
xii
21
Contents
20.2
20.3
20.4
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Reactions with Bases
20.4.1
Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Indolyl Anions
20.5
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Indoles
20.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
20.5.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
20.6
Reactions with Radicals
20.7
Reactions with Reducing Agents
20.8
Reactions with Carbenes
20.9
Electrocyclic and Photochemical Reactions
20.10 Alkyl-Indoles
20.11 Reactions of Indolyl-C–X Compounds
20.12 Indole Carboxylic Acids
20.13 Oxy-Indoles
20.13.1 Oxindole
20.13.2 Indoxyl
20.13.3 Isatin
20.13.4 1-Hydroxyindole
20.14 Amino-Indoles
20.15 Aza-Indoles
20.15.1 Electrophilic Substitution
20.15.2 Nucleophilic Substitution
20.16 Synthesis of Indoles
20.16.1 Ring Synthesis of Indoles
20.16.2 Ring Synthesis of Oxindoles
20.16.3 Ring Synthesis of Indoxyls
20.16.4 Ring Synthesis of Isatins
20.16.5 Synthesis of 1-Hydroxy-Indoles
20.16.6 Examples of Notable Indole Syntheses
20.16.7 Synthesis of Aza-Indoles
Exercises
References
385
386
386
386
388
388
390
391
392
392
393
394
395
396
397
397
398
399
399
400
400
401
401
402
402
416
417
418
418
418
421
422
423
Benzo[b]thiophenes and Benzo[b]furans: Reactions and Synthesis
21.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
21.1.1
Substitution at Carbon
21.1.2
Addition to Sulfur in Benzothiophenes
21.2
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
21.3
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Benzothiophenes and Benzofurans
21.4
Reactions with Radicals
21.5
Reactions with Oxidising and Reducing Agents
21.6
Electrocyclic Reactions
21.7
Oxy- and Amino-Benzothiophenes and -Benzofurans
21.8
Synthesis of Benzothiophenes and Benzofurans
21.8.1
Ring Synthesis
Exercises
References
433
433
433
434
435
435
436
436
436
437
437
437
443
443
Contents
xiii
22
Isoindoles, Benzo[c]thiophenes and Isobenzofurans: Reactions and Synthesis
22.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
22.2
Electrocyclic Reactions
22.3
Phthalocyanines
22.4
Synthesis of Isoindoles, Benzo[c]thiophenes and Isobenzofurans
22.4.1
Isoindoles
22.4.2
Benzo[c]thiophenes
22.4.3
Isobenzofurans
Exercises
References
447
447
448
449
449
449
450
451
452
452
23
Typical Reactivity of 1,3- and 1,2-Azoles and Benzo-1,3- and -1,2-Azoles
455
24
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
24.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
24.1.1
Addition at Nitrogen
24.1.2
Substitution at Carbon
24.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
24.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
24.3.1
With Replacement of Hydrogen
24.3.2
With Replacement of Halogen
24.4
Reactions with Bases
24.4.1
Deprotonation of Imidazole N-Hydrogen and Reactions of
Imidazolyl Anions
24.5
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated 1,3-Azoles
24.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
24.5.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
24.6
Reactions with Radicals
24.7
Reactions with Reducing Agents
24.8
Electrocyclic Reactions
24.9
Alkyl-1,3-Azoles
24.10 Quaternary 1,3-Azolium Salts
24.11 Oxy- and Amino-1,3-Azoles
24.12 1,3-Azole N-Oxides
24.13 Synthesis of 1,3-Azoles
24.13.1 Ring Synthesis
24.13.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses Involving 1,3-Azoles
Exercises
References
461
461
461
464
466
466
466
466
467
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
25.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
25.1.1
Addition at Nitrogen
25.1.2
Substitution at Carbon
25.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
25.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
25.4
Reactions with Bases
25.4.1
Deprotonation of Pyrazole N-Hydrogen and Reactions of
Pyrazolyl Anions
485
486
486
487
488
488
488
25
467
467
467
468
468
469
469
470
470
471
473
473
473
478
479
480
488
xiv
26
27
Contents
25.5
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated 1,2-Azoles
25.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
25.5.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
25.6
Reactions with Radicals
25.7
Reactions with Reducing Agents
25.8
Electrocyclic and Photochemical Reactions
25.9
Alkyl-1,2-Azoles
25.10 Quaternary 1,2-Azolium Salts
25.11 Oxy- and Amino-1,2-azoles
25.12 Synthesis of 1,2-Azoles
25.12.1 Ring Synthesis
Exercises
References
489
489
490
490
490
491
492
492
493
494
494
498
498
Benzanellated Azoles: Reactions and Synthesis
26.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
26.1.1
Addition at Nitrogen
26.1.2
Substitution at Carbon
26.2
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
26.3
Reactions with Bases
26.3.1
Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Benzimidazolyl
and Indazolyl Anions
26.4
Ring Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Derivatives
26.5
Reactions with Reducing Agents
26.6
Electrocyclic Reactions
26.7
Quaternary Salts
26.8
Oxy- and Amino-Benzo-1,3-Azoles
26.9
Synthesis
26.9.1
Ring Synthesis of Benzo-1,3-Azoles
26.9.2
Ring Synthesis of Benzo-1,2-Azoles
References
503
503
503
504
505
505
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
27.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
27.1.1
Addition at Nitrogen
27.1.2
Substitution at Carbon
27.2
Reactions with Radicals
27.3
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
27.4
Reactions with Reducing Agents
27.5
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
27.6
Reactions with Bases
27.6.1
Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Purinyl Anions
27.7
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Purines
27.7.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
27.7.2
Metal–Halogen Exchange
27.8
Oxy- and Amino-Purines
27.8.1
Oxy-Purines
27.8.2
Amino-Purines
27.8.3
Thio-Purines
515
516
516
519
521
521
521
521
524
524
524
524
525
525
526
527
529
505
505
506
506
506
507
507
507
509
512
Contents
xv
27.9
27.10
27.11
Alkyl-Purines
Purine Carboxylic Acids
Synthesis of Purines
27.11.1 Ring Synthesis
27.11.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses Involving Purines
Exercises
References
530
530
530
530
534
535
536
28
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds)
28.1
Indolizines
28.1.1
Reactions of Indolizines
28.1.2
Ring Synthesis of Indolizines
28.2
Aza-Indolizines
28.2.1
Imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines
28.2.2
Imidazo[1,5-a]pyridines
28.2.3
Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridines
28.2.4
Triazolo- and Tetrazolo-Pyridines
28.2.5
Compounds with an Additional Nitrogen in the Six-Membered Ring
28.3
Quinolizinium and Related Systems
28.4 Pyrrolizine and Related Systems
28.5
Cyclazines
Exercises
References
539
539
540
541
543
543
545
546
547
549
551
551
552
553
553
29
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
29.1
Five-Membered Rings
29.1.1
Azoles
29.1.2
Oxadiazoles and Thiadiazoles
29.1.3
Other Systems
29.2
Six-Membered Rings
29.2.1
Azines
29.3
Benzotriazoles
Exercises
References
557
557
557
569
574
574
574
579
581
581
30
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds: Reactions and Synthesis
30.1
Five- and Six-Membered Rings
30.1.1
Pyrrolidines and Piperidines
30.1.2
Piperideines and Pyrrolines
30.1.3
Pyrans and Reduced Furans
30.2
Three-Membered Rings
30.2.1 Three-Membered Rings with One Heteroatom
30.2.2 Three-Membered Rings with Two Heteroatoms
30.3
Four-Membered Rings
30.4
Metallation
30.5
Ring synthesis
30.5.1
Aziridines and Azirines
30.5.2
Azetidines and β-Lactams
30.5.3
Pyrrolidines
587
588
588
589
590
592
592
596
597
598
599
600
602
602
xvi
Contents
30.5.4
30.5.5
30.5.6
References
31
Piperidines
Saturated Oxygen Heterocycles
Saturated Sulfur Heterocycles
Special Topics
31.1
Synthesis of Ring-Fluorinated Heterocycles
31.1.1
Electrophilic Fluorination
31.1.2
The Balz–Schiemann Reaction
31.1.3
Halogen Exchange (Halex) Reactions
31.1.4
Ring Synthesis Incorporating Fluorinated Starting Materials
31.2
Isotopically Labelled Heterocycles
31.2.1 Hazards Due to Radionuclides
31.2.2
Synthesis
31.2.3
PET (Positron Emission Tomography)
31.3
Bioprocesses in Heterocyclic Chemistry
31.4
Green Chemistry
31.5
Ionic Liquids
31.6
Applications and Occurrences of Heterocycles
31.6.1
Toxicity
31.6.2
Plastics and Polymers
31.6.3
Fungicides and Herbicides
31.6.4
Dyes and Pigments
31.6.5
Fluorescence-Based Applications
31.6.6
Electronic Applications
References
32 Heterocycles in Biochemistry; Heterocyclic Natural Products
32.1
Heterocyclic Amino Acids and Related Substances
32.2
Enzyme Co-Factors; Heterocyclic Vitamins; Co-Enzymes
32.2.1
Niacin (Vitamin B3) and Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide
Phosphate (NADP+)
32.2.2
Pyridoxine (Vitamin B6) and Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP)
32.2.3
Riboflavin (Vitamin B2)
32.2.4
Thiamin (Vitamin B1) and Thiamine Pyrophosphate
32.3
Porphobilinogen and the ‘Pigments of Life’
32.4 Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) and Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA); Genetic
Information; Purines and Pyrimidines
32.5
Heterocyclic Natural Products
32.5.1
Alkaloids
32.5.2
Marine Heterocycles
32.5.3
Halogenated Heterocycles
32.5.4
Macrocycles Containing Oxazoles and Thiazoles
32.5.5 Other Nitrogen-Containing Natural Products
32.5.6
Anthocyanins and Flavones
References
33
Heterocycles in Medicine
33.1
Mechanisms of Drug Actions
33.1.1
Mimicking or Opposing the Effects of Physiological Hormones or
Neurotransmitters
603
604
605
606
609
609
609
611
612
612
616
616
616
617
619
620
620
621
622
622
623
623
624
625
626
629
629
630
631
631
632
632
633
635
637
637
639
639
640
640
641
642
645
646
646
Contents
33.1.2
33.1.3
Interaction with Enzymes
Physical Binding with, or Chemically Modifying,
Natural Macromolecules
33.2
The Neurotransmitters
33.3
Drug Discovery and Development
33.3.1 Stages in the Life of a Drug
33.3.2
Drug Discovery
33.3.3
Chemical Development
33.3.4 Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP)
33.4
Heterocyclic Drugs
33.4.1
Histamine
33.4.2
Acetylcholine (ACh)
33.4.3
5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)
33.4.4
Adrenaline and Noradrenaline
33.4.5
Other Significant Cardiovascular Drugs
33.4.6
Drugs Affecting Blood Clotting
33.4.7
Other Enzyme Inhibitors
33.4.8
Enzyme Induction
33.5
Drugs Acting on the CNS
33.6
Anti-Infective Agents
33.6.1
Anti-Parasitic Drugs
33.6.2
Anti-Bacterial Drugs
33.6.3
Anti-Viral Drugs
33.7
Anti-Cancer Drugs
33.8
Photochemotherapy
33.8.1
Psoralen plus UVA (PUVA) Treatment
33.8.2
Photodynamic Therapy (PDT)
References
Index
xvii
646
646
647
647
647
649
649
650
650
650
652
653
654
654
655
656
658
658
659
659
660
661
661
663
663
664
664
665
Preface to the Fifth Edition
Heterocyclic compounds have a wide range of applications but are of particular interest in medicinal chemistry, and this has catalysed the discovery and development of much heterocyclic chemistry and methods.
The preparation of a fifth edition has allowed us to review thoroughly the material included in the earlier
editions, to make amendments in the light of new knowledge, and to include recent work. Within the
restrictions that space dictates, we believe that all of the most significant heterocyclic chemistry of the 20th
century and important more recent developments, has been covered or referenced.
We have maintained the principal aim of the earlier editions – to teach the fundamentals of heterocyclic
reactivity and synthesis in a way that is understandable by undergraduate students. However, in recognition
of the level at which much heterocyclic chemistry is now normally taught, we include more advanced and
current material, which makes the book appropriate both for post-graduate level courses, and as a reference
text for those involved in heterocyclic chemistry in the work place.
New in this edition is the use of colour in the schemes. We have highlighted in red those parts of products
(or intermediates) where a change in structure or bonding has taken place. We hope that this both facilitates
comprehension and understanding of the chemical changes that are occurring and, especially for the undergraduate student, quickly focuses attention on just those parts of the molecules where structural change has
occurred. For example, in the first reaction below, only changes at the pyridine nitrogen are involved; in
the second example, the introduced bromine resulting from the substitution and its new bond to the heterocycle, are highlighted. We also show all positive and negative charges in red.
+ H+
+
N
N
H
NBS
S
S
Br
In recognition of the enormous importance of organometallic chemistry in heterocyclic synthesis,
we have introduced a new chapter dealing exclusively with this aspect. Chapter 4, ‘Organometallic
Heterocyclic Chemistry’, has: (i) a general overview of heterocyclic organometallic chemistry, but most
examples are to be found in the individual ring chapters, (ii) the use of transition metal-catalysed reactions
that, as a consequence of a regularity and consistency that is to a substantial degree independent of the
heterocyclic ring, is best treated as a whole, and therefore most examples are brought together here, with
relatively few in the ring chapters.
Other innovations in this fifth edition are discussions in Chapter 5 of the modern techniques of: (i) solidphase chemistry, (ii) microwave heating and (iii) flow reactors in the heterocyclic context. Reflecting the
large part that heterocyclic chemistry plays in the pharmaceutical industry, there are entirely new chapters
that deal with ‘Heterocycles in Medicine’ (Chapter 33) and ‘Heterocycles in Biochemistry; Heterocyclic
Natural Products’ (Chapter 32).
xx Preface to the Fifth Edition
We devote a new chapter (31) to some important topics: fluorinated heterocycles, isotopically labelled
heterocycles, the use of bioprocesses in heterocyclic transformations, ‘green chemistry’ and the somewhat
related topic of ionic liquids, and some the applications of heterocyclic compounds in every-day life.
1. The main body of factual material is to be found in chapters entitled ‘Reactions and synthesis of…’ a
particular heterocyclic system. Didactic material is to be found partly in advanced general discussions
of heterocyclic reactivity and synthesis (Chapters 3, 4 and 6), and partly in six short summary chapters
(such as ‘Typical Reactivity of Pyridines, Quinolines and Isoquinolines’; Chapter 7), which aim to
capture the essence of that typical reactivity in very concise resumés. These last are therefore suitable
as an introduction to the chemistry of that heterocyclic system, but they are insufficient in themselves
and should lead the reader to the fuller discussions in the ‘Reactions and Synthesis of …’ chapters.
They will also serve the undergraduate student as a revision summary of the typical chemistry of that
system.
2. More than 4000 references have been given throughout the text: the references to original work have
been chosen as good leading references and are, therefore, not necessarily the first or last mention of
that particular topic or method or compound; some others are included as benchmark papers and others
for their historical interest. The extensive list of references is most relevant to post-graduate teaching
and to research workers, however we believe that the inclusion of references does not interfere with the
readability of the text for the undergraduate student. Many review references are also included: for these
we give the title of the article; titles are also given for the books to which we refer. The majority of
journals are available only on a subscription (personal or institutional) basis, but most of their web sites
give free access to abstracts and a few, such as Arkivoc and Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry
give free access to full papers. Free access to the full text of patents, with a search facility, is available
via government web sites. Organic Syntheses, the ‘gold standard’ for practical organic chemistry, has
totally free online access to full procedures.
3. Exercises are given at the ends of most of the substantive chapters. These are divided into straightforward, revision exercises, such as will be relevant to an undergraduate course in heterocyclic chemistry.
More advanced exercises, with solutions given on line at www.wiley.com/go/joule, are designed to help
the reader to develop understanding and apply the principles of heterocyclic reactivity. References have
not been given for the exercises, though all are real examples culled from the literature.
4. We largely avoid the use of ‘R’ and ‘Ar ’ for substituents in the structures in schemes, and instead give
actual examples. We believe this makes the chemistry easier to assimilate, especially for the undergraduate reader. It also avoids implying a generality that may not be justified.
5. Structures and numbering for heterocyclic systems are given at the beginnings of chapters. Where the
commonly used name differs from that used in Chemical Abstracts, the name given in square brackets
is the official Chemical Abstracts name, thus: indole [1H-indole]. We believe that the systematic naming
of heterocyclic substances is of importance, not least for use in computerised databases, but it serves
little purpose in teaching or for the understanding of the subject and, accordingly, we have devoted only
a little space to nomenclature. The reader is referred to an exposition on this topic1 and also to the Ring
Index of Chemical Abstracts in combination with the Chemical Substances Index, from whence both
standardised name and numbering can be obtained for all known systems. Readers with access to electronic search facilities such as SciFinder and Crossfire can easily find the various names for substances
via a search on a drawn structure.
6. There are several general reference works concerned with heterocyclic chemistry, which have been
gathered together as a set at the end of this chapter, and to which the reader ’s attention is drawn. In
order to save space, these vital sources are not repeated in particular chapters, however all the topics
covered in this book are covered in them, and recourse to these sources should form the early basis of
any literature search.
Preface to the Fifth Edition xxi
7. The literature of heterocyclic chemistry is so vast that the series of nine listings – ‘The Literature of
Heterocyclic Chemistry’, Parts I–IX2 – is of considerable value at the start of a literature search. These
listings appear in Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry,3 itself a prime source for key reviews on heterocyclic topics; the journal, Heterocycles, also carries many useful reviews specifically in the heterocyclic
area. Progress in Heterocyclic Chemistry4 published by the International Society of Heterocyclic Chemistry5 also carries reviews, and monitors developments in heterocyclic chemistry over a calendar year.
Essential at the beginning of a literature search is a consultation with the appropriate chapter(s) of
Comprehensive Heterocyclic Chemistry, the original6a and its two updates,6b,6c or, for a useful introduction and overview, the handbook7 to the series. It is important to realize that particular topics in the three
parts of Comprehensive Heterocyclic Chemistry must be read together – the later parts update, but do
not repeat, the earlier material. Finally, the Science of Synthesis series, published over the period
2000–2008, contains authoritative discussions of information organized in a hierarchical system.8
Volumes 9–17 discuss aromatic heterocycles.
8. There are three comprehensive compilations of heterocyclic facts: the early series9 edited by Elderfield,
discusses pioneering work. The still-continuing and still-growing series of monographs10 dealing with
particular heterocyclic systems, edited originally by Arnold Weissberger, and latterly by Edward C.
Taylor and Peter Wipf, is a vital source of information and reviews for all those working with heterocyclic compounds. Finally, the heterocyclic volumes of Rodd’s Chemistry of Carbon Compounds11
contain a wealth of well-sifted information and data.
P.1
Hazards
This book is designed, in large part, for the working chemist. All chemistry is hazardous to some degree
and the reactions described in this book should only be carried out by persons with an appropriate degree
of skill, and after consulting the original papers and carrying out a proper risk assessment. Some major
hazards are highlighted (Explosive: general discussion (5.4), sodium azide (29.1.1.5.3), tetrazoles: diazonium salts and others (29.1.1.3), perchlorates (5.4; 11 (introductory paragraph)), tosyl azide (5.4). Toxicity:
general (31.6.1), fluoroacetate (31.1.1.4), chloromethylation (e.g. 14.9.2.1)),12 but this should not be taken
to mean that every possible hazard is specifically pointed out. Certain topics are included only as information and are not suitable for general chemistry laboratories – this applies particularly to explosive
compounds.
P.2
How to Use This Textbook
As indicated above, by comparison with earlier editions, this fifth edition of Heterocyclic Chemistry contains more material, including more that is appropriate to study at a higher level, than that generally taught
in a first degree course. Nevertheless we believe that undergraduates will find the book of value and offer
the following modus operandi as a means for undergraduate use of this text.
The undergraduate student should first read Chapter 2, which will provide a structural basis for the
chemistry that follows. We suggest that the material dealt with in Chapters 3 and 4 be left for study at later
stages, and that the undergraduate student proceed next to those chapters (7, 10, 13, 15, 19 and 23) that
explain heterocyclic principles in the simplest terms and which should be easily understandable by students
who have a good grounding in elementary reaction chemistry, especially aromatic chemistry.
The student could then proceed to the main chapters, dealing with ‘Reactions and Synthesis of…’ in
which will be found full discussions of the chemistry of particular systems – pyridines, quinolines, etc.
These utilise many cross references that seek to capitalise on that important didactical strategy – comparison
and analogy with reactivity already learnt and understood.
Chapters 3, 4 and 6 are advanced essays on heterocyclic chemistry. Sections can be sampled as required
– ‘Electrophilic Substitution’ could be read at the point at which the student was studying electrophilic
substitutions of, say, thiophene – or Chapter 3 can be read as a whole. We have devoted considerable space
xxii Preface to the Fifth Edition
in Chapter 3 to discussions of radical substitution, and Chapter 4, because of their great significance, is
devoted entirely to metallation and the use of organometallic reagents, and to transition metal-catalysed
reactions. These topics have grown enormously in importance since the earlier editions, and are of great
relevance to heterocyclic chemistry.
Acknowledgements
We thank Richard Davies, Sarah Hall and Gemma Valler and their colleagues at Wiley, and earlier Paul
Sayer at Blackwell, for their patience and support during the preparation of this fifth edition. We acknowledge many significant comments and corrections by Rob Young and Paul Beswick, and thank Mercedes
Álvarez, Peter Quayle, Andrew Regan and Ian Watt for their views on the use of colour in schemes. We
are greatly indebted to Jo Tyszka for her meticulous and constructive copy-editing. JAJ thanks his wife
Stacy for her encouragement and patience during the writing of Heterocyclic Chemistry, Fifth Edition.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
‘The nomenclature of heterocycles’, McNaught, A. D., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1976, 20, 175.
Katritzky, A. R. and Weeds, S. M., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1966, 7, 225; Katritzky, A. R. and Jones, P. M., ibid., 1979, 25, 303; Belen’kii, L. I.,
ibid., 1988, 44, 269; Belen’kii, L. I. and Kruchkovskaya, N. D., ibid., 1992, 55, 31; idem, ibid., 1998, 71, 291; Belen’kii, L. I., Kruchkovskaya,
N. D., and Gramenitskaya, V. N., ibid., 1999, 73, 295; idem, ibid., 2001, 79, 201; Belen’kii, L. I. and Gramenitskaya, V. N., ibid., 2005, 88, 231;
Belen’kii, L. I., Gramenitskaya, V. N., and Evdokimenkova, Yu. B., ibid., 2004, 92, 146.
Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1963–2007, 1–94.
Progr. Heterocycl. Chem., 1989–2009, 1–21.
http://euch6f.chem.emory.edu/ishc.html and the related Royal Society of Chemistry site: http://www.rsc.org/lap/rsccom/dab/perk003.htm
(a) ‘Comprehensive heterocyclic chemistry. The structure, reactions, synthesis, and uses of heterocyclic compounds’, Eds. Katritzky, A. R. and Rees,
C. W., Vols 1–8, Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1984; (b) ‘Comprehensive heterocyclic chemistry II. A review of the literature 1982–1995’, Ed. Katritzky,
A. R., Rees, C. W., and Scriven, E. F. V., Vols 1–11, Pergamon Press, 1996; (c) ‘Comprehensive heterocyclic chemistry III. A review of the literature
1995–2007’, Eds. Katritzky, A. R., Ramsden, C. A., and Scriven, E. F. V., and Taylor, R. J. K., Vols 1–15, Elsevier, 2008.
‘Handbook of heterocyclic chemistry, 2nd edition 2000’, Katritzky, A. R. and Pozharskii, A. F., Pergamon Press, Oxford, 2000; ‘Handbook of heterocyclic chemistry. Third edition 2010’, Katritzky, A. R., Ramsden, C. A., Joule, J. A., and Zhdankin, V. V., Elsevier, 2010.
‘Science of Synthesis’, Vols. 9–17, ‘Hetarenes’, Thieme, 2000–2008.
‘Heterocyclic compounds’, Ed. Elderfield, R. C., Vols. 1–9, Wiley, 1950–1967.
‘The chemistry of heterocyclic compounds’, Series Eds. Weissberger, A., Wipf, P., and Taylor, E. C., Vols. 1–64, Wiley-Interscience, 1950–2005.
‘Rodd’s chemistry of carbon compounds’, Eds., Coffey, S. then Ansell, M. F., Vols IVa–IVl, and Supplements, 1973–1994, Elsevier, Amsterdam.
United States Department of Labor, Occupational Safety & Health Administration Reports: Chloromethyl Methyl Ether (CMME) and BisChloromethyl Ether (BCME); see also: Berliner, M. and Belecki, K., Org. Synth., 2007, 84, 102 (discussion).
Web Site
Power Point slides of all figures from this book, along with the solution to the exercises, can be found at http://www.wiley.com/go/joul.
Biography
John Arthur Joule was born in Harrogate, Yorkshire, England, but grew up and attended school in Llandudno, North Wales, going on to study for BSc, MSc, and PhD (1961; with George F. Smith) degrees at
The University of Manchester. Following post-doctoral periods in Princeton (Richard K. Hill) and Stanford
(Carl Djerassi) he joined the academic staff of The University of Manchester where he served for 41 years,
retiring and being appointed Professor Emeritus in 2004. Sabbatical periods were spent at the University
of Ibadan, Nigeria, Johns Hopkins Medical School, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. He was William Evans Visiting Fellow at
Otago University, New Zealand.
Dr. Joule has taught many courses on heterocyclic chemistry to industry and academe in the UK and
elsewhere. He is currently Associate Editor for Tetrahedron Letters, Scientific Editor for Arkivoc, and CoEditor of the annual Progress in Heterocyclic Chemistry.
Keith Mills was born in Barnsley, Yorkshire, England and attended Barnsley Grammar School, going on
to study for BSc, MSc and PhD (1971; with John Joule) degrees at The University of Manchester.
Following post-doctoral periods at Columbia (Gilbert Stork) and Imperial College (Derek Barton/ Philip
Magnus), he joined Allen and Hanburys (part of the Glaxo Group) at Ware and later Stevenage (finally as
part of GSK), working in Medicinal Chemistry and Development Chemistry departments for a total of 25
years. During this time he spent a secondment at Glaxo, Verona. Since leaving GSK he has been an independent consultant to small pharmaceutical companies.
Dr. Mills has worked in several areas of medicine and many areas of organic chemistry, but with particular emphasis on heterocyclic chemistry and the applications of transition metal-catalysed reactions.
Heterocyclic Chemistry was first published in 1972, written by George Smith and John Joule, followed by
a second edition in 1978. The third edition (Joule, Mills and Smith) was written in 1995 and, after the death
of George Smith, a fourth edition (Joule and Mills) appeared in 2000; these authors also published Heterocyclic Chemistry at a Glance in 2007.
Definitions of Abbreviations
acac = acetylacetonato [MeCOCHCOMe–]
adoc = adamantanyloxycarbonyl
Aliquat® = tricaprylmethylammonium chloride [MeN(C8H17)3Cl]
p-An = para-anisyl [4-MeOC6H4]
aq. = aqueous
atm = atmosphere
9-BBN = 9-borabicyclo[3.3.1]nonane [C8H15B]
BINAP = 2,2′-bis(diphenylphosphino)-1,1′-binaphthalene [C44H32P2]
BINOL = 1,1′-bi(2-naphthol) [C20H14O2]
Bn = benzyl [PhCH2]
Boc = tertiary-butoxycarbonyl [Me3COC=O]
BOM = benzyloxymethyl [PhCH2OCH2]
BOP = (benzotriazol-1-yloxy)tris(dimethylamino)phosphonium hexafluorophosphate
BSA = N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl)acetamide [MeC(OSiMe3)=NSiMe3]
Bt = benzotriazol-1-yl [C6H4N3]
i-Bu = iso-butyl [Me2CHCH2]
n-Bu = normal-butyl [Me(CH2)3]
s-Bu = secondary-butyl [MeCH2C(Me)H]
t-Bu = tertiary-butyl [Me3C]
Bus = tertiary-butylsulfonyl [Me3CSO2]
c. = concentrated
c = cyclo as in c-C5H9 = cyclopentyl [C5H9]
CAN = cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate [Ce(NH4)2(NO3)6]
Cbz = benzyloxycarbonyl (PhCH2OC=O)
CDI = 1,1′-carbonyldiimidazole [(C3H3N2)2C=O]
Chloramine T = N-chloro-4-methylbenzenesulfonamide sodium salt [TsN(Cl)Na]
cod = cycloocta-1,5-diene [C8H12]
coe = cyclooctene [C8H14]
cp = cyclopentadienyl anion [c-C5H5–]
cp* = pentamethylcyclopentadienyl anion [Me5-c-C5]
m-CPBA = meta-chloroperbenzoic acid [3-ClC6H4CO3H]
CSA = camphorsulfonic acid
CuTC = thiophene-2-carboxylic acid copper(I) salt [C5H3CuO2S]
Cy = cyclohexyl [C6H11]
DABCO = 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane [C6H12N2]
dba = trans,trans-dibenzylideneacetone [PhCH=CHCOCH=CHPh]
DBU = 1,8-diazabicyclo[5.4.0]undec-7-ene [C9H16N2]
DCC = N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide [c-C6H11N=C=N-c-C6H11]
DCE = 1,2-dichloroethane [Cl(CH2)2Cl]
DDQ = 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyano-1,4-benzoquinone [C8Cl2N2O2]
de = diastereomeric excess
xxvi
Definitions of Abbreviations
DEAD = diethyl azodicarboxylate [EtO2CN=NCO2Et]
DIAD = diisopropyl azodicarboxylate [i-PrO2CN=NCO2i-Pr]
DIBALH = diisobutylaluminium hydride [(Me2CHCH2)2AlH]
DMA = N,N-dimethylacetamide [MeCONMe2]
DMAP = 4-dimethylaminopyridine [C7H10N2]
DME = 1,2-dimethoxyethane [MeO(CH2)2OMe]
DMF = N,N-dimethylformamide [Me2NCH=O]
DMFDMA = dimethylformamide dimethyl acetal [Me2NCH(OMe)2]
DMSO = dimethylsulfoxide [Me2S=O]
DoM = directed ortho-metallation
DPPA = diphenylphosphoryl azide [(PhO)2P(O)N3]
dppb = 1,4-bis(diphenylphosphino)butane [Ph2P(CH2)4PPh2]
dppf = 1,1′-bis(diphenylphosphino)ferrocene [C34H28FeP2]
dppp = 1,3-bis(diphenylphosphino)propane [Ph2P(CH2)3PPh2]
EDTA = ethylenediaminetetracetic acid [(HO2CCH2)2N(CH2)2N(CH2CO2H)2]
ee = enantiomeric excess
El+ = general electrophile
eq = equivalent(s)
ESR = electron spin resonance
Et = ethyl [CH3CH2]
f. = fuming
Fur = furyl as in 2-Fur = 2-furyl (furan-2-yl) [C4H3O]
FVP = flash vacuum pyrolysis
Het = general designation for an aromatic heterocyclic nucleus
HMDS = 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexamethyldisilazane [Me3SiNHSiMe3]
hplc = high pressure liquid chromatography
HOMO = highest occupied molecular orbital
hν = ultraviolet or visible irradiation
hy = high yield
Kryptofix 2.2.2 = 4,7,13,16,21,24-hexaoxa-1,10-diazabicyclo[8.8.8]hexacosane [C18H36N2O6]
LDA = lithium diisopropylamide [LiNi-Pr2]
LiTMP = lithium 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidide [LiN(CMe2(CH2)3CMe2)]
liq. = liquid
LR = Lawesson’s reagent [C14H14O2P2S4]
LUMO = lowest unoccupied molecular orbital
Me = methyl [CH3]
MOM = methoxymethyl [CH3OCH2O]
mp = melting point
MS = molecular sieves
MTBD = 1,3,4,6,7,8-hexahydro-1-methyl-2H-pyrimido[1,2-a]pyridine [C8H15N3]
Ms = mesyl (methanesulfonyl) [MeSO2]
MSH = O-(mesitylenesulfonyl)hydroxylamine [H2NOSO2C6H2-2,4,6-Me3]
MW = reaction heated by microwave irradation
NBS = N-bromosuccinimide [C4H4BrNO2]
NDA = sodium diisopropylamide [NaNi-Pr2]
NIS = N-iodosuccinimide [C4H4INO2]
NMP = N-methylpyrrolidone [C4H9NO]
NPE = 2-(4-nitrophenyl)ethyl [4-O2NC6H4CH2CH2]
Definitions of Abbreviations
Nu– = general nucleophile
n-Oct = normal-octyl[Me(CH2)7]
OXONE® = potassium peroxymonosulfate [2KHSO5.KHSO4.K2SO4]
Ph = phenyl [C6H5]
PhH = benzene [C6H6]
Phosphorus oxychloride (phosphoryl chloride ) = POCl3
Phth = phthaloyl [1,2-COC6H4CO]
PIFA = phenyliodine(III) bis(trifluoroacetate) [PhI(OCOCF3)3]
PMB = para-methoxybenzyl [4-MeOC6H4CH2]
PMP = 1,2,2,6,6-pentamethylpiperidine [C10H21N]
PP = pyrophosphate [OP(=O)(OH)OP(=O)OH]
PPA = polyphosphoric acid
i-Pr = iso-propyl [Me2CH]
n-Pr = normal-propyl [CH3CH2CH2]
proton sponge = 1,8-bis(dimethylamino)naphthalene [C14H18N2]
PSSA = polystyrenesulfonic acid
py = pyridine, usually as a solvent
Py = pyridyl, as in 2-Py = 2-pyridinyl (pyridin-2-yl), 3-Py, 4-Py [C5H4N]
Pybox = 2,6-bis[(4S,5S)-4,5-diphenyl-2-oxazolin-2-yl]pyridine [C35H27N3O2]
Rf = general designation of perfluoroalkyl [CnF2n+1]
RF = Rf(CH2)n
rp = room (atmospheric) pressure
rt = room temperature
salcomine = N,N′-bis(salicylidene)ethylenediaminocobalt(II) [C16H14N2O2Co]
SDS = sodium dodecylsulfate [C12H25SO3Na]
SEM = trimethylsilylethoxymethyl [Me3Si(CH2)2OCH2]
SES = 2-(trimethylsilyl)ethanesulfonyl [Me3Si(CH2)2SO2]
SET = single electron transfer
SOMO = singly occupied molecular orbital
TASF = tris(dimethylamino)sulfur (trimethylsilyl)difluoride [(Me2N)3S(Me3SiF2)]
TBAF = tetra-normal-butylammonium fluoride [n-Bu4N+ F–)
TBAS = tetra-normal-butylammonium hydrogen sulfate [n-Bu4N+ HSO4–)
TBDMS = tertiary-butyldimethylsilyl [Me3C(Me)2Si]
TBTA = tris[(1-benzyl-1H-1,2,3-triazol-4-yl)methyl]amine
TfO– = triflate [CF3SO3–]
tfp = trifuran-2-ylphosphine [P(C4H3O)3]
THF = tetrahydrofuran (2,3,4,5-tetrahydrofuran) [C4H8O]
THP = tetrahydropyran-2-yl [C5H9O]
TIPS = tri-iso-propylsilyl [i-Pr3Si]
TMEDA = N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylethylenediamine [Me2N(CH2)2NMe2]
TMP = 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine [C9H19N]
TMS = trimethylsilyl [Me3Si]
TMSOTf = trimethylsilyl triflate [Me3SiOSO2CF3]
TolH = toluene [C6H5CH3]
p-Tol = para-tolyl [4-MeC6H4]
o-Tol = ortho-tolyl [2-MeC6H4]
TosMIC = tosylmethyl isocyanide [4-MeC6H4SO2CH2NC]
triflate = trifluoromethanesulfonate [CF3SO3–]
xxvii
xxviii
Definitions of Abbreviations
Ts = tosyl [4-MeC6H4SO2]
dR = β-d-2-deoxyribofuranosyl
R = β-d-ribofuranosyl
S = a sugar, usually a derivative of ribose or deoxyribose, attached to heterocyclic nitrogen, in which the
substituents have not altered during the reaction shown.
= sonication
1
Heterocyclic Nomenclature
A selection of the structures, names and standard numbering of the more common heteroaromatic systems
and some common non-aromatic heterocycles are given here as a necessary prelude to the discussions
which follow in subsequent chapters. The aromatic heterocycles have been grouped into those with sixmembered rings and those with five-membered rings. The names of six-membered aromatic heterocycles
that contain nitrogen generally end in ‘ine’, though note that ‘purine’ is the name for a very important
bicyclic system which has both a six- and a five-membered nitrogen-containing heterocycle. Fivemembered heterocycles containing nitrogen general end with ‘ole’. Note the use of italic ‘H’ in a name
such as ‘9H-purine’ to designate the location of an N-hydrogen in a system in which, by tautomerism, the
hydrogen could reside on another nitrogen (e.g. N-7 in the case of purine). Names such ‘pyridine’, ‘pyrrole’,
‘thiophene’, originally trivial, are now the standard, systematic names for these heterocycles; names such
as ‘1,2,4-triazine’ for a six-membered ring with three nitrogens located as indicated by the numbers, are
more logically systematic.
A device that is useful, especially in discussions of reactivity, is the designation of positions as ‘α’, ‘β’,
or ‘γ’. For example, the 2- and the 6-positions in pyridine are equivalent in reactivity terms, so to make
discussion of such reactivity clearer, each of these positions is referred to as an ‘α-position’. Comparable
use of α and β is made in describing reactivity in five-membered systems. These useful designations are
shown on some of the structures. Note that carbons at angular positions do not have a separate number,
but are designated using the number of the preceding atom followed by ‘a’ – as illustrated (only) for quinoline. For historical reasons purine does not follow this rule.
Six-membered aromatic heterocycles
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
2
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Five-membered aromatic heterocycles
A detailed discussion of the systematic rules for naming polycyclic systems in which several aromatic
or heteroaromatic rings are fused together is beyond the scope of this book, however, a simple example
will serve to illustrate the principle. In the name ‘pyrrolo[2,3-b]pyridine’, the numbers signify the positions
of the first-named heterocycle, numbered as if it were a separate entity, which are the points of ring fusion;
the italic letter, ‘b’ in this case, designates the side of the second-named heterocycle to which the other
ring is fused, the lettering deriving from the numbering of that heterocycle as a separate entity, i.e. side a
is between atoms 1 and 2, side b is between atoms 2 and 3, etc. Actually, this particular heterocycle is
more often referred to as ‘7-azaindole’ – note the use of the prefix ‘aza’ to denote the replacement of a
ring carbon by nitrogen, i.e. of C-7–H of indole by N.
Heterocyclic Nomenclature
3
The main thrust of this book concerns the aromatic heterocycles, exemplified above, however Chapter
30 explores briefly the chemistry of saturated or partially unsaturated systems, including three- and fourmembered heterocycles.
Non-aromatic heterocycles
2
Structures and Spectroscopic Properties of
Aromatic Heterocycles
This chapter describes the structures of aromatic heterocycles and gives a brief summary of some physical
properties.1 The treatment we use is the valence-bond description, which we believe is appropriate for the
understanding of all heterocyclic reactivity, perhaps save some very subtle effects, and is certainly sufficient
for a general textbook on the subject. The more fundamental, molecular-orbital description of aromatic
systems is less relevant to the day-to-day interpretation of heterocyclic reactivity, though it is necessary in
some cases to utilise frontier orbital considerations,2 however such situations do not fall within the scope
of this book.
2.1
Carbocyclic Aromatic Systems
2.1.1 Structures of Benzene and Naphthalene
The concept of aromaticity as represented by benzene is a familiar and relatively simple one. The difference
between benzene on the one hand and alkenes on the other is well known: the latter react with electrophiles,
such as bromine, easily by addition, whereas benzene reacts only under much more forcing conditions and
then typically by substitution. The difference is due to the cyclic arrangement of six π-electrons in benzene:
this forms a conjugated molecular-orbital system which is thermodynamically much more stable than a
corresponding non-cyclically conjugated system. The additional stabilisation results in a diminished tendency to react by addition and a greater tendency to react by substitution for, in the latter manner, survival
of the original cyclic conjugated system of electrons is ensured in the product. A general rule proposed by
Hückel in 1931 states that aromaticity is observed in cyclically conjugated systems of 4n + 2 electrons,
that is with 2, 6, 10, 14, etc., π-electrons; by far the majority of monocyclic aromatic and heteroaromatic
systems are those with six π-electrons.
In this book we use the pictorial valence-bond resonance description of structure and reactivity. Even
though this treatment is not rigorous, it is still the standard means for the understanding and learning of
organic chemistry, which can at a more advanced level give way to the more complex, and mathematical,
quantum-mechanical approach. We begin by recalling the structure of benzene in these terms.
In benzene, the geometry of the ring, with angles of 120 °, precisely fits the geometry of a planar trigonally hybridised carbon atom, and allows the assembly of a σ-skeleton of six sp2 hybridised carbon atoms
in a strainless planar ring. Each carbon then has one extra electron which occupies an atomic p orbital
orthogonal to the plane of the ring. The p orbitals interact to generate π-molecular orbitals associated with
the aromatic system.
Benzene is described as a ‘resonance hybrid’ of the two extreme forms which correspond, in terms of
orbital interactions, to the two possible spin-coupled pairings of adjacent p electrons: structures 1 and 2.
These are known as ‘resonance contributors’, or ‘mesomeric structures’, have no existence in their own
right, but serve to illustrate two extremes which contribute to the ‘real’ structure of benzene. Note the
standard use of a double-headed arrow to inter-relate resonance contributors. Such arrows must never be
confused with the use of opposing straight ‘fish-hook’ arrows that are used to designate an equilibrium
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
6
Heterocyclic Chemistry
between two species. Resonance contributors have no separate existence; they are not in equilibrium one
with the other.
Structure of benzene; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
Sometimes, benzenoid compounds (and also, occasionally six- and five-membered heterocyclic systems)
are represented using a circle inside a hexagon (pentagon); although this emphasises their delocalised nature
and the close similarity of the ring bond lengths (all exactly identical only in benzene itself), it is not helpful
in interpreting reactions, or in writing ‘mechanisms’, and we do not use this method in this book.
Treating naphthalene comparably reveals three resonance contributors, 3, 4 and 5. The valence-bond
treatment predicts quite well the non-equivalence of the bond lengths in naphthalene: in two of the three
contributing structures, C-1–C-2 is double and in one it is single, whereas C-2–C-3 is single in two and
double in one. Statistically, then, the former may be looked on as 0.67 of a double bond and the latter as
0.33 of a double bond: the measured bond lengths confirm that there indeed is this degree of bond fixation,
with values closely consistent with statistical prediction.
Structure of naphthalene; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
2.1.2 Aromatic Resonance Energy3
The difference between the ground-state energy of benzene and that of hypothetical, non-aromatic,
1,3,5-cyclohexatriene corresponds to the degree of stabilisation conferred to benzene by the special cyclical
interaction of the six π-electrons. This difference is known as aromatic resonance energy. Quantification
depends on the assumptions made in estimating the energy of the ‘non-aromatic’ structure, and for this
reason and others, a variety of values have been calculated for the various heteroaromatic systems; their
absolute values are less important than their relative values. What one can say with certainty is that the
resonance energy of bicyclic aromatic compounds, like naphthalene, is considerably less than twice that of
the corresponding monocyclic system, implying a smaller loss of stabilisation energy on conversion to a
reaction intermediate which still retains a complete benzene ring, for example during electrophilic substitu-
Structures and Spectroscopic Properties of Aromatic Heterocycles 7
tion (see 3.2). The resonance energy of pyridine is of the same order as that of benzene; that of thiophene
is lower, with pyrrole and lastly furan of lower stabilisation energy still. Actual values for the stabilisations
of these systems vary according to assumptions made, but are in the same relative order (kJ mol−1): benzene
(150), pyridine (117), thiophene (122), pyrrole, (90), and furan (68).
2.2
Structure of Six-Membered Heteroaromatic Systems
2.2.1 Structure of Pyridine
The structure of pyridine is completely analogous to that of benzene, being related by replacement of CH
by N. The key differences are: (i) the departure from perfectly regular hexagonal geometry caused by the
presence of the heteroatom, in particular the shorter carbon–nitrogen bonds, (ii) the replacement of a
hydrogen in the plane of the ring with an unshared electron pair, likewise in the plane of the ring, located
in an sp2 hybrid orbital and not at all involved in the aromatic π-electron sextet; it is this nitrogen lone pair
which is responsible for the basic properties of pyridines, and (iii) a strong permanent dipole, traceable to
the greater electronegativity of nitrogen compared with carbon.
It is important to realise that the electronegative nitrogen causes inductive polarisation, mainly in the
σ-bond framework, and additionally stabilises those polarised mesomeric contributors in which nitrogen is
negatively charged – 8, 9, and 10 – which, together with contributors 6 and 7, which are strictly analogous
to the Kekulé contributors to benzene, represent pyridine. The polarised contributors also imply a permanent
polarisation of the π-electron system.
Structure of pyridine; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
The polarisations resulting from inductive and mesomeric effects are in the same direction in pyridine,
resulting in a permanent dipole towards the nitrogen atom. This also means that there are fractional positive
charges on the carbons of the ring, located mainly on the α- and γ-positions. It is because of this general
electron-deficiency at carbon that pyridine and similar heterocycles are referred to as ‘electron-poor ’, or
sometimes ‘π-deficient’. A comparison with the dipole moment of piperidine, which is due wholly to the
induced polarisation of the σ-skeleton, gives an idea of the additional polarisation associated with distortion
of the π-electron system.
2.2.2 Structure of Diazines
The structures of the diazines (six-membered systems with two nitrogen atoms in the ring) are analogous,
but now there are two nitrogen atoms and a corresponding two lone pairs; as an illustration, the main
contributors (11–18) to pyrimidine are shown below.
8
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Structure of pyrimidine; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
2.2.3 Structure of Pyridinium and Related Cations
Electrophilic addition to the pyridine nitrogen generates pyridinium ions, the simplest being 1H-pyridinium
formed by addition of a proton. 1H-Pyridinium is actually isoelectronic with benzene, the only difference
being the nuclear charge of nitrogen, which makes the system, as a whole, positively charged. Thus pyridinium cations are still aromatic, the diagram making clear that the system of six p orbitals required to
generate the aromatic molecular orbitals is still present, though the formal positive charge on the nitrogen
atom severely distorts the π-system, making the α- and γ-carbons in these cations carry fractional positive
charges which are higher than in pyridine, the consquence being increased reactivity towards nucleophiles.
Electron density at the pyridinium β-carbons is also reduced relative to these carbons in pyridines.
+
+
+
+
In the pyrylium cation, the positively charged oxygen also has an unshared electron pair, in an sp2 orbital
in the plane of the ring, exactly as in pyridine. Once again, a set of resonance contributors, 19–23, makes
clear that this ion is strongly positively charged at the 2-, 4- and 6-positions; in fact, because the more
electronegative oxygen tolerates positive charge much less well than nitrogen, the pyrylium cation is certainly a less stabilised system than a pyridinium cation.
Structure of pyrylium cation; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
2.2.4 Structures of Pyridones and Pyrones
Pyridines with an oxygen at either the 2- or 4-position exist predominantly as carbonyl tautomers, which
are therefore known as ‘pyridones’4 (see also 2.5). In the analogous oxygen heterocycles, no alternative
tautomer is possible; the systems are known as ‘pyrones’. The extent to which such molecules are aromatic
has been a subject for considerable speculation and experimentation, and estimates have varied considerably. The degree of aromaticity depends on the contribution that dipolar structures, 25 and 27, with a
‘complete’ pyridinium (pyrylium) ring make to the overall structure. Pyrones are less aromatic than pyridones, as can be seen from their tendency to undergo addition reactions (11.2.2.4), and as would be expected
Structures and Spectroscopic Properties of Aromatic Heterocycles 9
from a consideration of the ‘aromatic’ contributors, 25 and 27, which have a positively charged ring heteroatom, oxygen being less easily able to accommodate this requirement.
2.3
Structure of Five-Membered Heteroaromatic Systems5
2.3.1 Structure of Pyrrole
Before discussing pyrrole it is necessary to recall the structure of the cyclopentadienyl anion, which is a
six π-electron aromatic system produced by the removal of a proton from cyclopentadiene. This system
serves to illustrate nicely the difference between aromatic stabilisation and reactivity, for it is a very reactive, fully negatively charged entity, and yet is ‘resonance stabilised’ – everything is relative. Cyclopentadiene, with a pKa of about 14, is much more acidic than a simple diene, just because the resulting anion is
resonance stabilised. Five equivalent contributing structures, 28–32, show each carbon atom to be equivalent and hence to carry one fifth of the negative charge.
Structure of cyclopentadienyl anion; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
Pyrrole is isoelectronic with the cyclopentadienyl anion, but is electrically neutral because of the higher
nuclear charge on nitrogen. The other consequence of the presence of nitrogen in the ring is the loss of
radial symmetry, so that pyrrole does not have five equivalent mesomeric forms: it has one with no charge
separation, 33, and two pairs of equivalent forms in which there is charge separation, indicating electron
density drift away from the nitrogen. These forms do not contribute equally; the order of importance is:
33 > 35,37 > 34,36.
Structure of pyrrole; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
Resonance leads, then, to the establishment of partial negative charges on the carbons and a partial positive charge on the nitrogen. Of course the inductive effect of the nitrogen is, as usual, towards the heteroatom and away from carbon, so that the electronic distribution in pyrrole is a balance of two opposing
effects, of which the mesomeric effect is probably the more significant, and this results in a dipole moment
directed away from the nitrogen. The lengths of the bonds in pyrrole are in accord with this exposition,
10
Heterocyclic Chemistry
thus the 3,4-bond is very much longer than the 2,3-/4,5-bonds, but appreciably shorter than a normal single
bond between sp2 hybridised carbons, in accord with contributions from the polarised structures 34–37. It
is because of this electronic drift away from nitrogen and towards the ring carbons that five-membered
heterocycles of the pyrrole type are referred to as ‘electron-rich’, or sometimes ‘π-excessive’.
It is most important to recognise that the nitrogen lone pair in pyrrole forms part of the aromatic sixelectron system.
2.3.2
Structures of Thiophene and Furan
The structures of thiophene and furan are closely analogous to that discussed in detail for pyrrole above,
except that the NH is replaced by S and O, respectively. A consequence is that the heteroatom in each has
one lone pair as part of the aromatic sextet, as in pyrrole, but also has a second lone pair that is not involved,
and is located in an sp2 hybrid orbital in the plane of the ring. Mesomeric forms exactly analogous to those
(above) for pyrrole can be written for each, but the higher electronegativity of both sulfur and oxygen
means that the polarised forms, with positive charges on the heteroatoms, make a smaller contribution. The
decreased mesomeric electron drift away from the heteroatoms is insufficient, in these two cases, to overcome the inductive polarisation towards the heteroatom (the dipole moments of tetrahydrothiophene and
tetrahydrofuran, 1.87 D and 1.68 D, respectively, both towards the heteroatom, are in any case larger than
that of pyrrolidine) and the net effect is that the dipoles are directed towards the heteroatoms in thiophene
and furan.
The larger bonding radius of sulfur is one of the influences making thiophene more stable (more aromatic)
than pyrrole or furan – the bonding angles are larger and angle strain is somewhat relieved, but in addition,
a contribution to the stabilisation involving sulfur d-orbital participation may be significant.
2.3.3 Structures of Azoles
The 1,3- and 1,2-azoles, five-membered rings with two heteroatoms, present a fascinating combination of
heteroatom types – in all cases, one heteroatom must be of the five-membered heterocycle (pyrrole, thiophene, furan) type and one of the imine type, as in pyridine; imidazole with two nitrogen atoms illustrates
this best. Contributor 39 is a particularly favourable one.
Structures and Spectroscopic Properties of Aromatic Heterocycles 11
Structure of imidazole; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
2.3.4 Structures of Pyrryl and Related Anions
Removal of the proton from an azole N–hydrogen generates an N-anion, for example the pyrryl anion.
Such species are still aromatic, but now have a lone pair of electrons at the nitrogen, in an sp2 hybrid orbital,
in the plane of the ring and not part of the aromatic sextet.
–
–
Even in the simplest example, pyrrole itself, the acidity (pKa 17.5) is very considerably greater than that
of its saturated counterpart, pyrrolidine (pKa ∼ 44); similarly the acidity of indole (pKa 16.2) is much greater
than that of aniline (pKa 30.7). One may rationalise this relatively increased acidity on the grounds that the
charge is not localised, and this is illustrated by resonance forms which show the delocalisation of charge
around the heterocycle. With the addition of electron-withdrawing substituents, or with the inclusion of
extra heteroatoms, especially imine groups, the acidity is enhanced. A nice, though extreme, example is
tetrazole, for which the pKa is 4.8, i.e. of the same order as a carboxylic acid!
2.4
Structures of Bicyclic Heteroaromatic Compounds
Once the concepts of the structures of benzene, naphthalene, pyridine and pyrrole, as prototypes, have been
assimilated, it is straightforward to extrapolate to those systems which combine two (or more) of these
types, thus quinoline is like naphthalene, only with one of the rings a pyridine, and indole is like pyrrole,
but with a benzene ring attached.
H
Resonance representations must take account of the pattern established for benzene and the relevant
heterocycle. Contributors in which both aromatic rings are disrupted make a very much smaller contribution
and are shown in parentheses.
12
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Structure of quinoline; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
Structure of indole; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
2.5 Tautomerism in Heterocyclic Systems6,7
A topic which has attracted a large research effort over the years is the determination of the precise structure
of heterocyclic molecules which are potentially tautomeric – the pyridinol/pyridone relationship (2.2.4) is
one such situation. In principle, when an oxygen is located on a carbon α or γ to nitrogen, two tautomeric
forms can exist; the same is true of amino groups.
Early attempts to use the results of chemical reactions to assess the form of a particular compound were
misguided, since these can give entirely the wrong answer: the minor partner in such a tautomeric equilibrium may be the one that is the more reactive, so a major product may be actually derived from the minor
component in the tautomeric equilibrium. Most secure evidence on these questions has come from comparisons of spectroscopic data for the compound in question with unambiguous models – often N- and
O-methyl derivatives.
Determination of tautomeric equilibrium positions
In summary, α and γ oxy-heterocycles generally prefer the carbonyl form; amino-heterocycles nearly
always exist as amino tautomers. Sulfur analogues – potentially thiol or thione – tend to exist as thione in
six-membered situations, but as thiol in five-membered rings.
The establishment of tautomeric form is perhaps of most importance in connection with the purine and
pyrimidine bases which form part of DNA and RNA, and, through H-bonding involving carbonyl oxygen,
provide the mechanism for base pairing (cf. 32.4).
2.6
Mesoionic Systems8
There are a substantial number of heterocyclic substances for which no plausible, unpolarised mesomeric
structure can be written: such systems are termed ‘mesoionic’. Despite the presence of a nominal positive
and negative charge in all resonance contributors to such compounds, they are not salt-like, are of course
overall neutral, and behave like ‘organic’ substances, dissolving in the usual solvents. Examples of mesoionic
Structures and Spectroscopic Properties of Aromatic Heterocycles 13
structures occur throughout the text. Amongst the earliest mesoionic substances to be studied were the
sydnones, for which several contributing structures can be drawn.
Structure of a sydnone; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
Mesoionic structures occur amongst six-membered systems too – one example is illustrated below.
Structure of a pyrazinium-3-olate; resonance contributors (mesomeric structures)
If there is any one feature that characterises mesoionic compounds it is that their dipolar structures lead
to reactions in which they serve as 1,3-dipoles in cycloadditions.
2.7
Some Spectroscopic Properties of Some Heteroaromatic Systems
The use of spectroscopy is at the heart of chemical research and analysis, but a knowledge of the particular
chemical shift of, say, a proton on a pyridine, or the particular UV absorption maximum of, say, an indole,
is only of direct relevance to those actually pursuing such research and analysis, and adds nothing to the
understanding of heteroaromatic reactivity. Accordingly, we give here only a brief discussion, with relatively little data, of the spectroscopic properties of heterocyclic systems, anticipating that those who may
be involved in particular research projects will turn to reviews1 or the original literature for particular data.
The ultraviolet and infrared spectra of heteroaromatic systems are in accord with their aromatic character.
Spectroscopic investigation, particularly ultraviolet/visible (UV/VIS) and nuclear magnetic resonance
(NMR) spectroscopies, is particularly useful in the context of assessing the extent of such properties, in
determining the position of tautomeric equilibria, and in testing for the existence of non-isolable
intermediates.
2.7.1 Ultraviolet/Visible (Electronic) Spectroscopy
The simple unsubstituted heterocyclic systems show a wide range of electronic absorption, from the simple
200 nm band of furan, for example, to the 340 nm maximum shown by pyridazine. As is true for benzenoid
compounds, the presence of substituents that can conjugate causes profound changes in electronic absorption, but the many variations possible are outside the scope of this section.
The UV spectra of the monocyclic azines show two bands, each with fine structure: one occurs in the
relatively narrow range of 240–260 nm and corresponds to the π → π* transitions, analogous with the
π → π* transitions in the same region in benzene (see Table 2.1). The other band occurs at longer wavelengths, from 270 nm in pyridine to 340 nm in pyridazine and corresponds to the interaction of the heteroatom lone pair with aromatic π electrons, the n → π* transitions, which of course cannot occur in benzene.
The absorptions due to n → π* transitions are very solvent dependent, as is exemplified in Table 2.1 by
the case of pyrimidine. With pyridine, this band is only observed in hexane solution, for in alcoholic solution the shift to shorter wavelengths results in masking by the main π → π* band. Protonation of the ring
nitrogen naturally quenches the n → π* band by removing the heteroatom lone pair; protonation also
has the effect of considerably increasing the intensity of the π → π* band, without changing its position
significantly, the experimental observation of which has diagnostic utility.
14
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Table 2.1
Ultraviolet spectra of monocyclic azines (fine structure not given)
Heterocycle (solvent)
Pyridine (hexane)
Pyridine (ethanol)
Pyridinium (ethanol)
Pyridazine (hexane)
Pyrimidine (hexane)
Pyrazine (hexane)
Pyrimidine (water)
Pyrimidinium (water)
Pyrylium (90% aq. HClO4)
Benzene (hexane)
Table 2.2
N → π*
λmax (nm)
ε
π → π*
λmax (nm)
π → π*
λmax (nm)
ε
ε
270
–
–
340
298
328
271
–
–
–
450
–
–
315
326
1040
410
–
–
–
195
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
220
204
251
257
256
246
243
260
243
242
269
254
7500
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
1400
7400
2000
2750
5300
1400
2030
5600
3210
5500
8500
200
Ultraviolet spectra of bicyclic azines (fine structure not given)
Heterocycle
Quinoline
Quinolinium
Isoquinoline
Isoquinolinium
Quinolizinium
Naphthalene
Table 2.3
λmax (nm)
λmax (nm)
λmax (nm)
ε
ε
ε
313
313
317
331
324
312
270
–
266
274
284
275
226
233
217
228
225
220
2360
6350
3100
4170
14500
250
3880
35500
34700
37000
37500
17000
100000
4030
1960
2700
5600
Ultraviolet spectra of monocyclic five-membered heterocycles
Heterocycle
Pyrrole
Furan
Thiophene
Imidazole
Oxazole
Thiazole
Cyclopentadiene
λmax (nm)
λmax (nm)
ε
ε
210
200
235
206
205
235
200
–
–
–
–
–
–
239
5100
10000
4300
3500
3900
3000
10000
–
–
–
–
–
–
3400
The bicyclic azines have much more complex electronic absorption, and the n → π* and π → π* bands
overlap; being much more intense, the latter mask the former. Broadly, however, the absorptions of the
bicyclic azines resemble that of naphthalene (Table 2.2).
The UV spectra of the simple five-membered heteroaromatic systems all show just one medium-to-strong
low-wavelength band with no fine structure. Their absorptions have no obvious similarity to that of benzene,
and no detectable n → π* absorption, not even in the azoles, which contain a pyridine-like nitrogen (Tables
2.3 and 2.4).
2.7.2 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Spectroscopy9
The chemical shifts10 of protons attached to, and in particular of the carbons in, heterocyclic systems, can
be taken as relating to the electron density at that position, with lower fields corresponding to electrondeficient carbons. For example, in the 1H spectrum of pyridine, the lowest-field signals are for the α-protons
(Table 2.5), the next lowest is that for the γ-proton and the highest-field signal corresponds to the β-protons,
and this is echoed in the corresponding 13C shifts (Table 2.6). A second generality relates to the inductive
Table 2.4
Ultraviolet spectra of bicyclic compounds with five-membered heterocyclic rings
Heterocycle
λmax (nm)
Indole
Benzo[b]thiophene
Benzo[b]furan
2-t-Bu-isoindole
Isobenzofuran
288
288
281
223,
215,
249
347
259
217,
231,
275
203,
263
Indolizine
Benzimidazole
Benzothiazole
Benzoxazole
2-Methyl-2H-indazole
2,1-Benzisothiazole
Purine
Table 2.5
λmax (nm)
261
257
266
244,
270, 277
254, 261,
313
295
275
285
270
292
288sh, 298
–
251
263
221
λmax (nm)
219
227
244
289, 329
319, 327,
334, 343
238
295
276
295
315sh
–
ε
ε
4900
2000
2600
48000, 1800
14800, 2500,
2350
1950
5620
18620, 5500
7940, 2400
6310
14450, 16220
7950
ε
6300
5500
1650, 1850
2250, 1325,
5000
3600
5010
1700
3390
6170
7590, 2880
–
25000
28000
11000
1250, 3900
5000, 7400,
4575, 6150
32000
1350
3240
6030
3980
–
1
H chemical shifts (ppm) for heteroaromatic ring protons
Heterocycle
Pyridine
2-Pyridone
Quinoline
Quinoline N-oxide
Isoquinoline
Isoquinoline N-oxide
Pyridazine
Pyrimidine
Pyrimidine N-oxide
Pyrazine
1,2,4-Triazine
1,3,5-Triazine
Cinnoline
Quinazoline
Quinoxaline
Phthalazine
Pyrylium
Pyrrole
Thiophene
Furan
Indole
Benzo[b]furan
Benzo[b]thiophene
Indolizine
Imidazole
1-Methylimidazole
Pyrazole
1-Methylpyrazole
Thiazole
Oxazole
Benzimidazole
Benzoxazole
Pyrazole
Isothiazole
Isoxazole
Indazole
1,2,3-Triazole
1,2,4-Triazole
Tetrazole
Purine
Benzene
Anisole
Aniline
Nitrobenzene
Naphthalene
δ1
δ2
δ3
δ4
δ5
δ6
δ7
δ8
Others
–
–
–
–
9.1
8.8
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
9.4
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
6.3
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.27
–
–
–
7.8
8.5
–
8.8
8.6
–
–
–
9.2
9.0
8.5
–
9.2
–
9.2
9.7
–
9.6
6.6
7.2
7.4
6.5
7.5
7.3
6.6
7.9
7.5
–
–
8.9
7.95
7.4
7.5
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
9.0
–
6.9
6.5
8.2
7.5
7.1
6.6
7.3
7.3
8.5
8.1
9.2
–
–
–
9.6
–
9.15
–
–
–
8.5
6.2
7.1
6.3
6.3
6.7
7.3
7.1
–
–
7.6
7.5
–
–
–
–
7.6
8.5
8.1
8.1
–
7.9
–
–
–
7.2
7.0
7.4
–
7.5
7.3
8.0
7.7
7.5
–
7.7
8.6
8.2
–
–
–
7.75
9.3
–
–
9.3
–
–
–
7.5
7.5
7.7
–
7.25
7.1
6.3
6.2
8.0
7.1
7.0
7.7
7.3
7.3
6.3
7.8
7.75
–
–
–
–
6.9
6.6
7.6
–
–
6.2
7.7
–
7.7
–
–
7.1
7.3
–
8.5
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.0
7.1
7.3
7.8
–
6.9
–
7.4
7.4
7.7
6.9
7.8
–
8.7
8.4
7.1
–
8.85
9.5
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.3
7.4
–
7.6
–
–
–
8.4
–
9.2
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.1
7.2
7.3
6.3
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.8
–
–
–
7.35
–
–
–
9.2
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.6
–
7.5
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.4
7.4
7.8
6.5
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.7
–
–
–
7.55
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
8.1
8.8
7.9
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
7.2
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
8.6
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
in SO2 (liq.)
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
3.8 (CH3)
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
16
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Table 2.6
13
C chemical shifts (ppm) for heteroaromatic ring carbons
Heterocycle
Pyridine
1-H-pyridinium
Pyridine N-oxide
1-Me-pyridinium
2-Pyridone
4-Pyridone
Quinoline
Isoquinoline
Pyridazine
1H-pyridazinium
pyrimidine
1-H-pyrimidinium
pyrazine
1H-pyrazinium
Cinnoline
Quinazoline
Quinoxaline
Phthalazine
1,2,3-Triazine
1,2,4-Triazine
1,3,5-Triazine
Pyrylium (BF4–)
2-Pyrone
2,6-Me2-4-pyrone
Coumarin
Chromone
Pyrrole
Thiophene
Furan
Indole
Oxindole
Benzo[b]furan
Benzo[b]thiophene
Indolizine
Imidazole
1-Methylimidazole
Thiazole
Oxazole
Benzimidazole
Benzothiazole
Benzoxazole
Pyrazole
Isothiazole
Isoxazole
Indazole
3-Methyl-1,2benzisothiazole
Purine
Uracil
Benzene
Anisole
Aniline
Nitrobenzene
Naphthalene
δ1
δ2
δ3
δ4
δ5
δ6
δ7
δ8
δ ring junction
δ ring junction
Other
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
153
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
152
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
100
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
150
143
139
146
165
140
151
–
–
–
158
152
146
143
–
161
146
–
–
–
166
169
162
166
161
156
117
126
144
124
179
145
126
114
135
138
154
151
144
155
153
–
–
–
–
163
124
129
126
129
121
116
122
143
153
152
–
–
–
–
146
–
–
–
–
158
–
128
117
114
117
113
108
127
110
102
36
107
124
113
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
135
157
150
133
–
136
148
126
146
142
176
136
120
128
138
156
159
–
–
125
156
–
–
150
–
–
161
143
180
144
177
–
–
–
121
124
122
124
–
122
130
143
125
110
123
121
106
123
105
120
–
–
–
–
–
107
–
1289
126
–
–
121
125
–
–
128
127
130
127
118
150
–
–
–
–
–
136
–
127
130
–
–
–
–
–
–
132
128
130
133
–
151
–
106
152
129
125
–
–
–
122
122
123
124
126
124
126
–
–
–
120
128
125
124
111
120
120
138
123
126
125
135
148
159
120
–
126
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
130
127
–
–
–
–
–
–
132
134
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
132
134
–
–
–
111
110
112
123
117
–
–
–
–
119
122
111
–
–
–
110
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
131
128
–
–
–
–
–
–
130
129
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
117
118
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
120
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
129 (4a)
136 (4a)
–
–
–
–
–
–
127 (4a)
135 (4a)
143 (4a)
126 (4a)
–
–
–
–
–
–
119 (4a)
125 (4a)
–
–
–
128 (3a)
125 (3a)
128 (3a)
140 (3a)
133 (8a)
–
–
–
–
–
153 (3a)
140 (3a)
–
–
–
123 (3a)
152 (7a)
–
–
–
–
–
–
149 (8a)
129 (8a)
–
–
–
–
–
–
151 (8a)
150 (8a)
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
154 (8a)
156 (8a)
–
–
–
136 (7a)
143 (7a)
155 (7a)
140 (7a)
–
–
–
–
–
–
134 (7a)
150 (7a)
–
–
–
140 (7a)
–
–
–
–
50 (CH3)
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
20 (CH3)
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
33 (CH3)
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
129
160
149
149
128
152
151
–
114
114
124
126
–
–
–
130
129
130
–
155
142
–
121
116
135
–
131
100
–
–
–
–
–
146
164
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
146
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
133 (4a)
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
122
125
124
Structures and Spectroscopic Properties of Aromatic Heterocycles 17
electron withdrawal by the heteroatom – for example it is the hydrogens on the α-carbons of pyridine that
are at lower field than that at the γ-carbon, and it is the signals for protons at the α-positions of furan that
are at lower field than those at the β-positions. Protons at the α-positions of pyrylium cations present the
lowest-field 1H signals. In direct contrast, the chemical shifts for C-protons on electron-rich heterocycles,
such as pyrrole, occur at much higher fields.
Coupling constants between 1,2-related (ortho) protons on heterocyclic systems vary considerably.
Typical values round six-membered systems show smaller values closer to the heteroatom(s). In fivemembered heterocycles, altogether smaller values are typically found, but again those involving a hydrogen
closer to the heteroatom are smaller, except in thiophenes, where the larger size of the sulfur atom influences the coupling constant. The magnitude of such coupling constants reflects the degree of double-bond
character (bond fixation) in a particular C–C bond.
The use of 15N NMR spectroscopy is of obvious relevance to the study of nitrogen-containing heterocycles – it can, for example, be used to estimate the hybridisation of nitrogen atoms.11
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
‘Physical Methods in Heterocyclic Chemistry’, Vols 1–5, Ed. Katritzky, A. R., Academic Press, New York, 1960–1972; ‘Comprehensive Heterocyclic
Chemistry. The Structure, Reactions, Synthesis, and Uses of Heterocyclic Compounds’, Ed. Katritzky, A. R. and Rees, C. W., Vols 1–8, Pergamon
Press, Oxford, 1984; ‘Comprehensive Heterocyclic Chemistry II. A Review of the Literature 1982–1995’, Ed. Katritzky, A. R., Rees, C. W. and
Scriven, E. F. V., Vols 1–11, Pergamon Press, 1996; ‘Comprehensive Heterocyclic Chemistry III. A Review of the Literature 1995–2007’, Eds.
Katritzky, A. R., Ramsden, C. A., Scriven, E. F. V. and Taylor, R. J. K., Vols 1–15, Elsevier, 2008.
‘Frontier Orbitals and Organic Chemical Reactions’, Fleming, I., Wiley-Interscience, 1976.
‘Aromaticity of heterocycles’, Cook, M. J., Katritzky, A. R., and Linda, P., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1974, 17, 257; ‘Aromaticity of heterocycles:
experimental realisation of Dewar–Breslow definition of aromaticity’, Hosmane, R. A. and Liebman, J. F., Tetrahedron Lett., 1991, 32, 3949; ‘The
relationship between bond type, bond order and bond lengths. A re-evaluation of the aromaticity of some heterocyclic molecules’, Box, V. G. S.,
Heterocycles, 1991, 32, 2023; ‘Heterocyclic aromaticity’, Katritzky, A. R., Karelson, M. and Malhotra, N., Heterocycles, 1991, 32, 127; ‘The concept
of aromaticity in heterocyclic chemistry’, Simkin, B. Ya., Minkin, V. I. and Glukhovtsev, M. N., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1993, 56, 303.
‘In solution at high dilution, or in the gas phase, hydroxypyridine tautomers are more important or even dominant’, Beak, P., Covington, J. B., Smith,
S. G., White, J. M. and Zeigler, J. M., J. Org. Chem., 1980, 45, 1354.
Fringuelli, F., Marino, G., Taticchi, A. and Grandolini, G., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1974, 332.
‘The tautomerism of heterocycles’, Elguero, J., Marzin, C., Katritzky, A. R. and Linda, P., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., Supplement 1, 1976; ‘Energies
and alkylations of tautomeric heterocyclic compounds: old problems – new answers’, Beak, P., Acc. Chem. Res., 1977, 10, 186; ‘Prototropic tautomerism of heteroaromatic compounds’, Katritzky, A. R., Karelson, M. and Harris, P. A., Heterocycles, 1991, 32, 329.
‘Recent developments in ring-chain tautomerism. I. Intramolecular reversible addition reactions to the C=O group’, Valters, R. E., Fülöp, F.
and Korbonits, D., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1995, 64, 251; ‘Recent developments in ring-chain tautomerism. II. Intramolecular reversible addition
reactions to the C=N, C=C=C and C=C groups’, idem, ibid., 1997, 66, 1; ‘Tautomerism of heterocycles: five-membered rings with two or more
heteroatoms’, Minkin, V. I., Garnovskii, A. D., Elguero, J., Katritzky, A. R. and Denisko, O. V., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 2000, 76, 159; ‘Tautomerism involving other than five- and six-membered rings’, Claramunt, R. M., Elguero, J. and Katritzky, A. R., ibid., 2000, 77, 1; ‘Tautomerism of
heterocycles: condensed five-six, five-five and six-six ring systems with heteroatoms in both rings’, Shcherbakova, I., Elguero, J. and Katritzky, A.
R., ibid., 2000, 77, 52; ‘The tautomerism of heterocycles. Six-membered heterocycles: Annular tautomerism’, Stanovnik, B., Tisler, M., Katritzky,
A. R. and Denisko, O. V., ibid., 2001, 81, 254; ‘The tautomerism of heterocycles: substituent tautomerism of six-membered heterocycles’, ibid.,
2006, 91, 1.
‘Mesoionic compounds’, Ollis, W. D. and Ramsden, C. A., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1976, 19, 1; ‘Heterocyclic betaine derivatives of alternant
hydrocarbons’, Ramsden, C. A., ibid., 1980, 26, 1; ‘Mesoionic heterocycles (1976–1980)’, Newton, C. G. and Ramsden, C. A., Tetrahedron, 1982,
18
9
10
11
Heterocyclic Chemistry
38, 2965; ‘Six-membered mesoionic heterocycles of the m-quinodimethane dianion type’, Friedrichsen, W., Kappe, T. and Böttcher, A., Heterocycles,
1982, 19, 1083.
‘Applications of Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy in Organic Chemistry’, Jackman, L. M. and Sternhell, S., Pergamon Press, 1969; ‘Carbon13 NMR Spectroscopy’, Breitmaier, E. and Voelter, W., VCH, 1990.
Both proton and carbon chemical shifts are solvent dependent – the figures given in the tables are a guide to the relative shift positions of proton and
carbon signals in these heterocycles.
von Philipsborn, W. and Müller, R., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1986, 25, 383.
3
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
This chapter describes in general terms the types of reactivity found in the typical six- and five-membered
aromatic heterocycles. We discuss electrophilic addition (to nitrogen) and electrophilic, nucleophilic and
radical substitution chemistry. This chapter also has discussion of ortho-quinodimethanes, in the heterocyclic context. Organometallic derivatives of heterocycles, and transition metal (especially palladium)catalysed chemistry of heterocycles, are so important that we deal with these aspects separately, in
Chapter 4. Emphasis on the typical chemistry of individual heterocyclic systems is to be found in the
summary chapters (7, 10, 13, 15, 19 and 23), and a more detailed examination of typical heterocyclic
reactivity and many more examples for particular heterocyclic systems are to be found in the chapters –
‘Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis’, etc.
3.1
Electrophilic Addition at Nitrogen
Many heterocyclic compounds contain a ring nitrogen. In some, especially five-membered heterocycles,
the nitrogen may carry a hydrogen. It is vital to the understanding of the chemistry of such nitrogen-containing heterocycles to know whether, and to what extent, they are basic – will form salts with protic acids
or complexes with Lewis acids – and for heterocycles with N-hydrogen, to what extent they are acidic –
will lose the N-hydrogen as a proton to an appropriately strong base (see 3.5). As a measure of these
properties, we use pKa values to express the acidity of heterocycles with N-hydrogen and pKaH values to
express base strength. The lower the pKa value the more acidic; the higher the pKaH value the more basic.
It may be enough to simply remember this trend, but a little more detail is given below.
For an acid AH dissociating in water:
The corresponding equation for a base involves the dissociation of the conjugate acid of the base, so we
use pKaH:
Heterocycles which contain an imine unit (C=N) as part of their ring structure, pyridines, quinolines,
isoquinolines, 1,2- and 1,3-azoles, etc., do not utilise the nitrogen lone pair in their aromatic π-system (cf.
2.2) and therefore it is available for donation to electrophiles, just as in any simpler amine. In other words,
such heterocycles are basic and will react with protons, or other electrophilic species, by addition at nitrogen. In many instances the products from such additions – salts – are isolable.
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
20
Heterocyclic Chemistry
For the reversible addition of a proton, the position of equilibrium depends on the pKaH of the heterocycle,1 and this in turn is influenced by the substituents present on the ring: electron-releasing groups
enhance the basicity and electron-withdrawing substituents reduce the basic strength. The pKaH of simple
pyridines is of the order of 5, while those for 1,2- and 1,3-azoles depend on the character of the other
heteroatom: pyrazole and imidazole, with two nitrogen atoms, have values of 2.5 and 7.1, respectively.
Related to basicity, but certainly not always mirroring it, is the N-nucleophilicity of imine-containing
heterocycles. Here, the presence of substituents adjacent to the nitrogen can have a considerable effect on
how easily reaction with, for example, alkyl halides takes place, and indeed whether nitrogen attacks at
carbon, forming N+-alkyl salts,2 or by deprotonation, bringing about a 1,2-dehydrohalogenation of the
halide, the heterocycle then being converted into an N+-hydrogen salt. The classical study of the slowing
of N-alkylation by the introduction of steric interference at α-positions of pyridines showed one methyl to
slow the rate by about threefold, whereas 2,6-dimethyl substitution slowed the rate between 12 and 40
times.3 Taking this to an extreme, 2,6-di-t-butylpyridine will not react at all with iodomethane; the very
reactive methyl fluorosulfonate will N-methylate it, but only under high pressure.4 The quantitative assessment of reactivity at nitrogen must always take into account both steric (especially at the α-positions) and
electronic effects: 3-methylpyridine reacts faster (×1.6), but 3-chloropyridine reacts slower (×0.14) than
pyridine. In bicyclic molecules, peri substituents have a significant effect on the relative rates of reaction
with iodomethane: for pyridine, isoquinoline (no peri hydrogen), quinoline and 8-methylquinoline, rates
are 50, 69, 8 and 0.008, respectively.
Other factors can influence the rate of quaternisation: all the diazines react with iodomethane more slowly
than does pyridine. Pyridazine, much more weakly basic (pKaH 2.3) than pyridine, reacts with iodomethane
faster than the other diazines, a result which is ascribed to the ‘α effect’, i.e. the increased nucleophilicity
is deemed to be due to electron repulsion between the two immediately adjacent nitrogen lone pairs.5 Reaction rates for iodomethane with pyridazine, pyrimidine and pyrazine are respectively 0.25, 0.044 and 0.036,
relative to the rate with pyridine.
3.2
Electrophilic Substitution at Carbon6
The study of aromatic heterocyclic reactivity can be said to have begun with the results of electrophilic
substitution processes – these were traditionally the means for the introduction of substitutents onto heterocylic rings. To a considerable extent, that methodology has been superseded, especially for the introduction of carbon substituents, by methods relying on the formation of organometallic nucleophiles (4.1) and
on palladium-catalysed processes (4.2). Nonetheless, the reaction of heterocycles with electrophilic reagents
is still extremely useful in many cases, particularly for electron-rich, five-membered heterocycles.
3.2.1 Aromatic Electrophilic Substitution: Mechanism
Electrophilic substitution of aromatic (and heteroaromatic) molecules proceeds via a two-step sequence,
initial addition (of El+) giving a positively charged intermediate (a σ-complex, or Wheland intermediate),
then elimination (normally of H+), of which the former is usually the slower (rate-determining) step.
Under most circumstances such substitutions are irreversible and the product ratio is determined by kinetic
control.
Electrophilic substitution of aromatic compounds
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
21
3.2.2 Six-Membered Heterocycles
An initial broad division must be made in considering heteroaromatic electrophilic substitution, into those
heterocycles that are basic and those that are not, for, in the case of the former, the interaction of the nitrogen lone pair with the electrophile (cf. 3.1), or indeed with any other electrophilic species in the proposed
reaction mixture (protons in a nitrating mixture, or aluminium chloride in a Friedel–Crafts combination),
will take place far faster than any C-substitution, thus converting the substrate into a positively charged
salt and therefore enormously reducing its susceptibility to attack by El+ at carbon. It is worth recalling the
rate reduction attendant upon the change from benzene to the N,N,N-trimethylanilinium cation (PhN+Me3),
where the electrophilic substitution rate goes down by a factor of 108, even though in this instance the
charged atom is only attached to, and not a component of, the aromatic ring. Thus all heterocycles with a
pyridine-type nitrogen (i.e. those containing C=N) do not easily undergo C-electrophilic substitution,
unless: (i) there are other substituents on the ring which ‘activate’ it for attack or (ii) the molecule has
another, fused benzene ring in which substitution can take place. For example, simple pyridines do not
undergo many useful electrophilic substitutions, but quinolines and isoquinolines undergo substitution in
the benzene ring. It has been estimated that the intrinsic reactivity of pyridine (i.e. not protonated) to electrophilic substitution is around 107 times less than that of benzene, that is to say, about the same as that of
nitrobenzene.
When quinoline or isoquinoline undergo nitration in the benzene ring, the actual species attacked is the
N-protonated heterocycle and even though substitution is taking place in the benzene ring, it must necessarily proceed through a doubly charged intermediate; this results in a much slower rate of substitution
than for naphthalene, the obvious comparison – the 5- and 8-positions of quinolinium are attacked at a rate
about 1010 times slower than the 1-position of naphthalene, and it is estimated that the nitration of pyridinium cation is at least 105 slower still.7 A study of the bromination of methylpyridines in acidic solution
allowed an estimate of 10−13 for the partial rate factor for bromination of a pyridinium cation.8
‘Activating’ substitutents,9 i.e. groups that can release electrons either inductively or especially mesomerically, make the electrophilic substitution of pyridine rings to which they are attached faster; for example
4-pyridone nitrates at the 3-position via the O-protonated salt.10 In order to understand the activation, it is
helpful to view the species attacked as a (protonated) phenol-like substrate. Electrophilic attack on neutral
pyridones is best visualised as attack on a carbonyl-conjugated enamine (N–C=C–C=O). Dimethoxypyridines also undergo nitration via their cations, but the balance is often delicate, for example 2-aminopyridine
brominates at C-5, in acidic solution, via the free base.11
Electrophilic attack on 4-pyridones at C-3/5
22
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Pyridines carrying activating substituents at C-2 are attacked at C-3/C-5, those with such groups at C-3
are attacked at C-2/C-6, and not at C-4, whilst those with substituents at C-4 undergo attack at C-3.
Positions of electrophilic attack on pyridines carrying activating substituents
Substituents that reduce the basicity of a pyridine nitrogen can also influence the susceptibility of the
heterocycle to electrophilic substitution, in these cases by increasing the proportion of neutral (more reactive) pyridine present at equilibrium: 2,6-dichloropyridine nitrates at C-3, as the free base, and only 103
times more slowly than does 1,3-dichlorobenzene. As a rule-of-thumb: (i) pyridines with a pKaH > 1 will
nitrate as cations, slowly unless strongly activated, and at a position dictated by the substituent, (ii) weakly
basic pyridines, pKaH < −2.5, nitrate as free bases, the position of attack again depending on the influence
of the substituent.11 Pyridines carrying strongly electron-withdrawing substituents, or heterocycles with
additional heteroatoms, diazines for example, are so deactivated that electrophilic substitutions do not take
place, but again with the caveat that activating substituents do allow such substitutions in oxy- and
amino-diazines.
3.2.3 Five-Membered Heterocycles
For five-membered, electron-rich heterocycles, the utility of electrophilic substitutions is much greater.12
Heterocycles such as pyrrole, thiophene and furan undergo a range of electrophilic substitutions with great
ease, at either type of ring position, but with a preference for attack adjacent to the heteroatom – at their
α-positions.
Electrophilic subsitution of pyrrole at an α-position
These substitutions are facilitated by electron release from the heteroatom: pyrroles are more reactive
than furans, which are in turn more reactive than thiophenes. Quantitative comparisons13 of the relative
reactivities of the three heterocycles vary from electrophile to electrophile, but for trifluoroacetylation, for
example, the pyrrole:furan:thiophene ratio is: 5 × 107 : 1.5 × 102 : 1;14 in formylation, furan is 12 times more
reactive than thiophene,15 and for acetylation, the value is 9.3.16 In hydrogen exchange (deuteriodeprotonation), the partial rate factors for the α and β positions of N-methylpyrrole17 are 3.9 × 1010 and 2.0 × 1010
respectively; for this same process, the values for furan are 1.6 × 108 and 3.2 × 104 and for thiophene,
3.9 × 108 and 1.0 × 105 respectively,18 and in a study of thiophene, α:β ratios ranging from 100 : 1 to 1000 : 1
were found for different electrophiles.19 Relative substrate reactivity parallels positional selectivity i.e. the
α:β ratio decreases in the order furan > thiophene > pyrrole.20 Nice illustrations of these relative reactivities
are found in acylations of compounds containing two different systems linked together.21
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
23
The positional selectivity of attack on pyrroles can be completely altered by the presence of bulky groups
on nitrogen: 1-(t-butyldimethylsilyl)pyrrole and 1-(tri-i-propylsilyl)pyrrole are attacked exclusively at their
β-positions.22
Indoles are only slightly less reactive than pyrroles, electrophilic substitution taking place in the heterocyclic ring, at a β-position; in acetylation using a Vilsmeier combination (N,N-dimethylacetamide/
phosgene), the rate ratio compared with pyrrole is 1:3.23 In contrast to pyrrole, there is a very large difference in reactivity between the two hetero-ring positions in indoles: 2600:1, β:α in Vilsmeier acylation.
With reference to benzene, indole reacts at its β-position around 5 × 1013 times as fast.24 Again, these
differences can be illustrated conveniently using an example25 that contains two types of system linked
together.
The reactivity of an indole is very comparable to that of a phenol: typical of phenols is their ability to
be substituted even by weak electrophiles, like benzenediazonium cations, and indeed indoles (and pyrroles)
also undergo such couplings; depending on pH, indoles can undergo such processes via a small equilibrium
concentration of anion formed by loss of the N-proton (cf. 3.5); of course this is an even more rapid process,
shown to be 108 faster than for the neutral heterocycle.26 The Mannich substitution (electrophile: CH2=N+Me2)
of 5- and 6-hydroxy-indoles, takes place ortho to the phenolic activating group on the benzene ring, and
not at the indole β-position.27 Comparisons of the rates of substitution of the pairs furan/benzo[b]furan and
thiophene/benzo[b]thiophene showed the bicyclic systems to be less reactive than the monocyclic heterocycles, the exact degree of difference varying from electrophile to electrophile.28
Finally, in the 1,2- and 1,3-azoles there is a fascinating interplay of the propensities of an electron-rich
five-membered heterocycle with an imine basic nitrogen. This latter reduces the reactivity of the heterocycle
towards electrophilic attack at carbon, both by inductive and mesomeric withdrawal, and importantly by
addition of electrophilic species to the imine nitrogen (e.g. salt formation in acidic media). As an example,
depending on acidity, the nitration of pyrazole can proceed by attack on the pyrazolium cation29 or on the
free base.30 A study of acid-catalysed exchange showed the order: pyrazole > isoxazole > isothiazole, paralleling pyrrole > furan > thiophene, but each diazole is much less reactive than the corresponding heterocycle
without the azomethine nitrogen, but, equally, each is still more reactive than benzene, the partial rate
factors for exchange at their 4-positions being 6.3 × 109, 2.0 × 104 and 4.0 × 103 respectively. Thiophene
is 3 × 105 times more rapidly nitrated than 4-methylthiazole.31 The mono- and dinitration of a 2-(thien-2-yl)
thiazole illustrates the relative reactivities.32
24
3.3
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Nucleophilic Substitution at Carbon33
3.3.1 Aromatic Nucleophilic Substitution: Mechanism
Nucleophilic substitution of aromatic compounds proceeds via an addition (of Nu−) then elimination (of a
negatively charged entity, most often Hal−) two-step sequence, of which the former is usually rate-determining (the SN(AE) mechanism: Substitution Nucleophilic Addition Elimination). It is the stabilisation
(delocalisation of charge) of the negatively charged intermediates (Meisenheimer complexes) that is the
key to such processes, for example in reactions of ortho- and para-chloronitro-benzenes, the nitro group
is involved in the charge dispersal.
Aromatic nucleophilic substitution via an addition/elimination sequence
3.3.2 Six-Membered Heterocycles
In the heterocyclic field, the displacement of a good leaving group, often halide, by a nucleophile is a very
important general process, especially for six-membered systems. In the chemistry of five-membered aromatic heterocycles, such processes only come into play in situations such as where, as in benzene chemistry,
the leaving group is activated by an ortho- or para-nitro group, or in the azoles, where the leaving group
is attached to the carbon of the imine unit in analogy with the six-membered imines.
The α- and γ-positions of a six-membered halo-azine, a 2-, 4- or 6-halo-pyridine being the prototype,
are activated for the initial nucleophilic addition step by two factors: (i) inductive and mesomeric withdrawal of electrons by the nitrogen and (ii) inductive withdrawal of electrons by the halogen. Additionally,
in the intermediates formed, the negative charge resides largely on the nitrogen: α- and γ-halides are much
more reactive to nucleophilic displacement than β-halides.
A quantitative comparison for displacements of chloride with sodium methoxide in methanol showed
the 2- and 4-chloropyridines to react at roughly the same rate as 4-chloronitrobenzene, with the γ-isomer
somewhat more reactive than the α-halide.34 It is notable that even 3-chloropyridine, where only inductive
activation can operate, is appreciably more reactive than chlorobenzene.
Rates of displacement of chloride by MeO− relative to chlorobenzene, at 50 °C
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
25
The presence of a formal positive charge on the nitrogen, as in N-oxides and pyridinium salts, has a
further very considerable enhancing effect on the rate of nucleophilic substitutions, N-oxidation having a
smaller effect than quaternisation: in the latter there is a full formal positive charge on the molecule but
N-oxides are overall electrically neutral. In reactions with methoxide, the 2-, 3- and 4-chloropyridine Noxides are 1.9 × 104, 1.1 × 105, and 1.1 × 103 times more reactive than the corresponding chloropyridines,
and displacements of halide in the 2-, 3- and 4-chloro-1-methylpyridinium salts are 4.6 × 1012, 2.9 × 108,
and 5.7 × 109 times more rapid. Another significant point to emerge from these rate studies concerns the
relative rate enhancements, at the three ring positions: the effect of the charge is much greater at an α- than
at a γ-position, such that in the salts the order is 2 > 4 > 3, as opposed to both neutral pyridines, where
the order of reactivity is 4 > 2 > 3, and N-oxides, where the α-positions have about the same reactivity as
the γ-positions.35 The utility of a nitro group as a leaving group (nitrite) in heterocyclic chemistry is emphasised by a comparison of its relative reactivity to nucleophilic displacement: 4-nitropyridine is about 1100
times more reactive than 4-bromopyridine. Sulfones are also highly reactive and widely used leaving
groups. A comparison of the rates of displacement of 4-methylsulfonylpyridine with its N-methyl quaternary salt showed a rise in rate by a factor of 7 × 108.36 Although methoxide is not generally a good leaving
group, when attached to a pyridinium salt it is only about four times less easily displaced than iodide,
bromide and chloride; fluoride in the same situation is displaced about 250 times faster than the other
halides.37
A substantial study of the activating effects of other substituents on the displacement of 2-halo-pyridines
is very instructive and some examples are shown below. The activating effect of trifluoromethyl is particularly notable.38
Relative rates of displacement of pyridine-2-fluoride by EtO− in EtOH
Relative rates of displacement of pyridine-2-chloride by EtO− in EtOH
In certain situations, particularly with relatively poor nucleophiles such as anilines, reaction rates can be
enhanced considerably by the addition of acids, such as HCl, CF3CO2H or BF3, to the reaction mixture, so
that the much more reactive protonated haloazine is the substrate. Due to the relatively low basicity of
anilines, sufficient free base is present to act as the nucleophile.
Turning to bicyclic systems, and a study of reaction with ethoxide, a small increase in the rate of reaction
relative to pyridines is found for chloroquinolines at comparable positions.39 In the bicyclic compounds,
quaternisation again greatly increases the rate of nucleophilic substitution, having a larger effect (∼107) at
C-2 than at C-4 (∼105).40
26
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Relative rates of displacement of chloride by EtO− at 20 °C
Diazines with halogen α and γ to nitrogen are much more reactive than similar pyridines, for example
2-chloropyrimidine is ∼106 times more reactive than 2-chloropyridine.
3.3.3 Vicarious Nucleophilic Substitution (VNS Substitution)41
A process known as ‘Vicarious Nucleophilic Substitution’ (VNS) of hydrogen has been widely applied to
carboaromatic and to heteroaromatic compounds. In general form, the process requires the presence of a
nitro group on the substrate, which permits the addition of a carbon nucleophile, of the form (X)(Y)(R)C−,
where X is a potential leaving group and Y is an anion-stabilising group that permits the formation of the
carbanion. Most often X is a halogen and Y can be arylsulfonyl, ester or benzotriazole (which can serve
both as the anion stabilizing substituent and also as leaving group). A typical sequence is shown below:
following addition, ortho or para to the nitro group, elimination of HX takes place to form a conjugated,
non-aromatic nitronate, which on reprotonation returns the molecule to aromaticity and produces the substituted product. Excess of the base used to generate the initial carbanion must be employed in order to
drive the process forward by subsequently bringing about the irreversible elimination of HX from the
nitronate salt.
Vicarious nucleophilic substitution (VNS) of aromatic compounds
Three VNS sequences are shown below, each illustrating a different aspect. In the first example, the
anion-stabilising group (Y) (trifluoromethanesulfonyl) also serves as the leaving group (X).42 The second
example shows the operation of a VNS substitution in a five-membered heterocycle with the nucleophile
(X=Cl; Y=SO2Ph) attacking at C-5, vinylogously conjugated to the nitro group.43 The third example is
somewhat unusual in that the attacking nucleophile (X=Cl; Y=SO2p-Tol) does not even attack the nitrosubstituted ring: addition occurs at C-2 in 6-nitroquinoxaline, for this produces an anion stabilised by
delocalisation involving both N-1 and the nitro group.44
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
3.4
27
Radical Substitution at Carbon45
Both electron-rich and electron-poor heterocyclic rings are susceptible to substitution of hydrogen by free
radicals. Although electrically neutral, radicals exhibit varying degrees of nucleophilic or electrophilic
character and this has a very significant effect on their reactivity towards different heterocyclic types. These
electronic properties are a consequence of the interaction between the SOMO (Singly Occupied Molecular
Orbital) of the radical and either the HOMO, or the LUMO, of the substrate, depending on their relative
energies; these interactions are usefully compared with charge-transfer interactions.
Nucleophilic radicals carry cation-stabilising groups on the radical carbon, allowing electron density to
be transferred from the radical to an electron-deficient heterocycle; they react, therefore, only with electronpoor heterocycles and will not attack electron-rich systems: examples of such radicals are •CH2OH, alkyl•,
and acyl•. Substitution by such a radical can be represented in the following general way:
Electrophilic radicals, conversely, are those which would form stabilised anions on gaining an electron,
and therefore react readily with electron-rich systems; examples are •CF3 and •CH(CO2Et)2. Substitution by
such a radical can be represented in the following general way:
Aryl radicals can show both types of reactivity. A considerable effort (mainly older work) was devoted
to substitutions by aryl radicals; they react with electron-rich and electron-poor systems at about the same
rate, but often with poor regioselectivity.46
3.4.1 Reactions of Heterocycles with Nucleophilic Radicals
The Minisci Reaction47
The reaction of nucleophilic radicals, under acidic conditions, with heterocycles containing an imine unit
is by far the most important and synthetically useful radical substitution of heterocyclic compounds. Pyridines, quinolines, diazines, imidazoles, benzothiazoles and purines are amongst the systems that have been
shown to react with a wide range of nucleophilic radicals, selectively at positions α and γ to the nitrogen,
with replacement of hydrogen. Acidic conditions are essential because N-protonation of the heterocycle
28
Heterocyclic Chemistry
both greatly increases its reactivity and promotes regioselectivity towards a nucleophilic radical, most of
which hardly react at all with the neutral base. A particularly useful feature of the process is that it can
be used to introduce acyl groups, directly, i.e. to effect the equivalent of a Friedel–Crafts substitution –
impossible under normal conditions for such systems (cf. 3.2.2). Tertiary radicals are more stable, but also
more nucleophilic and therefore more reactive than methyl radicals in Minisci reactions. The majority
of Minisci substitutions have been carried out in aqueous, or at least partially aqueous, media, making
isolation of organic products particularly convenient.
Several methods have been employed to generate the required carbon-centred radical, many depending
on the initial formation of oxy or methyl radicals, which then abstract hydrogen or iodine from suitable
substrates, as illustrated below.48 The re-aromatisation of the intermediate radical-cation is usually brought
about by its reaction with excess of the oxidant used to form the initial radical.
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
29
In contrast to the oxidative generation of radicals described above, reductions of alkyl iodides using
tris(trimethylsilyl)silane also produces alkyl radicals under conditions suitable for Minisci-type substitution.49 Carboxylic acids (α-keto acids) are also useful precursors for alkyl50 and/or acyl51 radicals via
silver-catalysed peroxide oxidation, or from their 1-hydroxypyridine-2-thione derivatives,52 the latter in
non-aqueous conditions.
N,N-Dialkyl-formamides can be converted into either alkyl or acyl radicals, depending on the
conditions.53
An instructive and useful process is the two-component coupling of an alkene with an electrophilic
radical: the latter will of course not react with the protonated heterocycle, but after addition to the alkene,
a nucleophilic radical is generated, which will react.54
When more than one reactive position is available in a heterocyclic substrate, as is often the case for
pyridines for example, there are potential problems with regioselectivity or/and disubstitution (since the
product of the first substitution is often as reactive as the starting material). Regioselectivity is dependent
to a certain extent on the nature of the attacking radical and the solvent, but may be difficult to control
satisfactorily.55
30
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A point to note is that for optimum yields, radical substitutions are often not taken to full conversion (of
starting heterocycle), but as product and starting material are often easily separated this is usually not a
problem. Ways of avoiding disubstitution include control of pH (when the product is less basic than the
starting material) or the use of a two-phase medium to allow removal of a more lipophilic product from
the aqueous acidic reaction phase.
Very selective monosubstitution can also be achieved by the ingenious use of an N+-methoxy quaternary
salt, in place of the usual protonic salt. Here, re-aromatisation is the result of loss of methanol, leaving as
a product a much less reactive, neutral pyridine.56
In addition to substitution of hydrogen, ipso replacement of nitro, sulfonyl and acyl substituents can
occur, and may compete with normal substitution.57
3.4.2 Reactions with Electrophilic Radicals
Although much less well developed than the Minisci reaction, substitution with electrophilic radicals
can be used in some cases to achieve selective reaction in electron-rich heterocycles.58
3.5
Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen59
Pyrroles, imidazoles, pyrazoles and benzo-fused derivatives that have a free N-hydrogen have pKa values
for the loss of the N-hydrogen as a proton in the region of 14–18. This is to say that they can be completely
converted into N-anions by reaction with strong bases like sodium hydride or n-butyllithium. In reactivity
terms, these N-anions are nucleophilic at the nitrogen, in direct contrast to the neutral heterocycle, and thus
provide the means by which the nitrogen of azoles can be substituted, for example by reaction with alkyl
halides, or with other electrophiles that can provide protection/masking of the nitrogen, the N-substituent
to be subsequently removed (see 4.2.10 for palladium-catalysed azole N-arylations). Similar N-substitutions
can also be achieved with bases that generate only an equilibrium (low) concentration of the N-anion.
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
3.6
31
Oxidation and Reduction60 of Heterocyclic Rings
Generally speaking, the electron-poor heterocycles are more resistant to oxidative degradation than are
electron-rich systems – it is usually possible to oxidise alkyl side-chains attached to electron-poor heterocycles whilst leaving the ring intact; this is not generally true of electron-rich, five-membered systems.
The conversion of monocyclic heteroaromatic systems into reduced, or partially reduced derivatives is
generally possible, especially in acidic solutions, where it is a cation that is the actual species reduced. It
follows that the six-membered types, which usually have a basic nitrogen, are more easily reduced than
the electron-rich, five-membered counterparts. Heteroaromatic quaternary salts are likewise easily reduced.
3.7
ortho-Quinodimethanes in Heterocyclic Compound Synthesis61
The generation then trapping of ortho-quinodimethanes, in both intermolecular and intramolecular reactions, is a significant method for the construction of polycyclic heterocyclic compounds. This section
describes the most important methods for the generation of such species, and gives some examples of their
trapping. From the point of view of ring construction, the most important trapping reactions are those in
which the ortho-quinodimethane acts as a diene in Diels–Alder cycloadditions, thereby regaining a fully
aromatic heterocyclic ring, as illustrated below.62 The unstable and reactive ortho-quinodimethanes are not
isolated, but are generated in the presence of the trapping reactant. Their adducts with sulfur dioxide can
be a convenient way in which to store ortho-quinodimethanes generated by other means.61
The ease with which an ortho-quinodimethane can be formed is related to the stability of the
aromatic heterocycle from which it is derived and to the degree of double-bond character between the ortho
ring carbons. The first of these aspects can be nicely illustrated by comparing the thiophene 2,3quinodimethane63 with its furan counterpart64 – the latter is more stable than the former – the thiophenederived species has much more to lose in its formation from an aromatic thiophene (and much more to
gain by reacting to regain that aromaticity) than does the latter.
Relative stabilities of heterocyclic ortho-quinodimethanes
ortho-Quinodimethanes are much easier to produce if the bond between the ortho ring carbons in the
precursor has appreciable double-bond character. Thus, in five-membered heterocycles, it is much easier
to produce a 2,3-quinodimethane, than a 3,4-quinodimethane. Similarly, in bicyclic six-membered systems,
for example quinolines,65 it is much easier to produce 3,4-quinodimethanes than 2,3-quinodimethanes,
structures for which imply a loss of resonance stabilisation in the second ring.
Three main strategies have been employed for the production of heterocyclic ortho-quinodimethanes:
a 1,4-elimination, the chelotropic loss of sulfur dioxide from a 2,5-dihydrothiophene S,S-dioxide
and the electrocyclic ring opening of a cyclobuteno-heterocycle; each of these is illustrated diagramatically
below.
32
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Generation of heterocyclic ortho-quinodimethanes
The use of cyclobuteno-heterocycles is of course dependent on a convenient synthesis (for an example,
see 14.13.2.5), but when available, they are excellent precursors, only rather moderate heating being
required for ring opening, as shown by the example below, in which the initial Diels–Alder adduct is aromatised by reaction with excess quinone.66
1,4-Eliminations have involved 1,2-bis(bromomethyl)-heterocycles with iodide,67 ortho(trimethylsilylmethyl) heterenemethyl ammonium salts,68 ortho-(trimethylsilylmethyl) heterenecarbinol
mesylates, each with a source of fluoride, and ortho-(tri-n-butylstannylmethyl) heterenecarbinol acetates
with a Lewis acid.69
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
33
An extensively developed route involves loss of a proton from indol-3-ylcarboxaldehyde imines (or their
pyrrolic counterparts70), following reaction with an acylating agent, as illustrated below.71
The extrusion of sulfur dioxide from heterocyclic sulfones is probably the most generally used method
for the generation of ortho-quinodimethanes, and many examples have been reported. Such sulfones are
generally stable and easy to synthesise by various routes. In addition, the acidity of the protons adjacent
to the sulfone unit allows for base-promoted introduction of substituents, before thermolytic extrusion and
the Diels–Alder step. Two examples of sulfur dioxide extrusion are shown below.72
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40, 25) are rather similar for all bases; such measurements, though of considerable theoretical interest, are of limited value in considerations of solution chemistry.
‘The quaternisation of heterocyclic compounds’, Duffin, G. F., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1964, 3, 1; ‘Quaternisation of heteroaromatic compounds:
quantitative aspects’, Zoltewicz, J. A. and Deady, L. W., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1978, 22, 71; ‘The quantitative analysis of steric effects in heteroaromatics’, Gallo, R., Roussel, C. and Berg, U., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1988, 43, 173.
Brown, H. C. and Cahn, A., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1955, 77, 1715.
Okamoto, Y. and Lee, K. I., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1975, 97, 4015.
Zoltewicz, J. A. and Deady, L. W., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1972, 94, 2765.
‘Electrophilic substitution of heterocycles: quantitative aspects’; ‘Part I, Electrophilic substitution reactions; Part II, Five-membered heterocyclic rings;
Part III, Six-membered heterocyclic rings’, Katritzky, A. R. and Taylor, R., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1990, 47, 1; ‘Halogenation of heterocyclic
compounds’, Eisch, J. J., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1966, 7, 1; ‘Halogenation of heterocycles: I. Five-membered rings’, Grimmett, M. R., ibid., 1993,
57, 291; ‘II. Six- and seven-membered rings’, ibid., 58, 271.
Austin, M. W. and Ridd, J. H., J. Chem. Soc., 1963, 4204.
Gilow, H. M. and Ridd, J. H., J. Org. Chem., 1974, 39, 3481.
‘Substitution in the pyridine series: effect of substituents’, Abramovitch, R. A. and Saha, J. G., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1966, 6, 229.
‘Mechanisms and rates of the electrophilic substitution reactions of heterocycles’, Katritzky, A. R. and Fan, W.-Q., Heterocycles, 1992, 34, 2179.
‘Electrophilic substitution of heteroaromatic six-membered rings’, Katritzky, A. R. and Johnson, C. D., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1967, 6, 608.
‘Electrophilic substitutions of five-membered rings’, Marino, G., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1971, 13, 235.
Marino, G., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1972, 9, 817.
Clementi, S. and Marino, G., Tetrahedron, 1969, 25, 4599.
Clementi, S., Fringuelli, F., Linda, P., Marino, G., Savelli, G. and Taticchi, A., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1973, 2097.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
Quantitative comparisons must not ignore the considerable activating effect of a methyl group on an aromatic ring, whether attached to carbon or to
nitrogen.
Bean, G. P., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1971, 421; Clementi, S., Forsythe, P. P., Johnson, C. D. and Katritzky, A. R., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin
Trans. 2, 1973, 1675; Clementi, S., Forsythe, P. P., Johnson, C. D., Katritzky, A. R. and Terem, B., ibid., 1974, 399.
Clementi, S., Linda, P. and Marino, G., J. Chem. Soc. (B), 1970, 1153.
Clementi, S. and Marino, G., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1972, 71.
Gol’dfarb, Y. L. and Danyushevskii, Y. L., J. Gen. Chem. USSR (Engl. Transl.), 1961, 31, 3410; Boukou-Poba, J.-P., Farnier, M. and Guilard, R.,
Can. J. Chem., 1981, 59, 2962.
Muchowski, J. M. and Naef, R., Helv. Chim. Acta, 1984, 67, 1168; Simchen, G. and Majchrzak, M. W., Tetrahedron, 1985, 26, 5035.
Cipiciani, A., Clementi, S., Linda, P., Marino, G. and Savelli, G., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1977, 1284.
Laws, A. P. and Taylor, R., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1987, 591.
Holla, B. S. and Ambekar, S. Y., Indian J. Chem., Sect. B, 1976, 14B, 579.
Challis, B. C. and Rzepa, H. S., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1975, 1209; Butler, A. R., Pogorzelec, P. and Shepherd, P. R., idem., 1977, 1452.
Monti, S. A. and Johnson, W. O., Tetrahedron, 1970, 26, 3685.
Clementi, S., Linda, P. and Marino, G., J. Chem. Soc., (B), 1971, 79.
Austin, M. W., Blackborrow, J. R., Ridd, J. H. and Smith, B. V., J. Chem. Soc., 1965, 1051.
Austin, M. W., Chem. Ind., 1982, 57.
Poite, C., Roggero, J., Dou, H. J. M., Vernin, G. and Metzsger, J., Bull. Soc. Chim. Fr., 1972, 162.
Chauvin, P., Morel, J., Pastour, P. and Martinez, J., Bull. Soc. Chim. Fr., 1974, 2099.
‘Nucleophilic heteroaromatic substitution’, Illuminati, G., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1964, 3, 285; ‘Reactivity of azine, benzoazine, and azinoazine
derivatives with simple nucleophiles’, Shepherd, R. G. and Fedrick, J. L., ibid., 1965, 4, 145; ‘Formation of anionic σ-adducts from heteroaromatic
compounds: structures, rates and equilibria’, Illuminati, G. and Stegel, F., ibid., 1983, 34, 306.
Liveris, M. and Miller, J., J. Chem. Soc., 1963, 3486; Miller, J. and Kai-Yan, W., ibid., 3492.
Johnson, R. M., J. Chem. Soc. (B), 1966, 1058.
Barlin, G. B. and Benbow, J. A., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1974, 790.
O’Leary, M. H. and Stach, R. W., J. Org. Chem., 1972, 37, 1491.
Schlosser, M. and Rausis, T., Helv. Chim. Acta, 2005, 88, 1240.
Chapman, N. B. and Russell-Hill, D. Q., J. Chem. Soc., 1956, 1563.
Barlin, G. B. and Benbow, J. A., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1975, 298.
‘Vicarious nucleophilic substitution of hydrogen’, Makosza, M. and Winiarski, J., Acc. Chem. Res., 1987, 20, 282; ‘Applications of vicarious nucleophilic substitution in organic synthesis’, Makosza, M. and Wojciechowski, K., Liebigs Ann./Receuil, 1997, 1805.
Wróbel, Z. and Makosza, M., Org. Prep. Proc. Int., 1990, 575.
Wojciechowski, K., Synth. Commun., 1997, 27, 135.
Ostrowski, S. and Makosza, M., Tetrahedron, 1988, 44, 1721.
‘Radicals in organic synthesis: formation of carbon-carbon bonds’, Giese, B., Pergamon Press, 1986; ‘Free radical substitution of heteroaromatic
compounds’, Norman, R. O. C. and Radda, G. K., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1963, 2, 131.
Klemm, L. H. and Dorsey, J., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1991, 28, 1153.
Minisci, F., Galli, R., Cecere, M., Malatesta, V. and Caronna, T., Tetrahedron Lett., 1968, 5609; ‘Substitutions by nucleophilic free radicals: a new
general reaction of heteroaromatic bases’, Minisci, F., Fontana, F. and Vismara, E., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1990, 27, 79; Minisci, F., Citterio, A.,
Vismara, E. and Giordano, C., Tetrahedron, 1985, 41, 4157; ‘Advances in the synthesis of substituted pyridazines via introduction of carbon functional
groups into the parent heterocycle’, Heinisch, G., Heterocycles, 1987, 26, 481; ‘Recent developments of free radical substitutions of heteroaromatic
bases’, Minisci, F., Vismara, E. and Fonatana, F., Heterocycles, 1989, 28, 489.
Buratti, W., Gardini, G. P., Minisci, F., Bertini, F., Galli, R. and Perchinunno, M., Tetrahedron, 1971, 3655; Minisci, F., Gardini, G. P., Galli, R. and
Bertini, F., Tetrahedron Lett., 1970, 15; Sakamoto, T., Sakasai, T. and Yamanaka, H., Chem. Pharm. Bull., 1980, 28, 571; Minisci, F., Vismara, E.
and Fonatana, F., J. Org. Chem., 1989, 54, 5224.
Togo, H., Hayashi, K. and Yokoyama, M., Chem. Lett., 1993, 641.
Fontana, F., Minisci, F., Nogueira-Barbosa, M. C. and Vismara, E., Tetrahedron, 1990, 46, 2525.
Fontana, F., Minisci, F., Nogueira-Barbosa, M. C. and Vismara, E., J. Org. Chem., 1991, 56, 2866.
Barton, D. H. R., Garcia, B., Togo, H. and Zard, S. Z., Tetrahedron Lett., 1986, 27, 1327; Barton D. H. R., Chern, C.-Y. and Jaszberenyi, J. Cs.,
ibid., 1992, 33, 5013.
Gardini, G. P., Minisci, F., Palla, G., Arnone, A. and Galli, R., Tetrahedron Lett., 1971, 59; Citterio, A., Gentile, A., Minisci, F., Serravalle, M. and
Ventura, S., J. Org. Chem., 1984, 49, 3364.
Citterio, A., Gentile, A. and Minisci, F., Tetrahedron Lett., 1982, 23, 5587.
Minisci, F., Vismara, E., Fontana, F., Morini, G., Serravalle, M. and Giordano, G., J. Org. Chem., 1987, 52, 730.
Katz, R. B., Mistry, J. and Mitchell, M. B., Synth. Commun., 1989, 19, 317.
‘Radical ipso attack and ipso substitution in aromatic compounds’, Tiecco, M., Acc. Chem. Res., 1980, 13, 51.
Tordeaux, M., Langlois, B. and Wakselman, C., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1990, 2293; Cho, I.-S. and Muchowski, J. M., Synthesis, 1991, 567.
‘Basicity and acidity of azoles’, Catalan, J., Abboud, J. L. M. and Elguero, J., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1987, 41, 187.
‘The reduction of nitrogen heterocycles with complex metal hydrides’, Lyle, R. E. and Anderson, P. S., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1966, 6, 46; ‘The
reduction of nitrogen heterocycles with complex metal hydrides’, Keay, J. G., ibid., 1986, 39, 1.
‘Heterocyclic ortho-quinodimethanes’, Collier, S. J. and Storr, R. C., Prog. Heterocycl. Chem., 1998, 10, 25.
Carly, P. R., Cappelle, S. L., Compernolle, F. and Hoornaert, G. J., Tetrahedron, 1996, 52, 11889.
Munzel, N. and Schweig, A., Chem. Ber., 1988, 121, 791.
Trahanovsky, W. S., Cassady, T. J. and Woods, T. L., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1981, 103, 6691.
White, L. A., O’Neill, P. M., Park, B. K. and Storr, R. C., Tetrahedron Lett., 1995, 37, 5983.
Substitutions of Aromatic Heterocycles
66
67
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Herrera, A., Martinez, R., González, B., Illescas, B., Martin, N. and Seoane, C., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 4873.
Mertzanos, G. E., Stephanidou-Stephanatou, J., Tsoleridis, C. A. and Alexandrou, N. E., Tetrahedron Lett., 1992, 33, 4499; Alexandrou, N. E.,
Mertzanos, G. E., Stephanidou-Stephanatou, J., Tsoleridis, C. A. and Zachariou, P., ibid., 1995, 36, 6777; Pindur, U., Gonzalez, E. and Mehrabani,
F., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1997, 1861.
Kinsman, A. C. and Snieckus, V., Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40, 2453.
Liu, G.-B., Mori, H. and Katsumura, S., Chem. Commun., 1996, 2251.
Leusink, F. R., ten Have, R., van der Berg, K. J. and van Leusen, A. M., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1992, 1401.
Magnus, P., Gallagher, T., Brown, P. and Pappalardo, P., Acc. Chem. Res., 1984, 17, 25.
Ko, C.-W. and Chou, T., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 5315; Tomé, A. C., Cavaleiro, J. A. S. and Storr, R. C., Tetrahedron, 1996, 52, 1723; Chen,
H.-C and Chou, T.-s, Tetrahedron, 1998, 54, 12609.
4
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry
Heterocyclic ‘organometallics’ cover a wide range of types and reactivities, and can be prepared for any
metal, although relatively few are of practical importance for the synthetic chemist. The most significant
are: (i) nucleophilic (and often basic) compounds, mainly lithium and magnesium compounds, (ii) nucleophilic, generally non-basic compounds, such as those of zinc, aluminium and titanium, (iii) compounds of
tin, and the ‘metalloids’ boron and silicon, which have relatively low classical nucleophilicity, but are
particularly important as notionally ‘nucleophilic’ partners in transition-metal-catalysed coupling reactions,
but also have interesting chemistry in their own right, (iv) transition metals, of which the most important
are intermediates in catalytic cycles, particularly palladium, copper, nickel and rhodium.
In this chapter, for general organometallics we give an overview, with most of the examples for particular
heterocyclic rings in the main chapters (with further discussions); however, for the transition metals,
because of the regularity of reactivity across the whole range of heterocycles, most of the examples are
given in this chapter.
4.1
Preparation and Reactions of Organometallic Compounds
The general methods of preparation of these compounds1 are:
1. Direct metallation. Direct C–H metallations are of several types, of which the most important is reaction (‘deprotonation’) with a strongly basic reagent, usually a lithium compound, but is also possible
for magnesium and zinc. Electrophilic metallation can be carried out with palladium(II) and mercury(II)
salts, and neutral C–H insertion by other transition metals is becoming increasingly important, usually
for catalytic reactions.
2. Halogen–metal exchange. The simplest type of halogen metal exchange is by reaction of metal with a
halide, such as in the preparation of a Grignard reagent, but the most common way is by reaction of the
halide with an organometallic reagent, particularly an alkyllithium. Exchanges using organomagnesium
and organozinc compounds are now very well developed and offer advantages in selectivity and functional group compatibility.
3. Metal–metal exchange. Metal–metal exchange usually involves the reaction of an organometallic
reagent with an electrophilic metal source, such as a salt, halo or alkoxy derivative. This is most widely
used for the preparation of organo-boron, -tin, -zinc and -silicon compounds by reaction with organolithium or magnesium reagents.
4.1.1 Lithium2
Lithio-heterocycles have proved to be the most useful organometallic derivatives: they react with the whole
range of electrophiles in a manner exactly comparable to that of aryllithiums and can often be prepared by
direct metallation (C-hydrogen deprotonation), as well as by halogen exchange between a halo-heterocycle
and an alkyllithium. As well as reaction with carbon electrophiles, lithiated species are often the most
convenient source of heterocyclic derivatives of less electropositive metals, such as zinc, boron, silicon and
tin, as will be seen in the following sections.
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
38
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The two main routes to hetero-organolithiums exemplified
4.1.1.1 Direct Lithiation (C-Hydrogen Deprotonation)
Many heterocyclic systems react directly with alkyllithiums or with lithium amides to give the lithio-heterocycle via abstraction of a proton. Although a ‘free’ anion is never formed, the ease of lithiation correlates
well with C-hydrogen acidity and, of course, with the stability of the corresponding conjugate base (carbanion).3 Lithiations by deprotonation are therefore directly related to base-catalysed proton exchange4 using
reagents such as sodium methoxide, at much higher temperatures, which historically provided the first
indication that preparative deprotonations might be regioselective and thus of synthetic value. It must be
remembered that kinetic and equilibrium acidities may be different; thermodynamic products are favoured
by higher temperatures and by more polar solvents.
The details of the mechanism of this type of metallation are still under discussion, but can be represented
as involving a four-centre transition state, although higher-level complexes with more than one metal atom
and complexation with the ring heteroatom are probably involved.
The main factor giving increased acidity of heterocyclic C-hydrogen relative to benzenoid C-hydrogen
is the inductive effect of the heteroatom(s), thus metallation occurs at the carbon α to the heteroatom, where
the inductive effect is felt most strongly, unless other factors, with varying degrees of importance, intervene.
These include the following:
1. Mesomerism. Except in the case of side-chain anions, the ‘anion’ orbital is orthogonal to the π-system
and so it is not mesomerically delocalised. However, electron density, and therefore C-hydrogen acidity
at ring carbons, is affected by resonance effects.
2. Coordination of the metal to the heteroatom. Stronger coordination between the metal of the base and
a heteroatom leads to enhanced acidity of the adjacent C-hydrogen due to increased inductive withdrawal
of electron density – it is proportionately stronger, for example, for oxygen than for sulfur.
3. Lone-pair interactions. Repulsion between the electrons in the orbital of the ‘anion’ or incipient anion.
This interaction is thought to be important in pyridines and other azines, and may be a kinetic rather
than equilibrium effect, at least in the case of lithiation.5
4. Polarisability of the heteroatom. More polarisable atoms, such as sulfur, are able to disperse charge
more effectively.
5. Substituent effects. Directed ortho-metallation (DoM)6 is extremely useful in heterocyclic chemistry,
just as in carbocyclic chemistry. Metallation ortho to the directing group is promoted by either inductive
effects (e.g. Cl, F), or chelation (e.g. CH2OH → CH2OLi), or a combination of these, and may overcome
the intrinsic regioselectivity of metallation of a particular heterocycle. When available, this is by far the
most important additional factor influencing the regioselectivity of lithiation.
Lithiating Agents
Lithiations are normally carried out with alkyllithiums or lithium amides. n-Butyllithium is the most widely
used alkyllithium, but t-butyllithium and occasionally s-butyllithium are used when more powerful reagents
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 39
are required. Phenyllithium was used in older work, but is uncommon now, although it can be of value
when a less reactive, more selective base is required.7 A very powerful metallating reagent is formed from
a mixture of n-butyllithium and potassium t-butoxide: this produces the potassium derivative of the
heterocycle.
Lithium diisopropylamide (LiN(i-Pr)2; LDA) is the most widely used lithium amide, but lithium
2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidide (LiTMP) is rather more basic and less nucleophilic – it has found particular
use in the metallation of diazines. Alkyllithiums are stronger bases than the lithium amides, but usually
react at slower rates. Metallations with the lithium amides are reversible, so for efficient conversion, the
heterocyclic substrate must be more acidic (>4 pKa units) than the corresponding amine.
Solvents
Ether solvents – Et2O and THF – are normally used. The more strongly coordinating THF increases the
reactivity of the lithiating agent by increasing its dissociation. A mixture of ether, THF and pentane (Trapp’s
solvent) can be employed for very low temperature reactions (<100 °C) (THF freezes at this temperature).
To increase the reactivity of the reagents even further, ligands such as TMEDA (N,N,N′,N′tetramethylethylenediamine; Me2N(CH2)2NMe2) or HMPA ((Me2N)3PO) (CAUTION: carcinogen) are
sometimes added – these strongly and specifically coordinate the metal cation.
4.1.1.2 Halogen Exchange
Bromo- and iodo-heterocycles react rapidly with alkyllithiums, even at temperatures as low as −100 °C, to
give the lithio-heterocycle. Exchange of fluorine is unknown and of chlorine, rare, but is known under
special circumstances, such as in polychloro compounds. The apparent preparation of a number of lithioheterocycles by direct reaction of a chloro heterocycle using lithium metal with naphthalene has been
reported. Since such lithiations have to be carried out in the presence of the electrophile, it may be that the
process is more complex than it seems.8
Positional selectivity in halogen exchange is governed by factors similar to those in direct deprotonation,
such as acidity of the corresponding C–H and the presence of directing groups.
Mechanistically, the exchange process may involve a four-membered or other cyclic concerted transition
state, or may possibly proceed via an electron-transfer sequence, however direct nucleophilic attack, at
least on iodine, has been demonstrated in the case of iodobenzene,9 and cannot therefore be dismissed as
a more general mechanism.
Possible mechanisms for metal–halogen exchange
Halogen Exchange Reagents
n-Butyllithium is the usual exchange reagent; the n-butyl bromide byproduct does not usually interfere with
subsequent steps. When the presence of an alkyl bromide is undesirable, two equivalents of t-butyllithium
40
Heterocyclic Chemistry
can be employed – the initially formed t-butyl bromide is consumed by reaction with the second equivalent
of alkyl-lithium, producing isobutene.
It is very important to differentiate between pure bases, such as lithium diisopropylamide, which act only
by deprotonation, and alkyllithiums, which can act as bases or take part in halogen exchange. When using
alkyllithiums, exchange is favoured over deprotonation by the use of lower temperatures. The reaction of
3-iodo-1-phenylsulfonylindole with the two types of reagent is illustrative.10
4.1.1.3 Regiostability
When an organolithium is prepared by halogen exchange, or a kinetic C–H metallation, there may be the
possibility of equilibration involving a more ‘acidic’ hydrogen in the molecule. This occurs more readily
in strongly coordinating solvents and at higher temperatures, and may be promoted by the presence of
electron-withdrawing N-protecting groups. Derivatives of magnesium and zinc are much more resistant to
such migrations and are totally regio-stable for all practical purposes.
Similar equilibria, via halogen migration, are also possible and, indeed, can be used to advantage (see
for example, 17.4.2).
4.1.1.4
Ring Lithiation of Five-Membered Heterocycles
The inductive effect of the heteroatom, which withdraws electrons to a greater extent from an adjacent
carbon atom (α-positions), allows direct α-lithiation of practically all five-membered heterocycles. The
relative ‘acidities’ of α-hydrogens in some different classes are illustrated in the table below.
Equilibrium pKa values# for deprotonation of some five-membered heterocycles in THF11
# Measured pKa values vary according to solvent etc.
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 41
Despite the lower electronegativity of sulfur, and hence a weaker inductive effect, thiophene metallates
about as readily as furan, probably in part because the higher polarisability of sulfur allows more efficient
charge distribution.12 The lithiation of 2-(2-furyl)thiophene, in either ring depending on conditions, is
instructive;13 preferential lithiation of the furan ring in the non-polar solvent is probably due to stronger
coordination of lithium to the oxygen, thus increasing the inductive effect on the α-hydrogen in the
furan ring.
The use of stronger bases can result in dimetallation.14
Directing groups can overcome the normal tendency for α-lithiation in five-membered heterocycles, as
shown in the thiophene example below, however the use of lithium diisopropylamide does allow ‘normal’
α-lithiation in this case.15
Lithiation of pyrroles is complicated by the presence of a much more acidic hydrogen on nitrogen,
however 1-methylpyrrole lithiates, at C-2, albeit under slightly more vigorous conditions than for furan.16
Removable protecting groups on the pyrrole nitrogen allow α-lithiation, t-butoxycarbonyl (Boc) is an
example; it has additional advantages: not only is it easily hydrolytically removed, but it also withdraws
electrons, thus acidifying the α-hydrogen further, and finally it provides chelation assistance.17
Benzo[b]thiophenes, benzo[b]furans and N-blocked indoles lithiate on the heterocyclic ring, α to the
heteroatom.18 Lithiation at the other hetero-ring position can be achieved via halogen exchange, but
low temperatures must be maintained to prevent equilibration to the more stable 2-lithiated heterocycle.10
42
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Benzene-ring-lithiated intermediates can be prepared by metal–halogen exchange, even, in the case of
indoles, without protection of the NH, i.e. it is possible to produce an N,C-dimetallated species (20.5.2).19
The 1,3-azoles lithiate very readily, at C-2. One may understand this in terms of a combination of the
acidifying effects seen at an α-position of pyridine (both inductive and mesomeric electron withdrawal)
with that at the α-positions of thiophene, furan and pyrrole (inductive only). 2-Substituted-1,3-azoles generally lithiate at C-5.20
For imidazoles, it is usual for the N-hydrogen first to be masked,21 and a variety of protecting groups
have been used for that purpose, many of which provide additional stabilisation and an additional reason
for regioselective α-lithiation by coordinating the lithium: trimethylsilylethoxymethyl (Me3Si(CH2)2OCH2;
SEM) is one such group.22
It is a significant comment on the relative ease of α-lithiation in six- and five-membered systems that
(N-protected) pyrazoles lithiate at C-5, i.e. at the pyrrole-like α-position, though, again chelation assistance
from the N-protecting group also directs to C-5.23
One must be aware that hetero-ring cleavage24 can occur in β-lithiated five-membered systems, because
the heteroatom can act as a leaving group, if the temperature is allowed to rise.25
Higher azoles – triazoles, tetrazoles, heterodiazoles – lithiate readily, but some of the lithio-compounds are
relatively unstable.
4.1.1.5 Ring Lithiation of Six-Membered Heterocycles
The preparation of lithiated derivatives of six-membered heterocycles like pyridines, quinolines and diazines
must overcome the problem that they are intrinsically susceptible to nucleophilic addition/substitution
(3.3.2) by the lithium reagents. In contrast to the selective lithiation of five-membered rings, the direct
metallation of pyridine is quite difficult and complex, but it can be achieved using the very strong base
combination n-butyllithium/potassium t-butoxide. In relatively non-polar solvents (ether/hexane) kinetic
2-metallation predominates, but in a polar solvent (THF/HMPA/hexane), or under equilibrating conditions,
the 4-isomer is the major product. The pyridine α- and γ-positions, being more electron-deficient than a
β-position, have the kinetically most acidic protons, and of the two former anions, location of negative
charge at the γ-position is the more stable situation, perhaps due to unfavourable repulsion between the
coplanar nitrogen lone pair and the α-‘anion’. In non-polar solvents, stronger coordination of the metal
cation with the nitrogen lone pair will reduce this repulsive interaction and thus increase the relative
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 43
stability of the α-‘anion’.26 As a corollary of this, pyridine can be selectively lithiated at C-2 when the lone
pair is tied up as a complex with boron trifluoride27 or using special reagents which act via complexation
to the nitrogen and then intramolecular delivery of base to the α-proton (8.4.1). This is consistent with
much earlier studies of base-catalysed exchange, when it was demonstrated that N-oxides and N+-alkyl
quaternary salts exchange more rapidly at an α-position.28
All the isomerically pure lithio-pyridines can be prepared by halogen exchange, though 3-bromopyridine
requires a lower temperature, or a change to a less-dissociating solvent, to discourage nucleophilic addition;
bromopicolines can be similarly converted, without deprotonation at the methyl groups.
Pyridines carrying groups which direct metallation ortho, using chelation and/or inductive influences,
can be directly lithiated without risk of nucleophilic addition. When the group is at a 2-29 or 4-position,30
lithiation must occur at a β-carbon; pyridines with ortho-directing groups located at a β-position usually
lithiate at C-4: this is true, for example, of chloro- and fluoro-pyridines;31 3-methoxymethoxy-,32 3-pivaloylamino,-33 3-trimethylsilylethoxymethoxy-34, 3-t-butylaminosulfonyl-,35 3-diethylaminocarbonyloxyor 3-diethylaminothiocarbonyloxy-pyridines,36 and the adduct from 3-formylpyridine and Me2N(CH2)2
NMeLi;37 3-ethoxypyridine, however, metallates at C-2.38
Quinolines react like pyridines, but are more susceptible to nucleophilic addition;39 this is also an
increased problem with pyrimidines, relative to pyridines, but nevertheless they can be lithiated by
deprotonation or by halogen exchange at low temperatures, around −100 °C. The presence of 2- and/or
4-substituents adds some stability to lithiated pyrimidines.40
44
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Pyrazines and pyridazines react in accord with the principles discussed above.41
4.1.1.6 Generation of the Organolithium in the Presence of the Electrophile
Rather than a sequential lithiation, followed by addition of an electrophile, it may be better to generate the
organolithium compound, either by halogen exchange or direct deprotonation, in the presence of the electrophile. The reason for doing this may be that the organolithium intermediate is unstable, or that it avoids
side reactions, such as lithium migration. It is also more efficient, particularly on larger scale, as only one
temperature-controlled addition is required and it often allows the use of higher reaction temperatures.
There is a balance, which may be temperature dependent, between the rates of formation of the organometallic, its reaction with the electrophile and the reaction of the lithiating agent with the electrophile.
Examples of this approach include the preparation of heterocyclic boronic acids via halogen exchange42
and indole-2-boronates and 2-silanes via direct deprotonation.43 In the latter case, the low reactivity of the
base (LDA) to trialkyl borates and silyl chlorides allows temperatures as high as 0 °C to be used.
4.1.1.7 Lithiation in the Presence of Functional Groups
N-Hydrogen
When a ring nitrogen bears a hydrogen, it is normal to use a protecting group during lithiation (by halogen
exchange), but in a number of cases the ‘protection’ involves simply deprotonating the nitrogen. In some
cases, for example, 2-iodoindole44 or 4-bromopyrazole,45 excess of the alkyl lithium can be used, but the
process is more complex than might be thought and internal protonation may occur, leading to overall
dehalogenation. The initial use of a separate strong base to deprotonate the NH before carrying out the
lithium exchange may be better, as in the reaction of six-ring bromo-indoles, where potassium hydride is
used for the deprotonation (20.5.2).
Iodine-magnesium exchange has been carried out for 5- and 6-iodouracils in the presence of lithium
chloride, using methylmagnesium chloride to deprotonate both N-hydrogens, then addition of isopropylmagnesium chloride to exchange the halogen.46
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 45
Protecting Groups
The standard solution for ketones and aldehydes is to use protecting groups such as acetals, but this can
be inconvenient or maybe incompatible with the product due to the conditions required for deprotection.
However, in situ protection as carbinolamine anions is an ideal solution, being very efficient time-wise and
process-wise.47 (Note that intermediates of the same type are formed during quenching of lithio-compounds
with DMF and can be used in the same way.)
Another, very useful, in situ protection of indoles and pyrroles, involves deprotonation of the nitrogen then
addition of carbon dioxide to give the lithium N-carboxylate salt.48
4.1.2 Magnesium49
Heterocyclic magnesium compounds (Grignard reagents), which are often difficult to prepare by the standard method (halides with magnesium metal), can be readily prepared by metal–halogen exchange with an
alkyl Grignard. These exchanges show the same selectivity as lithium exchanges: 2 > 3 in five-membered
rings and 3 > 2 in six-membered rings (for the same halogen) and I > Br, as illustrated by the dihalothiophenes shown below.50
Isopropylmagnesium halides are the most widely used reagents and are effective over a very wide
range of heterocyclic systems; they can even be used in the presence of esters if the temperature is kept
low and are also suitable for solid-state synthesis.51
The relatively modest directing effect of a carboxylate overrides the normally higher reactivity in thiazoles
of C-2 > C-5.51
46
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The exchange of the bromomethyl oxazole shown below had to be carried out in the presence of the electrophile, due to the high instability of the intermediate magnesium compound.52
Electron-withdrawing substituents increase the rate of exchange, as shown above, but, generally, exchange
of bromine is quite slow. However, the addition of lithium salts brings about dramatic increases in reactivity
of Grignard reagents for halogen exchange and also increases the reactivity of the resulting (hetero)aryl
organometallic. This is best conducted by using the complex i-PrMgCl.LiCl, which probably exists as
a magnesiate i-PrMgCl2− Li+, which is more reactive than the (oligomeric) Grignard. The pyridine
example below demonstrates the difference in reactivity.53
LiCl seems to be a ‘magic ingredient’ for enhancing reactivity during magnesium and zinc halogen–metal
exchanges, and direct metallation, and also of the subsequent reactions of the products. This 2004 discovery
may supersede previous methods. The addition of (THF-soluble) CeCl3.LiCl to Grignard reactions (including some pyridyl Grignard reagents) with hindered or readily enolisable ketones greatly increases the
yields.54
The addition of lithium chloride to magnesium amide bases, for example TMPMgCl, greatly increases
solubility (in THF) and reactivity for direct metallation, even for sensitive substrates such as pyrimidines.55
Amongst a range of heterocyclic substrates, it is notable that 2,6-dichloropyridine gives clean 4-substitution,
whereas ‘standard’ amide bases give mixtures of C-3 and C-4 products. Magnesium bis-amides, such as
(TMP)2Mg.2LiCl, are more successful in some situations, such as where t-butyl esters are used as directing
groups.56
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 47
Direct C–H magnesiation can be carried out with lithium tri-n-butylmagnesiate on oxazoles,57 thiophenes
and fluoro- and chloro-pyridines, the intermediates being used for trapping electrophiles and in coupling
reactions. The use of the highly hindered neopentylmagnesium bromide allows iodine–magnesium exchange,
even in the presence of ketones.58
Bromine exchange of bromo-2-furoic acids can be carried out after formation of the magnesium salt of
the acid by reaction with methyl Grignard in the presence of lithium chloride.59 This procedure can also
be used for iodine exchange in imidazoles, without protection of the NH.60
4.1.3 Zinc61
Heteroaryl zinc compounds are particularly useful in palladium-catalysed coupling, being compatible with
many functional groups. They are often prepared in situ via lithiation, followed by reaction with zinc
halides, but direct zincation of halides can be carried out, using either Riecke zinc, as in the example
below,62 or, more conveniently, ordinary zinc dust,63 with various means of activation.
Activation with cobalt chloride and allyl chloride has been used for chlorothiophenes (2-Cl is more
reactive than 3-Cl) and activated aryl chlorides.64 Commercial zinc dust and the heteroaryl halide can be
used to make the heteroarylzinc in both electron-rich and electron-poor systems.65
The addition of LiCl to zinc dust (activated with 1,2-dibromoethane plus TMSCl) has a dramatic effect
on the reaction rates.66 The reaction is successful with iodo-heterocycles and some activated bromocompounds, such as the furan ester shown below.
Organoindium(III) compounds can be prepared under very similar conditions to these organozincs and
have an even greater tolerance of functional groups: they are compatible with alcohols and phenols.67
Di-(heteroaryl) zincs, for use in coupling reactions, can be prepared by direct exchange of iodides, for
example 5-iodofurfural, with (i-Pr)2Zn in the presence of a Li(acac) catalyst.68
The direct C–H zincation of a number of heterocyclic systems can be carried out using
(TMP)2Zn.2MgCl2.2LiCl (prepared by reacting TMPMgCl.LiCl with ZnCl2), including 1,3,4-oxadiazoles,
1,2,4-triazoles and compounds bearing sensitive functional groups, such a nitro or aldehyde.69 In less
48
Heterocyclic Chemistry
reactive systems, such as benzofuran and benzothiophene, the use of microwave irradiation allows efficient
conversion.70
4.1.4 Copper
Copper derivatives, in the form of cuprates (RCu(X)Li), are usually prepared in situ from lithium, magnesium or zinc compounds, by reaction with a Cu(I) source such as CuCN. They are often used to improve
conversions using, for example, an acid chloride or an allylic halide as electrophile – a number of examples
appear in other sections of this book. They are also useful as the organometallic partners in some crosscoupling reactions (using cobalt catalysts).71
A more convenient direct cupration of iodides can be carried out using highly hindered cuprates, such
as (Nphyl)2CuLi.72 The reaction is faster in electron-deficient rings, and chelating groups allow the use of
bromides as substrates.
4.1.5 Boron
Practically all the organoboron compounds of interest in the current context are boronic acids or closely
related compounds.73 Boronic acids are relatively weak acids that ionise by association, not dissociation
– stable salts of tetrahedral aryl trihydroxyboronates can be isolated as stable solids and used in coupling
reactions.74 Some typical pKas are shown below.75 Pyridine boronic acids exist as zwitterions in water at
pH 7.76 Electron-withdrawing groups and the inductive effects of heteroatoms increase acidity, and formation of esters with 1,2- or 1,3-diols can reduce the pKa by up to 2.5 units.77
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 49
Boronic acids readily dehydrate, eventually giving a boroxin, but the conversion is easily reversible and
the interconversion can be brought about simply by dissolution in wet or dry solvents. The solid ‘acids’
very commonly occur as mixtures of acid and anhydrides, which makes precise measurement of molar
quantities difficult. Simple esters, such as with methanol, readily form on dissolution in the alcohol, but
also hydrolyse very rapidly in air. Cyclic esters are more stable and, particularly, pinacol esters are widely
used in coupling reactions, as they are reasonably stable on storage, have a known stoichiometry and, of
course, react well; they are the most common form of boronate available commercially. More stable esters
are formed with substituted diethanolamines, due to the extra coordination afforded by the basic nitrogen.
N-Methyldiethanolamine has long been used for isolation and characterisation of boronic acids and its esters
can be used in coupling reactions, although somewhat variably. The free acid is readily liberated by treatment with aqueous acid or ammonium chloride. The N-phenyl analogue has found particular use as a stable
source of 2-pyridylboronic acid, the weaker donation by the aniline nitrogen giving a good balance of
stability and reactivity.
An important application is the use of N-methyliminodiacetic acid (MIDA) esters as protecting groups
(4.2.8). These MIDA esters are readily cleaved in mild basic aqueous conditions, but are stable to many
standard functional-group transformations, even chromic acid oxidations.
4.1.5.1 Trifluoroborates
Boron has a high affinity for fluoride, and boronic acids can be converted, via reaction with KHF2, into
trifluoroborates (RBF3K), the fluorine analogues of the boronate anion. These compounds are very stable,
but can be reactive under the appropriate conditions and are very useful in palladium-catalysed
couplings.
4.1.5.2 Protodeboronation
Boronic acids are potentially susceptible to acid- or base-catalysed protodeboronation, but the conditions
necessary vary widely. The ease of cleavage of the C–B bond under basic or acidic conditions correlate
with the corresponding carbanion stability or ease of protonation of the ring, respectively. When a relatively
stable carbanion can be formed, such as in furan boronic acids containing electron-withdrawing groups,
base-catalysed deboronation can become an important unwanted side reaction during palladium-catalysed
boronic acid couplings.78 Indeed, imidazole and oxazole 2-boronic acids have not yet been isolated, possibly
due to their very ready deboronation.
50
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Pyridine 2-boronic acid is rather unstable (unlike the 3- and 4-isomers) and can only be isolated as esters,
N-substituted diethanolamine esters being the most stable. A possible rationale for this instability may be
the parallel with the mechanism for the ready decarboxylation of pyridine 2-carboxylic acid via a transient
ylide intermediate (8.11).
4.1.5.3 Preparation
Boronates (i.e. boronic acids and esters) are usually prepared by one of two methods: reaction of organolithiums or Grignard reagents with a trialkyl borate, usually tri-iso-propyl borate, or palladium-catalysed
boronation.
Palladium-catalysed boronation can be carried out using either 4,4,4′,4′,5,5,5′,5′-octamethyl-2,2′-bi1,3,2-dioxaborolane (pinacol diboron or bis(pinacolato)diboron) or pinacol borane,79 the latter being preferred because of the lower cost of the reagent. The mechanisms of the conversions are very similar to
cross-coupling reactions, the difference being the transfer of boron, instead of carbon, to palladium in the
transmetallation step. The mechanism (see below) of transfer of boron from the diboron compound seems
straightforward, but exactly how it is transferred from the borane is less clear.
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 51
Iridium-catalysed C–H-boronation can be carried out using either pinacol borane or pinacol diborane,
both methods giving comparable results.80 Reaction occurs at α-positions of five-membered rings and is
compatible with halogen substituents, as exemplified below.81
Minor methods for the synthesis of boronic acids involve transmetallation with silicon or mercury.82
As is also true for silicon and tin compounds, the high stability of boronates, particularly cyclic esters,
allows them to be incorporated into and carried through as substituents in a range of reaction types, such
as the synthesis of pyrazole boronates for cross couplings (see 4.2.7.4).
In addition to the very important palladium-catalysed reactions, boronic acids undergo a number of useful
reactions that do not require transition-metal catalysis, particularly those involving electrophilic ipsosubstitutions by carbon electrophiles. The Petasis reaction involves ipso-replacement of boron under
Mannich-like conditions and is successful with electron-rich heterocyclic boronic acids. A variety of quinolines and isoquinolines, activated by ethyl pyrocarbonate, have been used as the ‘Mannich reagent’.83
A Petasis reaction on indole 3-boronic acids under standard conditions was an efficient route to very high
de α-indolylglycines.84
52
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Furan and indole trifluoroborates undergo HF-catalysed ipso-substitution reactions with enones, which can
also be made highly enantioselective.85
A long-standing reaction is the oxidation of aryl boronic acids to ‘phenols’ by alkaline peroxide, usually
in the work-up of a borate-organolithium reaction, without isolation of the boronic acid, i.e. an efficient
ArBr → ArOH conversion. A variant under milder conditions uses sodium perborate (for the conversion
of 5-bromopyrimidines),86 and, using oxone, oxindoles can be prepared from 1-Boc indoles via direct
2-lithiation.87
4.1.6 Silicon88 and Tin89
(CAUTION: see the discussion of organotin toxicity on page 67)
Silicon and tin compounds have many similarities to organoborons, both in preparation, stability and reactivity. Reaction of organolithiums with silyl and stannyl halides is straightforward, and the preparations
via palladium-catalysed reactions of distannanes90 and disilanes with aryl halides exactly follow the
boron analogues, though coupling with hexaalkyldisilanes requires rather more vigorous conditions.91 The
disilane method can be used for the preparation of trimethylsilyl compounds from aryl chlorides92 and
dimethylsilanols for cross couplings.93
Aryl silicon compounds can be prepared by metal-catalysed reaction of halides with silanes, as in the
rhodium-catalysed reaction below.94 The mechanistic details of this reaction (probably) differ from the
palladium-catalysed borane reaction. (NOTE: triethoxysilane is extremely toxic!)
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 53
Useful alternative preparations of stannanes include palladium-catalysed decarboxylation of stannyl
esters.90 Trialkylstannyl and trialkylsilyl anions are highly reactive and will displace halogen without
the use of a catalyst.95 It is possible to directly silylate indoles and pyrroles via electrophilic
substitution.96
The relatively high stability of carbon-silicon/-boron/-tin bonds allows the ‘metal’ to be carried through
many heterocyclic syntheses as an inert substitutent: some examples are shown below.97
Silicon and tin are both subject to ipso-replacement by electrophiles, via an electrophilic addition/metal
elimination mechanism analogous to other aromatic substitutions, but at a much faster rate than the corresponding replacement of hydrogen.98 Ipso-substitutions also take place on heterocycles and, in the case
of electron-rich systems, probably via the same type of mechanism.
54
Heterocyclic Chemistry
4-Trimethylsilyl-pyridines will also react with aldehydes under fluoride catalysis; an intramolecular example
is shown below.99
4.1.7 Mercury100
Only Hg(II) compounds are of interest in the current context and they can be prepared by exchange reactions of other organometallics with mercuric salts or, more usefully from the heterocyclic viewpoint, by
direct electrophilic mercuration with mercuric salts, particularly mercuric acetate.
There is a lot of information on the mercuration of heterocycles in the old literature,101 but it is seldom
used nowadays due to the major disadvantages of toxicity and associated waste management; it can be,
however, a very useful reaction. The advantages of mercuration are that it can be carried out in hydroxylic
and acidic solvents and in the presence of air, and that mercury in the product is easily replaced by ipsosubstitution with other electrophiles, such as halogens, and gives boronic acids by reaction with borane.
There is a differential reactivity to nitrogen heterocycles between Hg(II) and other types of electrophile,
such as bromine, possibly due to a weaker coordination of the mercuric ion to a ring nitrogen; for example
mercuration is more successful in electrophilic substitutions for oxazoles. In both oxazoles and thiazoles,
the preferred position for mercuration is C-5,102 but in the latter, trimercuration occurs quite readily.
4.1.8 Palladium
Organopalladium compounds can be prepared by electrophilic palladation, oxidative addition to aryl halides
or reaction of Pd(II) with organometallic reagents. These transformations are all vital for the palladiumcatalysed reactions discussed later in this chapter.
4.1.9 Side-Chain Metallation (‘Lateral Metallation’)103
4.1.9.1 Side-Chain Metallation of Six-Membered Heterocycles
Anions that are immediately adjacent to the ring on alkyl side-chains are subject to varying degrees of
stabilisation by interaction with the ring. The most favourable situation is where the side-chain is linked
directly to a C=N, as in the 2- and 6-positions of a pyridine, or at a 4-position of a pyridine. Such anions
are stabilised in much the same way as an enolate (conjugated enolate). We use the word ‘enaminate’ to
describe this nitrogen-containing, enolate-like anion.
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 55
Quantitative measures for some methyl deprotonations are: 2-methylpyridine (pKa 34), 3-methylpyridine
(pKa 37.7), 4-methylpyridine (pKa 32.2), 4-methylquinoline (pKa 27.5).104 These values can be usefully
compared with those typical for ketone α-deprotonation (19–20) and toluene side-chain deprotonation
(∼41). Thus, strong bases can be used to convert methyl-pyridines quantitatively into side-chain anions,
however the enolate-like stabilisation of the anion is sufficient that reactions can often be carried out using
weaker bases under equilibrating conditions, i.e. under conditions where there is only a small percentage
of anion present at any one time. It may be that under such conditions, side-chain deprotonation involves
N-hydrogen-bonded or N-coordinated pyridines.
An alternative means for effecting reaction at a side-chain depends on a prior electrophilic addition to
the nitrogen: this acidifies further the side-chain hydrogens, then deprotonation generates an enamine or
an enamide, each being nucleophilic at the side-chain carbon; the condensation of 4-picoline with benzaldehyde using acetic anhydride illustrates this.
4.1.9.2 Side-Chain Metallation of Five-Membered Heterocycles
The metallation of a side-chain on a simple five-membered heterocycle is much more difficult than in the
six-membered series, because no enaminate stabilising resonance is available. Nonetheless, it also is selective for an alkyl adjacent to the heteroatom, because the heteroatom acidifies by induction. Relatively more
forcing conditions need to be applied, especially if an N-hydrogen is present,105 but an elegant method has
been developed for indoles, in which the first-formed N-anion is blocked with carbon dioxide, the lithium
carboxylate thus formed then neatly also facilitating 2-methyl lithiation by intramolecular chelation; this
device has the further advantage that, following reaction of the side-chain anion with an electrophile,
the N-protecting group is removed simply, during aqueous processing.106
Side-chains at C-2 on 1,3-azoles are activated in a manner analogous to pyridine α-alkyl groups, and
can be metallated, but more care is needed to avoid ring metallation.107
56
Heterocyclic Chemistry
4.2 Transition Metal-Catalysed Reactions108
Transition-metal-catalysed reactions are probably the most important area in synthetic organic chemistry
and they have been used extensively in both the ring synthesis and the functionalisation of heterocycles.
As well as completely new modes of reactivity, variants of older synthetic methods have been developed
using the milder and more selective processes that attach to the use of transition-metal catalysts. Although
this section is devoted to reactions catalysed by a range of transition metals, palladium-catalysed processes
vastly outnumber the others (Ni, Rh, Cu, Fe). Therefore, the following discussions will be concerned
with palladium-catalysed processes, with occasional diversions, where appropriate, into other metals. In
fact, many of the processes and mechanistic details of the ‘minor ’ metals are very similar to those of
palladium.
In general, heterocyclic compounds undergo palladium-catalysed reactions in ways exactly analogous to
carbocycles; heterocyclic sulfur and nitrogen atoms seldom interfere with these (homogeneous) palladium
catalysts, which must be contrasted with the well-known poisoning of hydrogenation catalysts, such as
palladium metal on carbon, by sulfur- and nitrogen-containing molecules.
Palladium-catalysed processes typically utilise only 1–5 mol% of the catalyst and proceed through small
concentrations of transient palladium species: there is a sequence of steps, each with an organopalladium
intermediate, and it is important to become familiar with these basic organopalladium processes in order
to rationalise the overall conversion. Concerted, rather than ionic, mechanisms are the rule, so it is misleading to compare them too closely with apparently similar classical organic mechanisms, however curly
arrows can be used as a memory aid (in the same way as one may use them for cycloaddition reactions),
and this is the way in which palladium-catalysed reactions are explained in the following discussion. (For
convenience, an organometallic component can be referred to as the nucleophilic partner and the halide as
the electrophilic partner, but this should not necessarily be taken to imply reactivity as defined in classical
chemistry. Also, references to ‘the halide’ should be understood to include all related substrates, such as
triflates.)
4.2.1 Basic Palladium Processes
NOTE: For clarity, ligands that are not involved in the transformation under consideration are omitted
from the following schemes, however it is important to understand that most organopalladium compounds
normally exist as 4-coordinate, square-planar complexes, although the more reactive key intermediates may
have lower degrees of coordination. The equilibration of these various degrees of ligand binding plays an
important role in the overall reaction sequences, both in the individual reactions and in cis–trans isomerisation of the square planar complexes. Ligands are major determinants of the rates of all the individual steps
and can be ‘tailored’ for specific purposes.
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 57
Despite an apparent similarity between RPdX and RMgX, their chemical properties are very different.
The former are usually stable to air and water, and unreactive to the usual electrophilic centres, such as
carbonyl, whereas RMgX do react with oxygen, water and carbonyl compounds.
4.2.1.1 Concerted Reactions
Oxidative Addition
Aromatic and vinylic halides react with Pd(0) to give an organopalladium halide: aryl(or alkenyl)PdHal.
This is formally similar to the formation of a Grignard reagent from magnesium metal, Mg(0), and a halide,
but mechanistically, a concerted, direct ‘insertion’ of palladium into the carbon–halogen bond is believed
to be involved. The ease of reaction: X = I > Br ∼ OTf >> Cl >> F, explains why chloro and fluoro substituents can normally be tolerated, not interfering in palladium-catalysed processes, however the use of
highly reactive catalysts does allow the use of chloro compounds as substrates for these reactions. As a
simple illustration, Pd(PPh3)4 reacts with iodobenzene at room temperature, but requires heating to 80 °C
for a comparable insertion into bromobenzene. Although alkyl halides will undergo oxidative addition to
Pd(0), the products are generally much less stable.
Oxidative addition involves a concerted nucleophilic-like attack by Pd(0), but differs from a standard
two-step aromatic nucleophilic displacement in that direct attack at the carbon–halogen bond occurs and
mesomeric stabilisation of an intermediate is not involved. That being said, those same mesomeric relationships do contribute, together with inductive effects, to the total electron density at the carbons involved
and, all other things being equal, the tendency is for oxidative addition to select the carbon with the lowest
electron density. In simple systems, there seems to be a good correlation with total electron density at
carbon: pyridine, furan and thiophene show highest reactivity at C-2. In pyridines, for oxidative addition,
the order is C-2 > C-4 > C-3, whereas for nucleophilic displacement it is C-4 > C-2 > C-3, showing the
greater effect of induction at C-2 in the former.
Reductive Elimination
Organopalladium species with two organic units attached to the metal, R1PdR2, are generally unstable:
extrusion of the metal, in a zero oxidation state, takes place, with the consequent linking of the two organic
units. Because this is again a concerted process, stereochemistry in the organic moieties is conserved.
1,2-Insertion
Organopalladium halides add readily to double and triple bonds in a concerted, and therefore syn, manner
(via a π-complex, not shown for clarity).
58
Heterocyclic Chemistry
This process works best with electron-deficient alkenes, such as ethyl acrylate, but will also take place
with isolated or even with electron-rich alkenes. In reactions with acrylates, the palladium becomes attached
to the carbon adjacent to the ester, i.e. the aromatic moiety becomes attached to the carbon β to the ester.
1,1-Insertion
Carbon monoxide, and isonitriles, will insert into a carbon–palladium bond, subsequent reaction with a
nucleophile generates the product.
β-Hydride Elimination
When a syn β-hydrogen is present in an alkylpalladium species, a rapid elimination of a palladium hydride
occurs, generating an alkene. This reaction is much faster in RPdX than in R2Pd and is the reason that
attempted palladium-catalysed reactions of alkyl halides often fail.
Transmetallation
Palladium(II) compounds, such as ArPdX and PdX2, generally react readily with a wide variety of organometallic reagents, of varying nucleophilicity, such as R4Sn, RB(OH)2, RMgX and RZnX, transferring the
R group to palladium with overall displacement of X. The details of the reactions are not fully understood
and will vary from metal to metal, but a concerted transfer is probably the best means for their interpretation. It should be noted that the reactivity of these organometallic compounds towards palladium (or at
least in the overall reaction) does not parallel their reactivity in nucleophilic additions, for example to
carbonyl groups; indeed the less reactive metals (B, Sn) are generally the most effective.
The process probably involves coordination between the metal and the palladium via a bridging oxygen
(boronic acids, silanols) or halogen (tin, zinc, magnesium), followed by internal transfer of the organic
residue. The diagram shows a simple four-centre transition state, but more complex arrangements are
possible.
For boronic acids, coordination of the boron with a nucleophile, such as hydroxide, fluoride or an amine,
giving a tetrahedral boronate anion, is necessary to drive transmetallation.
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 59
4.2.1.2 Ionic Reactions
Addition to Palladium–Alkene π -Complexes
Like those of Hg2+ and Br+, Pd2+–alkene complexes are very susceptible to attack by nucleophiles. In contrast to 1,2-insertion, this process exhibits anti stereospecificity.
Aromatic Palladation
In reactions like aromatic mercuration, palladium(II) compounds will metallate aromatic rings via an electrophilic substitution, hence electron-rich systems are the most reactive.109 ortho-Palladation assisted by
electron-releasing chelating groups has been used frequently.110
4.2.2 Catalysts111
The catalyst (or catalytic system) is generally composed of a metal and a ligand – most commonly a phosphine, but sometimes an amine or imidazole carbene. For most reactions, the active catalyst is the zerovalent
metal i.e. Pd(0), and can be added as such, as a stable complex such as Pd(PPh3)4 – tetrakis(triphenylphosphine)
palladium(0) – referred to colloquially as ‘tetrakis’.
On the other hand, a Pd(II) pre-catalyst, such as palladium acetate, together with a ligand (or as a preformed complex) can be used and has the benefit of better stability for storage.
It is sometimes a cause of confusion that the added ‘catalyst’ is a Pd(II) compound, but it must be
remembered that an initiation step – reduction of Pd(II) to Pd(0) – is required before the catalytic cycle
can start. This reduction is usually brought about by a component of the reaction, as shown below, but
sometimes a separate reducing agent, such as DIBALH, can be used.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
There are a very large number of catalyst systems in the literature and every new issue of a journal seems
to contain yet more! Many of these catalysts have merit in specific situations, but a relatively small number
will suffice for the large majority of reactions. For library synthesis, a single catalyst has to be generally
active over a range of reactants, but not necessarily optimum for all. In more critical situations, such as
scale-up, a variety of catalysts can be screened to optimise yields or other features of the reaction.
The ligand is the main variable in the catalyst system. Phosphines can be varied in steric bulk or in their
donor strength, or finely tuned as chelating diphosphines. Alkyl groups on phosphorus increase the donor
strength, increasing the electron density on the metal and thus the reactivity of the catalyst to less reactive
substrates, such as chlorides. Steric bulk decreases the number of ligands that can coordinate to the metal
atom, therefore increasing its reactivity. Tri-o-tolylphosphine is moderately bulky and moderate in its donor
effects. Very bulky ligands that also contain alkyl groups on phosphorus, such as the (Buchwald–Hartwig)
biphenyl compounds, form very powerful catalysts that are effective for poorly reactive substrates and can
often be used at very low concentrations.
Carbene ligands are usually derived from very hindered imidazoles and are strong donors, so also form
powerful catalysts. The carbenes themselves are very unstable to air, so are often generated in situ by reaction of precursor imidazolium salts with base. Alternatively, additionally stabilized preformed complexes,
such as the ‘PEPPSI’ group (stabilized by the additional pyridine ligand) can be used.
Palladium on charcoal, in the presence of a phosphine, can be used as the catalyst in Sonogashira
and Suzuki reactions,112 but a phosphine-free method, shown below, is effective with a wide range of heterocyclic partners.113
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 61
NOTE: There are often descriptions in the literature of ‘ligand-free’ or ‘ligandless’ catalysts. What is
usually meant is that a standard ligand, such as a phosphine or carbene, has not been added. There are
always ligands present – a ligand can be halide, hydroxide, amines in the reacting molecule or solvents,
such as water or THF, counter ions (if a Pd(II) compound is used), and so on. Moreover, halide anions
have been shown to be very influential ligands.114
4.2.2.1 Additives
In addition to the catalyst and base (if required), the use of metal-salt additives is very common for enhancing cross coupling and other reactions. CuI is the most common additive and in many cases it may operate
as an intermediate transmetallating agent: RM → RCu → RPdR′. In other cases, it has been said to remove
excess phosphine, thus increasing the reactivity of the palladium. Ag2O is sometimes used and may act by
transmetallation or as a halide trap.
4.2.2.2 Less Common Catalysts
Iron, cobalt and manganese are effective catalysts for cross coupling and other reactions. They were studied
in the very early days of transition-metal catalysis and are now being resurrected.115
Fe(III) salts catalyse the coupling of Grignard reagents with alkenyl and aryl halides. The mechanism is
not fully understood, but probably resembles the standard palladium sequence, through either an Fe(0)–
Fe(II) or an Fe(I)–Fe(III) cycle. A particular feature is that chlorides are superior, in terms of yield,
to bromides and iodides as substrates. Triflates also give very high yields and couple selectively in the
presence of chlorides. Heterocyclic examples include 6-chloropurines, 4-chloropyrimidines, 6-chloro-1,3dimethyluracil and 2-chloropyridines,116 and the dichloropyridine example below.117
Iron (FeCl2.(py)4) also catalyses Suzuki coupling,118 but this has not yet been applied to heterocycles.
Manganese(II) chloride (2–5 mol%) as the catalyst gave generally high yields in the coupling of Grignard
reagents with 2- and 4-chloroquinolines, 1-chloroisoquinoline and 4-chloro-2-phenylquinazoline. Other
substrates, which gave somewhat lower yields, included 2-chloropyrimidine, 6-chloropurine and
2-chlorobenzthiazole.119
Cobalt(II) catalyses the coupling of Grignard reagents with chloropyridines120 and of aryl cuprates with
aryl halides.121 This reaction shows unusual substrate reactivity patterns and the mechanism is thought to
involve a radical intermediate at the oxidative addition step.
4.2.3 The Electrophilic Partner; The Halides/Leaving Groups
Finding a suitable electrophilic substrate is not usually very challenging as a wide range is generally available or readily prepared at any (carbon) position of all heterocyclic rings. The main additional consideration
is occasional instability of the halide.
The most common leaving groups for these reactions are halides and triflates, but some useful
alternatives for specific situations are described later. Bromide is usually the first choice, having sufficient
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
reactivity for use with the common catalyst–ligand combinations, and being readily available in many cases.
Chlorides have advantages of availability and cost, but are more catalyst-dependent, although this is not
too much of a problem following the advent of the hindered, electron-rich ligands, such as the Buchwald–
Hartwig group and carbenes. Iodides may be required for relatively unreactive substrates or catalysts, but
in the general case, this does not necessarily imply a better or faster overall reaction or outcome for all
reactions, as the steps following oxidative addition may be less efficient in the presence of iodide ions. A
very useful and general conversion of bromine to iodine can be carried out.122
Oxy compounds are readily available for a number of ring systems and can be used as precursors for
halides, but conversion into triflates or other oxygen-linked leaving groups is generally preferred. For
example, oxindoles are very accessible sources of C-2 triflates as electrophilic indole components,123 preparation of the 2-halides from the indole usually involving lithiation. In the example shown below, the
N-protecting group is readily removed by potassium carbonate in methanol. An alternative 1-phenylsulfonyl
protecting group can be used, but is more difficult to remove.124 The isomeric C-3 counterpart can be
a halide, prepared by direct electrophilic substitution, or the indoxyl triflate.125
There are very few examples of fluoride acting as a leaving group in oxidative addition, although it is a
very good leaving group in two-step aromatic nucleophilic substitution. The examples that are known are
in electron-deficient systems and generally use nickel catalysts, exemplified by the reactions of fluoroazines
with Grignard reagents.126
4.2.3.1 Leaving Group Selectivity127
Achieving a selective coupling reaction involving just one particular halogen in a polyhalo-compound can
be very useful synthetically. This can take two main forms – competition between identical halogens and
between different halogens.
Selectivity in the coupling reaction is determined by selectivity in oxidative addition and normally the
differences between halogens are dominant: I > Br > Cl. Triflate is usually more reactive than bromide,
but it may not always override other effects (see the examples below). When the halogens are the same,
differences in positional reactivity come into play. The tendency is for selective oxidative addition to occur
at the carbon of lowest electron density and this can be determined by 13C NMR spectroscopy.128 Other
effects may be involved, such as chelation or steric hindrance, particularly when there is competition
between two otherwise identical halogens.
Although it is possible to predict the result from physical measurements and calculations, the patterns
are well established experimentally for most heterocyclic systems. These general selectivity patterns for
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 63
the reactivity of leaving groups in palladium-catalysed reactions, and some interesting specific examples,
are indicated below, the point of first reaction indicated in red. The differences between the two pairs of
pyridine 2/3-bromo-3/2-triflates are intriguing, one set seeming to be position selective and the other
leaving-group selective. Further specific examples will be found later, in the sections dealing with the
particular ring systems.
4.2.3.2 Less Common Leaving Groups
Methylthio is a good leaving group in Pd-catalysed cross couplings of azines (pyridine, pyrimidine,
pyrazine) with benzylzinc reagents. The reaction is also successful for 2-methylthiobenzimidazole and
-benzthiazole. In pyrimidines, the reaction shows high selectivity for C-2 over C-4; the corresponding
sulfones are much less reactive – the reverse of nucleophilic substitutions.129 Methylthio-1,2,4,5-tetrazines
are good electrophilic partners for boronic acid and stannane couplings, if a thiophilic copper additive
(CuTC) is used to activate-capture the thiolate leaving group.130 An unusual feature in this method is that
exactly the same conditions are used for the reactions of both boronic acids and stannanes, with no base
being required for the former.
A similar method has been used for boronic acid couplings of 3-methylthio-1,2,4-triazine, using
Cu(I) 3-methylsalicylate as the additive131 and for Stille couplings of a wider range of heterocyclic
substrates.132
Even thiones react similarly with boronic acids133 and also in the Sonogashira reaction, where less than
one equivalent of copper was required, as the sulfur is eventually converted into Et3N.H2S.134
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
Benzylic-type sulfonium salts derived from thiophene-2- and 3- and furan-2-methanols, where halides
are not stable, have been used as substrates for Suzuki, Stille and Negishi couplings. The 1-Boc-pyrrole2-methanol analogue was only successful in Stille couplings. An important feature of this method is that
triphenyl phosphite was required as the ligand to overcome the problem of reaction of the usual phosphine
ligands with the sulfonium salts.135
Phosphates are useful milder alternative leaving groups, for example in coumarins,136 and furans and
indolizines.137
Other fluorinated sulfonates, such as nonaflates (ArOSO2C4F9), can be used as substitutes for triflates
and are said to be less susceptible to S–O bond cleavage by nucleophiles.138
Malonate anion, with a palladium catalyst, displaces the acetoxy of 3- and 4-(acetoxymethyl)quinolines,
probably via a three-centered benzylic equivalent of a π-allyl complex. The reaction fails with the 2-isomer,
but also works with the 3- and 4-(1-acetoxyethyl) compounds and 4-(1-acetoxyethyl)isoquinoline.139
4.2.4
Cross-Coupling Reactions
RM + ArX → R−Ar
140
Cross-coupling reactions – the reaction of a (hetero)aryl halide (ArX), or its equivalent, with an organometallic reagent (RM), resulting in the formation of a carbon–carbon bond – are undoubtedly the most
widely used transition-metal-catalysed reactions in general organic and heterocyclic chemistry.
4.2.4.1 Mechanism
The catalytic cycle for all these reactions is: (i) oxidative addition, (ii) transmetallation and (iii) reductive
elimination to regenerate Pd(0). However, the reaction conditions required can vary dramatically for different metals, as can compatibility with functional groups. Boron and silicon reagents require the presence
of a base and the transmetallations take place via anionic intermediates, while tin, zinc and magnesium
transmetallations probably go via neutral halogen-bridged species.
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 65
4.2.4.2 Side Reactions
A number of side reactions may occur in cross-coupling experiments and can sometimes consume a considerable proportion of the reactants:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
Reduction of the halide: ArX → ArH
Protonolysis of the organometallic: RM → RH
Homo-coupling of the halide: ArX → Ar–Ar
Homo-coupling of the organometallic: RM → R–R
Transfer of groups from the ligand (particularly Ph from Ph3P): ArX → ArPh
Oxidation of the organometallic (particularly boronates), by air or peroxides: RM → ROH.
The mechanisms of some of these side reactions are not always clear, particularly the source of the
reducing agent in (a) and (c). It is possible that radical reactions may sometimes be involved. Homocoupling of the organometallic (d) will always occur to some extent if a pre-catalyst-Pd(II) is used. Homocoupling of the halide (c) is sometimes desired and can be achieved efficiently by using a Pd catalyst in
the presence of a reducing agent, such as indium.141
An example of transfer of the phenyl group from triphenylphosphine (e) is seen in the coupling of the
phenyldiethanolamine ester of 2-pyridylboronic acid, where this side reaction represents about 20% of the
product, however using tri-o-tolylphosphine circumvents the problem (4.2.7.6).
4.2.5 The Nucleophilic (Organometallic) Partner
The preparations of the various types of organometallic compounds that can be used as cross-coupling
partners are described earlier in this chapter. Most magnesium and zinc compounds have to be prepared,
then used, as needed. However, boronates (i.e. boronic acids and esters), stannanes and silanes are much
more stable to air and water, and many of them can be stored for long periods.
A large number of heterocyclic boronates and, to a lesser degree, stannanes are available commercially.
Included in the suppliers’ lists are many compounds, the preparations and properties of which do not appear
in the literature. They are often noted in papers just as reagents for syntheses of libraries for biological
testing and, although this may be a practical approach, it is scientifically unsatisfactory because there is no
‘trail’ of characterization, particularly as some of these compounds, for example azine α-boronates, are
significant from a theoretical viewpoint.
Other than ability to perform the required reaction, factors to be taken into consideration when choosing
the organometallic include functional group compatibility, selectivity and reaction conditions. When considering scale-up, disposal of metal residues, particularly tin and zinc, and by-products of other additives,
such as fluoride, can be significant problems.
Grignard and zinc reagents require dry, generally non-polar, solvents, the main difference between the
two being that zinc organometallics are much more tolerant of functional groups than are Grignard reagents.
However, some zinc reagents may have a relatively low solubility in solvents such as THF, which can
result in slow reactions. Stille reactions are usually carried out in non-aqueous solvents, but the reagents
are quite stable to water and some mono-organotin reactions can be carried out in aqueous solution. The
major problems with tin reagents are toxicity and removal of organotin impurities from the product. Boronic
acid (and their trifluoroborate equivalent) couplings are very tolerant to a variety of conditions and
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
functional groups, and can be conducted in aqueous and non-aqueous conditions, and with a variety of
bases: aqueous bases of various strengths, anhydrous bases in non-polar solvents, triethylamine in DMF,
and so on. Silanes can be a useful substitute for boronic acids, but do not have the large range of conditions
or availability of reagents.
Carbanionic reagents, such as enolates and cyanide can also be used in place of the organometallic
component.
4.2.5.1 The Cross-Coupling Reactions
There are a number of ‘named reactions’, which are specific to the organometallic used and, in chronological order of introduction, these are:
Kumada–Corriu (Grignard reagents) (1972)
Sonogashira (in situ copper acetylides) (1975)
Negishi (zinc reagents) (1977)
Stille (tin reagents) (1977)
Suzuki–Miyaura (boron reagents, particularly boronic acids) (1979)
Hiyama–Denmark (silicon reagents) (1988).
The Suzuki–Miyaura reaction is certainly the most widely used, but each of the others has its own particular
advantages (and in some cases disadvantages!). Other metals, such as aluminium,142 zirconium143 and
indium144 are occasionally used in variants of Kumada/Negishi-type reactions.
The Suzuki–Miyaura Reaction73
(This process is sometimes referred to simply as the ‘Suzuki reaction’.) Boronic acids are by far the most
versatile coupling partners, and most suited to combinatorial chemistry and library synthesis due their
stability, ease of handling and ease of removal of by-products on work-up. They are generally considered
to have low toxicity, although they may have some enzyme-inhibiting activity. The cyclic esters may be
preferred for enhanced stability and consistent stoichiometry. The corresponding trifluoroborates145 show
even greater stability.
The Suzuki reaction usually involves heating the boronic acid (or ester), halide, catalyst and a base in a
suitable solvent. The presence of base is crucial, but it can vary from very weak to strong. The original,
and still popular, conditions use Pd(PPh3)4 as catalyst, with aqueous base and an immiscible solvent, such
as toluene with ethanol,146 but DME is an advantageous solvent in some cases.147 Dioxane is also a popular
solvent and anhydrous bases, such as potassium phosphate, can be beneficial, particularly when deboronation is a problem. Triethylamine in DMF is also a useful base–solvent combination.148
Two biphenyl-derived phosphines (shown below) are proposed149 as effective ligands for general heterocyclic Suzuki couplings, covering a wide range of ring systems, both as boronic acids and/or the halide
component. Examples include thiophene-2- and -3-boronates, pyrrole-2- and -3-boronates, furan-2boronates, indole-5-boronates and pyridine-3- and -4-boronates.
The use of trifluoroborate salts in couplings,150 which are very easily prepared from boronic acids by
reaction with KHF2, is a useful variant of the Suzuki reaction. These salts have the advantage of enhanced
(often considerably) stability compared to boronic acids and this is particularly notable for alkenyl compounds, which can be stored for a considerable time. The coupling conditions are very similar to those for
boronates and are applicable to a wide range of heterocyclic substrates,149,151,152
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 67
Very few functional groups interfere with boronate couplings, but free NH, either in the ring or attached
to it, is sometimes said to block the reaction. In other cases, for no obvious reason, there is no problem,
for example unprotected 2-chlorobenzimidazole couples nicely, under microwave conditions, with a variety
of aryl boronic acids and aryl trifluoroborates, the latter being the favoured reagents.153 3-Amino-2-chloropyridine does not react with phenyboronic acid, but gives high yields after protection of the NH2 as the
acetyl derivative (86%) or as the benzylidene compound (90%).154 On the other hand, a number of unprotected amino-chloro-pyridines and -pyrimidines undergo Suzuki couplings in high yield, using a highly
hindered ferrocenylphosphine ligand.155
The Stille Reaction89,156
The Stille coupling involves heating a halide, a stannane and a catalyst in a suitable solvent, such as toluene
or DMF. No base is required. The conditions are relatively straightforward, with little overall variation,
apart from the catalyst. However, if a triflate is used instead of a halide, the reaction may not succeed, as
transmetallation of aryltin compounds with arylpalladium triflates is often difficult. Addition of a halide
source, such as lithium chloride, usually solves this problem as it allows the formation of the arylpalladium
chloride, which can undergo transmetallation.
The combination of CsF with CuI is said to work synergistically to enhance reactivity over a range of
coupling partners in general Stille couplings.157 In this method, Pd(PPh3)4 is the preferred catalyst for iodides
and triflates, and PdCl2 plus t-Bu3P the preferred catalyst for chlorides and bromides.
Organotin reagents have the advantage of greater stability compared to boronates in certain situations,
for example they resist protodemetallation better at the 2-position of 1,3-azoles. In these cases the boronates
are unknown, but the tin derivatives are easily prepared and couple well.
The Stille reaction is a fine synthetic method, but substantial problems are associated with the use of
organotin compounds. Trialkyltin reagents and their by-products show a range of toxic effects.158 In particular, trimethyltin derivatives are potent neurotoxins that are readily absorbed through the skin and
require extreme care in handling. Tri-n-butyltin derivatives are considerably less toxic than trimethyltin,
but may show enzyme-inhibiting and immunological effects. Organotin compounds generally are very
damaging to the environment, particularly in watercourses, even at very low levels. Because of this, there
are severe controls on their release in aqueous effluents.
In addition, it is notoriously difficult to remove traces of organotin reagents and by-products from the
product of a reaction. Although purification to a level that is very satisfactory from a chemical viewpoint
(<0.1% i.e. 1000 ppm Sn) may be possible, this amount is potentially very important biologically and if
used in synthesis for biological screening, there is a possibility that these levels could significantly affect
the results. Modified techniques, such as the use of solid-supported159 or fluorous tin reagents can help to
minimise residues.
The use of mono-organotin compounds, which have much lower toxicity, for couplings offers major
potential advantages, but further development of this area is required. Phenyltrichlorotin couples with
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
some halo-heterocyclic substrates in aqueous solution, using palladium and a water-soluble ligand,
the reacting species actually being the trihydroxytin compound produced by hydrolysis.160 A promising
method uses bis-(silylamino)tin reagents, prepared by the reaction of a commercially available Sn(II)
compound with halides.161 A notable application of this method is the efficient transfer of 11CH3 in couplings
with several bromo-quinoline isomers.162
The Hiyama–Denmark Reaction
Several types of organosilicon compounds can be used in cross coupling, fluoride usually being required
to activate the silicon for the transmetallation in the earlier examples. Silanols are newer and more versatile
reagents, in particular dimethylsilanols, which are used with bases – either reversible (alkoxides and cesium
carbonate) or irreversible (sodium hydride and sodium hexamethyldisilazide). In the latter case, the silanoate salts can be isolated and stored.163
A range of 2-dimethylsilanol derivatives of N-protected and substituted indoles, N-Boc-pyrrole, furan
and thiophene couple in high yields with iodides, bromides and chlorides, the latter two requiring the use
of highly activating ligands, such as SPhos.164 Isoxazolyl silanols are readily available via cycloaddition
ring synthesis and couple well.165 Other conditions for silanol couplings include Pd(PPh3)4 with silver oxide
and catalytic TBAF.166
Aryltrimethoxysilanes, for use in cross couplings,167 can be prepared by a palladium-catalysed reaction
of aryl iodides with trimethoxysilane,168 but this silane is extremely toxic!
Trimethylsilyl compounds generally do not react in attempted cross couplings, but 2-trimethylsilylpyridines will react in the presence of TBAF and silver oxide.169 Also, 2-trimethylsilylpyridines containing
chloro, fluoro or methoxy substituents will couple in the presence of a CuI additive.170
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 69
The Kumada–Corriu Reaction171
Grignard reagents are easy to prepare on a large scale, but they are incompatible, at least under standard
conditions, with many functional groups, and even add to the rings of the more reactive azines. However,
efficient couplings of a wide range of halo-heterocycles can be carried out, for example α-chloro- and
-bromo-, and β-bromo-azines with phenylmagnesium chloride, as shown below. Moreover, the preparation
and coupling of some functionalised Grignards can also be carried out by maintaining low
temperatures.172
2-, 3- and 4-Tri(quinolyl)magnesates (Q3MgLi), prepared by bromine exchange with n-Bu3MgLi, give
moderate yields in cross couplings with heteroaryl bromides.173
The Negishi Reaction174
Zinc reagents are more tolerant of functional groups than Grignard reagents and they can be used to introduce quite complex alkyl chains (which is difficult to do with the other organometallics), as demonstrated
by the example below.175 When used as a heterocyclic organometallic component, zinc reagents can be
prepared with relative ease at practically any position of any heterocyclic ring.
The Sonogashira Reaction
A typical Sonogashira reaction involves heating an aryl halide, catalyst and a terminal alkyne with cuprous
iodide and triethylamine. This reaction does not require the preparation of an organometallic reagent,
because transmetallation occurs via an alkynylcopper, formed in situ. The main use of the Sonogashira
reaction in heterocyclic chemistry is probably for the synthesis of intermediates for ring
synthesis.176
Alternatives to the Sonogashira reaction involve the use of preformed alkynyl organometallics,177
such as trifluoroborates,178 or the reverse coupling of haloalkynes with organometallics.179
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
4.2.6 Other Nucleophiles
Boronic acids180 and 9-BBN derivatives are often used as alkyl partners,181 but trifluoroborates may be more
convenient and stable. Introduction of a protected aminoethyl chain, using a trifluoroborate, has substantial
potential for bioactive molecules – the reaction shown below using 3-bromopyridine works equally well
for pyrimidine (C-5), thiophene (C-2), and indole (C-5).182
A cyano group can be introduced using palladium and zinc cyanide,183 potassium cyanide or potassium
ferrocyanide, the last having the significant advantage of low toxicity, and can be carried out with either a
palladium184 or copper catalyst.185 Tri-n-butyltin cyanide can be used similarly, but a modification using
catalytic tri-n-butyltin chloride with potassium cyanide is much to be preferred.186
Pd(0) catalyses the coupling of a variety of stabilised enolates, for example the reaction of bromopyridines with the sodium salts of sulfonyl and phosphonyl acetonitriles.187 Simple enolates can be arylated
using Pd-carbene catalysts188 or using highly hindered phosphine ligands.189
Phosphorus can be introduced via Pd-, Ni- or Cu-catalysed reactions.190
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 71
Hydroxymethyl can be introduced via coupling with benzoyloxymethylzinc iodide. This reaction
shows an unusual pattern, with chloroazines being superior to the corresponding bromides and iodides;
2-bromonaphthalene and 3-bromoquinoline do not react.
4.2.7 The Ring Systems in Cross-Coupling Reactions
As reactions in benzo-fused rings are generally similar to simple carbocyclic compounds, our discussion
of these is limited.
4.2.7.1 Pyrrole,191 Furan and Thiophene
2-Boronates and -stannanes are usually made via direct lithiation and the 3-analogues via lithium exchange
on 3-bromo or -iodo compounds. Boronic acids at α- and β-positions of all three systems generally couple
well, but some α-derivatives are quite susceptible to base-catalysed cleavage, which is enhanced by the
presence of β-electron-withdrawing groups.192 In the reverse couplings, using the heterocyclic halide, the
only potential problem is the relative instability of some halo-pyrroles, but this can be alleviated to some
degree by the presence of electron-withdrawing protecting groups on nitrogen. Examples below include
the double coupling of 2,5-dibromothiophene,193 the reaction of a thiophene-2-stannane with a vinyl
iodide,194 and a nickel(0)-catalysed alkylation of 3-bromothiophene.195
4.2.7.2 Indole, Benzofuran, Benzothiophene
Lithiation of N-protected indoles is the main route to 2-boronic acids, which have found wide use, although
the usual protecting groups (Boc and arylsulfonyl) increase the ease of deboronation. With Boc-protected
derivatives, the indole is less consistent than the pyrrole in coupling reactions.192 In situ protection of the
indole NH as the N-carboxylate can be used to prepare both the 2-boronic acid196 and 2-tri-n-butylstannane197 for one-pot coupling procedures.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
1-TBS and 1-TIPS indole-3-boronic acids, prepared in situ via halogen exchange, couple well with a
range of heterocyclic substrates.198
A synthesis of the natural product meridianin D demonstrates selectivity in halogen–lithium exchange
and substrate selectivity, using a halogenated boronic acid. The presence of the N-tosyl probably controls
the halogen exchange selectivity.199
1-Tosyl-3-tri-n-butylstannylindole, available via palladium-catalysed stannylation, undergoes coupling
with a range of halides and triflates.200
1-Methylindol-2-ylzinc chloride can be coupled with alkenyl halides201and the couplings of N-protected
indol-2-ylsilanols are discussed above.
Unprotected 5- and 6-tri-n-butylstannylindoles (and comparable boronic acids) are prepared via lithium–
bromine exchange, using the KH then t-butyllithium procedure, and couple cleanly with acid chlorides.202
2,3-Diiodo-1-phenysulfonylindole can be converted by sequential, in situ, magnesium–iodine
exchanges into various 3-substituted indol-2-ylboronates, which participate in Suzuki couplings.203
Benzothiophene-3-boronates can be prepared via both lithiation204 and palladium-catalysed
boronation.205
4.2.7.3 1,3-Azoles206
Imidazole boronate esters at C-4 and C-5 are known, but attempts to prepare imidazole 2-boronic acid or
boronate esters, either via lithio compounds or palladium-catalysed boronation, fail. The products of these
attempts indicate that the boronate may have formed, but rapidly deboronates.207 Oxazole-208 and thiazole2-stananes209 are much more stable and work well in coupling reactions.
2-Stannyl imidazoles210 can be used, but the corresponding zinc compounds give high yields and are
preferable.211
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 73
N-Protected 2-substituted imidazole 5-boronates are readily prepared via direct lithiation, but the use of
2-silyl compounds as precursors for the corresponding 2H-5-boronates fail at the desilylation stage.
However, catalytic reduction of a 2-chloro analogue gives a high yield of the 1-THP protected boronate,
but yields of its coupling products are quite modest.212
2-Phenyl-5- and -4-stannyl-thiazoles, prepared via lithium-halogen exchange, are equally reactive in
Stille couplings.213 2-Phenyloxazole 4-pinacolboronates are prepared by palladium-catalysed boronation of
the 5-H-triflate or via lithium-bromine exchange on the 5-methyl-4-bromide.214
Unprotected 4(5)-bromoimidazole couples well with arylboronic acids under phase-transfer conditions.215
Boronic acid couplings of 2-chloro- and 4-trifloxy-oxazoles are equally successful.216
In a 5-bromo-4-trifloxy-oxazole, the triflate reacted selectively in a Stille coupling with PhSnMe3.217
2,4-Dibromothiazole reacts selectively at C-2 in Negishi couplings, the products being convertible into zinc
or tin derivatives for further couplings.218 The coupling of 4,5-diiodoimidazole protected with SEM on N-1,
is completely selective for the 5-halogen.219
4.2.7.4 1,2-Azoles
1-SEM and -THP-protected pyrazole-5-boronates are easily prepared via direct lithiation and undergo cross
couplings under standard conditions.220 Pyrazole-5/3-stannanes (with no N-protection) can be prepared by
ring synthesis from alkynyl stannanes. The example shown below, bearing a 4-fluorine, requires iodo-arenes
as substrates for cross coupling.221
A wide range of isoxazole-4-boronates and some 5-boronates can be prepared by dipolar cycloaddition
of nitrile oxides with alkynylboronates.222
3-Iodoindazoles require Boc-protection of the NH for successful Sonogashira,223 Suzuki and Heck reactions.224 3,5-Dichloro- and dibromo-isothiazole-4-carbonitriles undergo selective cross coupling at C-5 for
a range of reaction types; a further coupling of the remaining 3-halogen is possible for Stille and Negishi
reactions, but Suzuki coupling requires iodine.225
4.2.7.5 Higher azoles
There seem to be few examples of organometallics derived from higher azoles (triazoles, tetrazole,
oxadiazoles etc.) being used in coupling reactions, possibly due to the relative instability of boronates and
stannanes, although there is an example of a coupling of a 5-stannyltetrazole.226
74
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Zinc derivatives seem to be more amenable, for example 1-benzyloxy-1,2,3-triazol-5-ylzinc iodide
(prepared via direct lithiation) couples well, but the corresponding stannane is less stable and can only be
used for palladium-catalysed acylations.227
Generally the reverse-mode coupling, using the halo-heterocycle is better, for example 1-benzyl-5-bromotetrazole gives high yields with a range of boronic acids, the yield of a single example of a Stille coupling
being significantly lower.228
4.2.7.6 Pyridines and Quinolines
Boronic acids, stannanes, zinc derivatives and Grignard reagents at all positions of the pyridine ring generally couple well. Silane couplings also work well in some cases. The 3- and 4-pyridine-boronic acids have
been widely used, but the 2-isomer is rather unstable, undergoing ready deboronation, although some
couplings have been carried out using crude material. However, the N-phenyldiethanolamine ester of
pyridin-2-ylboronic acid229 has the right balance between stability and reactivity and is commercially available. Tri-o-tolylphosphine is used as the ligand in this case because with triphenylphosphine, substantial
transfer of the phenyl from phosphorus occurs.
Both 2- and 3-pyridyl stannanes can be prepared by palladium-catalysed stannylation.230 The N-oxides
and quaternary salts of pyridyl stannanes can be used in Stille couplings.231
The coupling of pyridin-3-ylzinc bromide requires a solvent exchange from the ether used for lithiation
and metal exchange, to THF, for the coupling.232
The Sonogashira coupling of 2,4-dichloroquinoline in water with a palladium–carbon catalyst (triphenylphosphine, triethylamine, CuI, 80 °C) shows complete selectivity for the 2-position233 and Suzuki
couplings of 1,3-dichloroisoquinoline are selective for C-1.234
The 2,6-dichloronicotinic ester shown below gives catalyst-variable selectivity in couplings with phenylboronic acid, but the chelating amide is more selective: 9:1 compared to 2.5:1 for the ester.235
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 75
The selectivity (C-2:C-4:2,4-disubstitution) of Suzuki couplings of 2,4-dibromopyridine varies greatly
with catalyst and conditions. The most selective C-2 mono-coupling is obtained using Pd(PPh3)4 with thallium hydroxide as base.236 (Caution! Thallium hydroxide is very toxic.)
4.2.7.7 Diazines237
By analogy with pyridin-2-ylboronic acid, the azine boronic acids with the boron α to nitrogen would be
expected to be relatively unstable. Pyrimidine-5-boronic acids have been quite widely used and pyridazine4-boronic acids are also well characterised. However, all the other isomeric diazine boronic acids are
uncharacterised in the literature, but have been mentioned in patents and in suppliers’ catalogues. The
only references to their use in couplings seem to be as listed examples in library syntheses, without individual experimental details, particularly pyrazin-2-ylboronate, 2-methylthiopyrimidin-4-ylboronate, and
pyrimidine-2- and -4-boronates.
Pyridazin-4-ylboronates are available via Diels–Alder reactions of alkynyl boronates and 1,2,4,5tetrazines,238 and the 4-stannanes similarly from 1,2,4-triazines239 and 1,2,4,5-tetrazines.240 The stannylpyridazine, without other substituents, can also be obtained by this latter method, as shown below.241
A range of stannylpyrimidines and pyrazines can be prepared by reaction of the halodiazines with a
lithiostannane, however attempts to prepare 3-stannylpyridazines fail. Their Stille reactions are consistently
successful.242
2,4-Di-t-butoxy-pyrimidines are used as protected forms of uracil 5-boronic acids and 5-halides for
Suzuki and Stille couplings, respectively, but suffer from the problem that an intermediate in their preparation (2,4-dichloro-5-bromopyrimidine) is highly allergenic. Unprotected 5-iodouracil will couple in some
cases, but the Stille coupling of the 5-bromo-2,4-bis(trimethylsilyloxy) derivative is more consistently
successful.243
76
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Couplings of 5-iododeoxyuridine (with protection of the sugar oxygens) are successful with a range of
heteroaryl trimethylstannanes.244
2,4-Dichloropyrimidine gives a selective Sonogashira coupling at C-4245 and 2,4,6-trichloropyrimidine
shows clean sequential Suzuki couplings: C-4, then C-6, then C-2.246 In Sonogashira reactions on dihalopyrimidines, a 4-chloro reacts in preference to a 5-bromo, but not a 5-iodo.247
The use of ultrasonic activation is notable in the Negishi couplings of diazinyl zinc halides.248
4.2.7.8 Higher Azines
3,5-Di-(benzylamino)-6-chloro-1,2,4-triazine undergoes Sonogashira coupling under mild conditions (CuI,
Et3N, MeOH, reflux, 3 h; 50–77%).249
4.2.7.9 Oxygen Heterocycles
4-Tosyloxycoumarins are good substrates for Sonogashira and Negishi couplings.250 3-Bromo-4sulfonyloxycoumarins showed complementary selectivity in Suzuki couplings, depending on the sulfonyl
group, with relative reactivity of 4-TfO > 3-Br > 4-TsO.251
2-Methyl-4-pyrone-3-triflate gives good yields in Stille couplings, under microwave heating, with a
range of heterocyclic stannanes.252
3,5-Dibromo-2-pyrone reacts selectively at C-3 under standard Suzuki conditions, but this is switched
to C-5 by a change of solvent and addition of cuprous iodide.253 Stille couplings show the same C-3 selectivity, but this is enhanced, rather than reversed by the addition of cuprous iodide.254 4,6-Dichloro-2-pyrone
shows reasonable selectivity for C-6 in Sonogashira reactions.255
4.2.7.10 Purines256
Most commonly, palladium-catalysed substitutions on purines are carried out on the halo-purine, but some
metallated purines are useful. 2-Stannyl-6-chloropurines can be prepared via direct (C–H) lithiation, without
protection of C-8 (27.7.1). 6-Purinyl zinc compounds can be prepared by reaction of the iodide with activated zinc metal.256
O-Tosyl, -mesitylenesulfonyl and -2,4,6-tri-iso-propylphenylsulfonyl derivatives of deoxyguanosine are
good substrates for Suzuki couplings, when used with dicyclohexyl-JohnPhos as ligand.257 Stille and
Negishi couplings on 6,8-dichloropurines are highly selective for C-6.258
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 77
5-Bromo- and -iodo-indolizines give consistently good results in Suzuki couplings using very simple
conditions (0.5 mol% PdCl2, K2CO3, aq. dioxane, 80 °C; no ligand added).259
4.2.8 Organometallic Selectivity
The selective reaction of one organometallic in the presence of another is very useful in building up complex
organometallic reagents. This is best achieved by using metals that have very different requirements for
their coupling conditions. The greatest differences are between boronates and related reagents, which
require added base and often aqueous conditions, and stannanes or organozincs, for which non-polar solvents with no added base tend to be used. In compounds containing both a metal and a halide, the challenge
is to minimize self-coupling, although in the absence of a competitive substrate this is a useful way of
synthesizing oligomers and polymers. Illustrative examples are shown below in the coupling of 2-bromo3-tri-n-butylstannyl pyridine with 3-diethylborylpyridine260 and the synthesis of a nucleoside boronic acid
analogue.261
78
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Negishi couplings on 2-bromo-5- and -6-tri-n-butylstannyl pyridines are possible due to the relatively
high reactivity of 2-bromopyridines (the isomeric 5-bromo-2-stannylpyridine gave only low yields
under the same conditions) and the low temperature of the reaction.262
For Suzuki reactions using haloboronic acids and another halide, the obviously best course is to have
a more reactive halide in the substrate than in the boronate, so there are quite a few examples of
chloro-heteroaryl-boronic acids coupling efficiently with aryl bromides. This difference is clearly shown
by the coupling reactions of 2-chloro- and 2-bromopyridine-5-boronic acids with bromo-heterocycles.263
High-yielding Suzuki substitutions of halogen in halo-boronates are also possible using N-methyliminodiacetic acid (MIDA) to form the protected boronate, which resists coupling under anhydrous conditions.
This approach has been applied to aryl and heteroaryl (only thiophene and benzofuran, shown below)
systems,264 and also for polyene synthesis.265
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 79
In couplings of 5-metallo-2-chlorothiazoles, stannanes are preferred to boronates due to the relative
instability of the latter. The corresponding zinc derivatives are unsatisfactory.266
4.2.9
Direct C–H Arylation
HetH + ArX → HetAr
The direct arylation, with substitution of hydrogen, mainly of electron-rich heterocycles, such as mono- and
di-hetero 5-membered rings, by reaction with aryl267 or alkenyl halides, is a very useful supplement to cross
coupling, eliminating the need for the preparation of an organometallic partner.
Both palladium and rhodium are effective catalysts, but the rhodium reactions seem to be more subject
to steric effects. The reaction proceeds via a catalytic cycle similar to cross coupling, except that the
formation of the diorgano(palladium) is brought about by electrophilic attack by the arylpalladium halide,
rather than a transmetallation reaction, hence the need for electron-rich systems.268,269 The equivalent
alkynylation can also be carried out using haloalkynes.270
It is significant that these types of reaction may be easier than standard electrophilic substitutions in
1,3-azoles, reflecting the different nature of electrophilic metal cations compared to simple electrophiles,
such as bromine.
Oxazoles can be arylated at either C-2 or C-5, the method shown being notable for the use of water as
solvent.271 2-Substitution of 5-aryl oxazoles, using palladium acetate, can be carried out without an added
ligand.272
80
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The direct coupling of t-butyl thiazole-4-carboxylate at C-2 is successful with a wide range of (hetero)
aryl halides, the hindered ester (rather than the methyl ester), together with the use of tri-o-tolylphosphine
as ligand, giving optimum selectivity for C-2 vs. C-5 for iodoarenes and heteroarenes. Changing the ligand
to JohnPhos allows extension to chloro- and bromo-heterocycles.273
The reaction of 3-methoxythiophene is highly selective for C-2 and has been put to use for the synthesis
of thiophene oligomers.274 The substitution of thiophenes, using aryl iodides, can also be carried out without
interference from bromo substituents in the substrate.275
The reaction is selective, as would be expected, for C-8 in purines276 and their nucleosides.277 Even totally
unprotected deoxyadenosine reacts well with a range of aryl iodides, without arylation of the 6-NH2 except,
curiously, for 2-iodonitrobenzene, which was completely selective for the amine group!278
Alkenylations can also be carried out: the optimum conditions for 2-bromopropene with palladium
acetate include the use of triphenylarsine with silver carbonate and triethylamine, but the advantages
over more amenable conditions, using triphenylphosphine with potassium or cesium carbonate, are
marginal.279
A rhodium catalyst, under microwave heating, is similarly successful with NH imidazoles, benzimidazole,
benzoxazole, and a 1,2,4-triazole.280
Indoles show a strong tendency to give 2-substituted products, using either rhodium281 or palladium
catalysts, in contrast to normal C-3 electrophilic substitution.
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 81
N-Substituted indoles can be similarly arylated at C-2, using modified conditions, the reactions being
successful even when the indole contains strong electron-withdrawing groups.282
This ‘abnormal’ regioselectivity can be explained by equilibration of the intermediate palladated indole
cation, followed by a relatively slow deprotonation.
The reaction using NH indoles and a magnesium base can be controlled to give either C-2 or C-3 arylation.283 With magnesium oxide, a mild reversible base, only 2-substitution occurs, but with pre-formed
strongly coordinating magnesium derivatives, as formed by reaction with Grignard reagents or best, magnesium hexamethyldisilazide, high C-3:C-2 ratios result.
Alternatively, very clean 3-substitution of NH indoles by aryl bromides can be achieved by use of
phosphine-free conditions, but the reaction is inhibited by electron-withdrawing groups on the indole.
Similar reactions using phosphines give 1- or 3-arylation depending on the phosphine.284
N-oxides of pyridines285 and diazines286 react well and with complete selectivity for the position α to the
N-oxide. Mechanistic studies indicate that the reaction is not based on normal (two step: addition then
proton loss) electrophilic palladation of the N-oxide, but possibly by a simultaneous palladation–deprotonation that was used to explain the success of the reaction in very electron-deficient (non-heterocyclic)
systems, where there is also considerable acidification of the hydrogen.268
82
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Although azines do not usually react under these conditions, the arylation of pyrazine and pyridine is
possible using a gold(I) catalyst with t-BuOK.287
Consideration could also be given to possible involvement of an (ylide ↔ carbene)/Pd complex, perhaps
assisted by coordination with the oxygen. (Carbene intermediates are well known in azoles, cf. the rhodium
reactions shown later.)
(Stable metal (Ir, Ru, Os, Au)-carbene complexes of such pyridinium and related ylides have been isolated,
including an iridium derivative by direct preparation from pyridine.288)
A reaction using diaryl iodonium salts is thought to proceed via a Pd(II)–Pd(IV) cycle (simple halides
are not sufficiently reactive to carry out oxidative addition on Pd(II)).289
4.2.9.1 C–H insertion
A different type of metallation, directed by an acyl group at either the pyridine 3- or 4-position, uses a
catalytic ruthenium complex and results in a reductive Heck-type substitution, as illustrated below. The
mechanism involves insertion of the metal into a C–H bond. The process is non-polar and works equally
well with electron-rich heterocycles, for example indole.290
The rhodium-catalysed reaction between 1,3-azoles and terminal alkenes is thought to proceed via a
carbene complex.291
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 83
4.2.9.2 Oxidative Coupling of Arenes
The catalytic oxidative coupling of two dissimilar arenes is also possible, for example, N-acetyl indoles,
or benzofurans, with benzene and other simple arenes. The mechanism involves sequential metallations in
the two rings.292 The regioselectivity can be controlled by the choice of oxidant, Cu(OAc)2 favouring C-3
and AgOAc, C-2 substitution in 1-acetylindole.293
The similar oxidative dimerisation of 2-bromothiophene illustrates selectivity in the presence of halogen.
The silver fluoride seems to be the oxidant as it is reduced to silver metal during the reaction.294
2-Arylation of indoles can also be carried out via arylpalladium acetates generated from boronic acids295
or trifluoroborate salts296 and palladium acetate. The reactions are catalytic in palladium, cycling of the
Pd(II) being effected by the use of a re-oxidant (Cu(II)/air). The reaction works well on NH and N-methyl
indoles but fails with the N-acetyl derivative.
4.2.10
N-Arylation
ArX + R 2 NH → ArNR 2
Transition-metal-catalysed reactions can be used to introduce aryl or heteroaryl groups onto the ring NH,
or attached amino groups, of heterocycles. They can also be used for the displacement of leaving groups
by amines in all types of heterocyclic systems, including the use of milder conditions for substitutions at
relatively activated positions, such as α- and γ-positions in pyridines, where nucleophilic substitutions can
be carried out.
There are two general ways in which to carry out this process: (i) reaction with an aryl halide using a
Pd, Cu or Ni catalyst, (ii) reaction with an aryl boronic acid catalysed by Cu(II). Minor methods include
reactions with diaryl iodonium salts or high oxidation state aryl metals.
4.2.10.1 Buchwald–Hartwig Reaction (Palladium-Catalysed Amination)
Although occasional examples had been described earlier, the design and development of new highly active
ligands for palladium gave new impetus to transition-metal-catalysed aminations.297 A number of relatively
complex ligands were used in earlier work, but simpler versions, such as JohnPhos, have now become
prominent.298 These methods work well with heterocycles, for example N-arylation of indoles, using
triflates, bromides and chlorides.299
The mechanism of palladium/aryl halide amination is very closely related to that of cross coupling, with
displacement of the halide on palladium (or copper or nickel) by an amine or N-anion instead of the transmetallation step. In the case of Cu and Ni catalysis, it may proceed through M(0)–M(II) or M(I)–M(III)
cycles.
84
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Arylation of a pendant amino group in a wide range of amino heterocycles, including pyrazoles, thiazoles,
thiadiazoles,300 oxazoles, isoxazoles, pyridines and diazines can be carried out using Xantphos as the
ligand.301 In another method, with a number of halo-azines as the arylating agents, the use of sodium phenoxide as base is a key feature. This reaction works equally well under classical thermal conditions (80 °C,
2 h) or with microwave heating (170 °C, 2 h).301
The conversion of purines into arylamino derivatives,302 particularly with polycyclic arylamines, is of
significance for investigations of mutagenesis. Displacement of bromine on purine nucleosides can be
carried out at C-6303 and C-8 of deoxyguanosine, with protection of the 2-amino, the sugar hydroxyl groups,
and the 6-oxo as an ether.304 8-Bromoadenosine, with protection of the sugar, but not the amino group,
couples well with anilines.305 The reverse method is also possible, for example reaction on the 2-amino of
a 6-benzyloxy-deoxyriboside (i.e. a protected deoxyguanosine) with bromopyrenes.306
Intramolecular reactions can also be carried out, such as cyclisation of an N-1-COCH2NHCbz indole
displacing a 2-iodo group.307
Aryl hydrazines, can be prepared via arylation of benzophenone hydrazone, Boc-hydrazide or bisBoc-hydrazide.308 Such transformations can also be carried out using copper catalysts.309
N-Alkenylation can also be carried out. For indoles, pyrroles and carbazoles, the N-lithio-compound is
the preferred reactant, the magnesium derivative or a mixture of the indole with potassium phosphate giving
significantly lower yields.310
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 85
4.2.10.2 Nickel-Catalysed Amination
Nickel is particularly useful for reactions of aryl chlorides, for example, 2-, 3- and 4-chloropyridines are
aminated in the presence of a carbene ligand.311
4.2.10.3 Copper-Catalysed Amination
A copper-catalysed amination – the Ullmann reaction – was the forerunner (1904) of all transition-metalcatalysed couplings, but the vigorous conditions that are required limited its use. In recent years there has
been a resurgence in copper catalysis, due in part to the development of better ligands and understanding
of mechanisms.312
Copper catalysts have the advantages of lower cost, low toxicity and, often, less need for complex
ligands. An early example, using phenanthroline as ligand, is shown below.313
A very simple system, using cuprous iodide with no added ligand, gives good results with a wide range
of aryl and heteroaryl bromides (and a few chlorides and iodides), reacting for example with imidazole,
1,2,4-triazole, pyrazole and pyrrole.314
4,7-Dimethoxy-1,10-phenanthroline is a superior ligand for the arylation315 and heteroarylation316 of
imidazoles using a cuprous oxide catalyst.
86
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Lithium chloride is an effective promoter (no organic ligand added) for the CuI-catalysed N-1 arylation
of 5- and 7-azaindoles.317 Very clean and high-yielding N-arylation results from the use of the tetra-nbutylammonium salt of 2-pyridone as substrate for CuI-catalysed reactions with iodides.318
Proline is a highly effective ligand for the CuI-catalysed displacement of bromine in 3-bromopyridines,
2-bromothiazoles and 5-bromo-1-phenylsulfonylindole by primary amines, morpholine and pyrazole.319
4.2.10.4 Chan–Lam Reaction
This conversion employs a boronic acid with a copper(II) catalyst. The method was developed for reactions
of heterocycles, including the N-arylation of isatin320 and of pyrazole, imidazole and their benzo derivatives
(1,2,3-triazole, 1,2,4-triazole and 5-phenyltetrazole gave only very modest yields).321 These conditions
also apply to the N-arylation of 2-pyridone (and various fused derivatives), 3-pyridazinones, indole-2carboxylates and pyrrole-2-carboxylates.322
The reaction mechanism proceeds via a transmetallation giving an aryl-copper-nitrogen species, followed
by a reductive elimination, but the difference from the aryl halide reaction is that this generates a species
(Cu(0)) that cannot enter into a catalytic cycle. However, methods that are catalytic in copper have been
developed, using an oxidant to regenerate Cu(II), although here there is the possibility for a variation in
mechanism, involving Cu(III).323
The use of TMEDA as ligand gives the highest yield in the catalytic reaction, using air as re-oxidant for
copper. It also gives the highest regioselectivity in the reaction with 4(5)-phenyl imidazole.323 (Note that
even in the stoichiometric reaction above, the presence of air is considered to be beneficial.)
Arylation of the amidic nitrogen in oxy-purine and oxy-pyrimidine nucleosides302 is consistently successful. Arylation on exocyclic amino groups, such as in deoxyadenosine, is also possible, but less
reliable.324
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 87
Similar conditions are used for the arylation, with suitable protection of other positions, at N-1 of uracil
and cytosine derivatives and at N-9 of purines.325
An analogous reaction using alkenyl boronic acids is one of the best processes for the N-alkenylation of
pyridones and amides.326 Indoles can be N-cyclopropylated using cyclopropylboronic acid/cupric acetate.327
4.2.10.5 Other Variations327
As is the case for cross-coupling reactions, arylstannanes328 and aryltrialkoxysilanes329 can be substituted
for boronic acids in this method, but would appear to offer few advantages. A number of other, usually
Cu(II)-catalysed, reagents can be used to arylate azoles and indoles, of which diaryliodonium salts are the
most useful.330 Aryllead triacetates331 and triarylbismuth diacetates 332 may find very occasional use, but
N-cyclopropylation using tricyclopropylbismuth with cupric acetate is possibly more interesting.333
4.2.10.6 O-Arylation
O-Arylations can be carried out under conditions very similar to those for N-arylations, using Pd or Cu
catalysts, examples being displacement of 5-bromo in N-protected indoles by phenoxides,334 and reactions
of 2-chloro- and 2-bromo-pyridines with 2-aryl-ethanols.335
Copper powder can also be used to catalyse the reaction of activated halides (in pyridine, quinoline,
pyrimidine, benzothiazole) with phenols. Microwave heating is far superior to conventional heating for
chlorides and bromides, but there is little difference for iodide.336
Highly selective CuI-catalysed O- or N-arylation of aminoalcohols can be carried out by choice of ligand:
N using 3,4,7,8-tetramethylphenantholine; O using 2-isobutyrylcyclohexanone.337
4.2.11
Heck Reactions338
ArBr + CH= CHR → ArCH= CHR
A standard Heck reaction, as shown in the example below,339 involves the palladium-catalysed reaction of
a halide with an alkene, most commonly an electron-deficient alkene such as an acrylate, but other types
can also be used. Heck-type cyclisation onto olefins is a useful reaction for ring synthesis.
88
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The sequence involves an initial oxidative addition of palladium(0) to the halide, followed by in insertion
of the arylpalladium halide into the double bond and finally a β-hydride elimination. Both of the latter two
reactions are concerted-syn, therefore a rotation around the carbon–carbon single bond must precede the
hydride elimination.
Electron-deficient alkenes, such as acrylates, show a strong regiochemical bias, with the aryl group
becoming attached to the β-position. Terminal, unactivated alkenes tend to substitute on the terminal carbon
and the regiochemistry of reactions with enol ethers is controllable. The α-substitution of enol ethers is a
useful means, following hydrolysis, of introducing acyl groups.340
The electron-rich nature of heterocycles such as indoles, furans and thiophenes allows a different type
of Heck reaction to be carried out.341 In this ‘oxidative’ modification, the aryl palladium derivative is generated by electrophilic palladation with a palladium(II) reagent.
This process is not catalytic in the standard way, as the Pd(0), generated in the final hydride elimination,
cannot effect the first (electrophilic) ring palladation. However, the addition of an oxidant selective for
Pd(0), such as a peroxide or Cu(II), allows the cycle to continue by re-formation of the reactive Pd(II)
species.342
Organometallic Heterocyclic Chemistry 89
In indoles, the reaction generally occurs at C-3, unless that is blocked, as in the example above. However,
the position of substitution can be influenced by choice of solvent and possibly, to a lesser extent, the reoxidant. Equilibration of the intermediate palladated indole is probably responsible for the variations in
regioselectivity.343
The palladation, and therefore substitution, can also be directed to C-2 in indoles by the use of a chelating 2-pyridylmethyl group on the nitrogen.344 Direction by a carboxy group (via the Pd carboxylate) is
generally useful in indole, furan, thiophene and pyrrole, although it is not always completely selective. The
carboxyl group is lost during the reaction.345
4.2.12
Carbonylation Reactions
ArX + CO + Nu (H ) → ArCONu
Palladium-catalysed carbonylation of halides, with carbon monoxide, can be used to prepare esters, amides
and ketones by trapping the intermediate acylpalladium halide with alcohols,346 amines347 and organometallics, respectively. Boronic acids are probably the best organometallics for the preparation of ketones, but
conditions must be adjusted to give the best selectivity between the acylation reaction and simple Suzuki
coupling of the boronic acid with the starting halide.348
90
Heterocyclic Chemistry
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Bessard, Y. and Crettaz, R., Heterocycles, 1999, 51, 2589; Albaneze-Walker, J., Bazaral, C., Leavey, T., Dormer, P. G. and Murray, J. A., Org. Lett.,
2004, 6, 2097.
Kumar, K., Zapf, A., Michalik, D., Tillack, A., Heinrich, T., Böttcher, H., Arlt, M. and Beller, M., Org. Lett., 2004, 6, 7.
Couve-Bonnaire, S., Carpentier, J-F., Mortreux, A. and Castanet, Y., Tetrahedron, 2003, 59, 2793.
5
Methods in Heterocyclic Chemistry
The traditional methods of organic synthesis have been supplemented, and often supplanted, by
several newer techniques, all of which are relevant to heterocyclic chemistry, and are discussed in this
chapter.
One important approach is to carry out reactions with tethered substrates, to simplify manipulation,
purification and isolation, avoiding the often tedious and wasteful standard techniques such as liquid–liquid
extractions and chromatography. The original way of doing this was by carrying out the reactions on solid
phase – that is, where the substrate is attached (tethered) to an insoluble polymeric solid support – and this
remains the most popular method. Soluble polymeric supports can also be used, but are not so convenient.
A more recent approach is the use of (non-polymeric) ‘phase tags’, which are auxiliary groups that have
high affinities for particular solvents or adsorbents, allowing selective capture of the tagged components.
These methods have also been extended to the use of tethered reagents, and scavengers for removal of
by-products, rather than immobilisation of the substrate.
This chapter also includes a discussion of the use of microwave heating which can greatly accelerate
reactions, cutting down on reaction times and often allowing transformations that would otherwise not be
practicable. The use of flow reactors is a burgeoning area, with advantages at all scales and is discussed in
the heterocyclic context.
5.1
Solid-Phase Reactions1 and Related Methods
5.1.1 Solid-Phase Reactions
This method was originally developed by Merrifield for peptide synthesis, with the link (tether) being
achieved by alkylation of the carboxyl oxygen of protected amino acids with chloromethylated polystyrene
resins. It is now very widely used in general and heterocyclic chemistry, but modified resins are much
more common, although still normally based on the polystyrene backbone, but with various intermediate
chains and functional linking groups, which allow easier control over conditions for cleavage of the
product. Popular variants are based on Wang resins, containing an intermediate alkoxybenzyl group
and the related Rink resins. Solid-supported reactions are particularly amenable to combinatorial, high
throughput and automated synthesis.2 (NOTE: In schemes, the resin backbone, including any spacer group,
may be indicated generically as ‘PS’ in reagent listings, but in structural diagrams it is shown as shaded
circles.)
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
98
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The process of solid-phase synthesis (SPS) involves linking the substrate to the resin, carrying out
various reactions, washing away by-products, and finally cleaving the product from the support with
minimal impurities. The polymer-bound intermediates may simply be filtered off and washed after each
stage or, more conveniently, by using a special flask containing a sinter, controlled by a stopcock, at
the base.
Individual reactions may be slower on solid phase, due to congestion at the reacting site, and it is common
to use substantial excesses of reagents to ensure complete reaction. However, overall processes are generally faster because only one isolation step is needed. Modified polymers, for example with polyethylene
glycol spacers between the polymeric benzyl and the reacting group, are said to give reactions that are
more similar to solution reactions.
Practically all types of reaction can be carried out, although some may limit the choice of linking group,
including those that may include aggressive or sensitive reagents, such as lithiation, halogenation or metalcatalysed couplings. Solid-phase synthesis can be adapted to most standard heterocyclic reactions and
syntheses.
A major question is how to attach the substrate to the polymer in such a way that it can be selectively
and easily removed at the end of the sequence. In carboaromatic and aliphatic chemistry this is often
done through a functional group such as a carboxylic acid or an amine. However, this can restrict choice
of substrate; an alternative method is through a ‘traceless link’ such as a silane, which can be removed, for
example by protonolysis, to leave a hydrogen at the point of attachment, but this may not be particularly
convenient. Here, heterocycles have the advantage! Attachment to the support can be by methods similar
to those described above, but also via the ring nitrogen, or other potential ring heteroatoms.
Some illustrative and self-explanatory examples are shown below.3,4,5 For a discussion of the
heterocyclic reactivity involved in the examples shown, the reader should consult the relevant ring-system
chapter.
Methods in Heterocyclic Chemistry
99
An alternative attachment is through a heteroatom when the heterocyclic ring formation is the final step
– it is often easy to incorporate a final cyclisation (heterocycle formation) step in such a way that it results
in cleavage of the product from the support at the same time.6
Sulfur is a useful link for heterocycles because its use as a leaving group (or better, after conversion to
sulfoxide7 or sulfone) can bring about cleavage from the support combined with addition of a nucleophile.
This method has been used for both azoles8 and azines,9 as shown below.
An interesting (traceless) example combines the linking with a first-stage reaction by use of a resin acid
chloride in a Reissert-reaction–alkylation sequence from isoquinolines, the normal Reissert final-stage
hydrolysis being the means of cleavage from the resin.10
5.1.2 Solid-Supported Reagents and Scavengers
Another application of solid-phase chemistry is the use of polymer-bound reagents for reactions with
substrates in solution, which offers similar advantages in requiring minimal purification: the thiazole synthesis shown below, which involved the use of a polymer-bound brominating agent and secondly a polymerbound base, gave the intermediate and product in greater than 95% purity, without the need for any
chromatography.11
100
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Other examples include reactions, such as the Mitsunobu condensation, where polystyrene-diphenylphosphine can be used instead of triphenylphosphine, avoiding production of the difficult-to-remove by-product,
triphenylphosphine oxide.
Solid-phase ‘scavengers’ can also be used both for removal of excess reagents and trace impurities, such
as metal residues, for example palladium from cross-coupling reactions. A range of resins is available to
remove a variety of metal residues, usually involving binding to a thiol or amino group.
Instead of simply filtering off the resin between stages, an alternative approach is to carry out reactions
in flow systems with sequential chambers containing catalysts and/or reagents and/or scavengers. An illustrative example is the triazole synthesis shown below, via a copper-catalysed azide–acetylene cycloaddition,
where excess azide was used to ensure complete reaction of the acetylene substrate. The mixture of azide
and acetylene was first passed through a chamber containing the reaction catalyst – CuI.Me2NCH2PS – then
though a polystyrene-thiourea resin to remove a small amount of copper that had leached from the catalyst.
Finally, passage though a polystyrene-phosphine resin to eliminate the excess azide, and removal of the
solvent, gave essentially pure product.12
While all the above methods have been used very successfully on standard laboratory scale, they also
have significant potential for rapid synthesis on medium scale (up to several kg) and possibly even larger.
High-loading resins can bind an equal weight of substrate and so are efficient in terms of volume.13
At the other end of the scale, products can be isolated on single beads of resin produced by combinatorial
chemistry, involving sequential splitting and mixing batches of beads between reaction steps such that
single beads contain only one product. Spectroscopic methods have been developed for the non-destructive
characterisation of products while still on the bead.14
5.1.3 Solid-Phase Extraction (SPE)
Rather than carry out liquid–liquid extractions, which are time-consuming and lead to large quantities of
waste, solid supports can be constructed that have high affinity for selected types of molecules. Simple
filtration of a solution through a column of the solid-phase medium results in efficient extraction
of the product. This method is quite widely used and is of particular interest for fluorous chemistry
(see below).
5.1.4 Soluble Polymer-Supported Reactions15
Soluble polymers, such as polyethylene glycol (PEG), can be used in similar ways to the insoluble supports,
but they generally require a more elaborate work-up, often involving precipitation of the polymeric
Methods in Heterocyclic Chemistry
101
complex. They have not been widely used for heterocyclic synthesis, however in one example, thiophenes
were made from PEG cyanoacetic ester, ketones and sulfur.16
5.1.5 Phase Tags
A phase tag can be as simple as incorporation of a protecting group containing a carboxyl or amino
group, allowing selective extraction into base or acid respectively. However, general methods using
non-reactive tags are more versatile, of which the most important and best-developed group are fluorous
compounds, with a significant number of protecting groups, reagents and scavengers being commercially
available.
5.1.5.1 Fluorous Tags17
A fluorous compound is one that contains one or more perfluoroalkyl groups that confer special physical
properties on the molecule, particularly selective affinity for solvents and adsorbants, without changing the
chemical properties to a great degree. They can be differentiated into ‘light fluorous’, which generally have
a single perfluoroalkyl group (usually C6 to C10) and ‘heavy fluorous’, which may contain multiple perfluoroalkyl groups. Light fluorous compounds are generally much more useful in the current context. The
perfluoroalkyl group is usually ‘insulated’ from a functional group by a number of methylenes to avoid
altering its reactivity too much, for example where it is a nucleophile or where formation of a cation is
involved in cleavage, as for the Boc analogue shown below. However, in certain cases, for example sulfonate leaving groups, it may be beneficial to have the stronger electron withdrawal of a fully fluorinated
group.
Fluorous chemistry can be applied in many ways that are similar to solid-phase methodology, including
the use of traceless and reactive attachment points for substrates, or as reagents or scavengers. Notable
examples of reagents where the by-products are difficult to separate in the ‘normal’ form, but easy in the
fluorous form, are azodicarboxylates and phosphines, for Mitsunobu reactions, and ‘heavy’ fluorous tin
reagents, for various purposes, including Stille couplings.18
Fluorous tagging can facilitate separation by standard purification methods, but more specific methods
are available. A particularly useful technique is SPE onto fluorous silica gel, which contains a fluorinated
chain bonded to the silica. The non-fluorous components are washed off with a fluorophobic solvent then
the fluorous component is eluted with a fluorophilic solvent. Note that ordinary organic solvents are used;
fluorinated solvents are seldom required. Many organic solvents are fluorophilic, but can be switched dramatically, in the case of water-miscible solvents, by the addition of relatively small amounts of water, into
fluorophobes. The selectivity is such that the fluorophobic solvent can be 20% water in methanol, followed,
as the fluorophilic solvent, by pure methanol.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
The exact size of the perfluoroalkyl group can be critical. In the example shown below, fluorous versions
of the Mukaiyama 2-chloropyridinium reagent were used to couple acids and amines in DMF, the fluorous
pyridone by-product being removed by precipitation on addition of 20% water. Some of the pyridone was
retained in the solution when Rf was C8F17, but none when it was C10F21.19
The scheme shown below illustrates a typical fluorous sequence, including the use of a fluorous tagged
intermediate where the tag can be converted into a leaving group, in analogy with solid-phase sulfur links.20
5.1.5.2 Ionic-Liquid Tags
Some syntheses using intermediates with ionic-liquid tags have been reported, but they are not as versatile
as solid or fluorous supports. The tagged intermediates and products are often isolated by precipitation and
an advantage of ionic liquids is that the affinity and solubility of the tagged compounds can be altered by
exchange of the associated anion.
An example of an efficient ionic liquid-phase tag is for Biginelli reactions, where a potentially very
versatile tagged acetoacetate was used. This ester was prepared straightforwardly from a pre-formed ionicliquid-tagged alcohol.21
In other cases, a less convenient approach to the preparation of the tagged intermediate has been used,
involving quaternisation, followed by anion exchange, of complex haloalkyl substrates, for example a
C-6–linked glycoside.22
Methods in Heterocyclic Chemistry
5.2
Microwave Heating23
103
Microwave heating (commonly designated ‘MW’ or ‘μW’ in reaction schemes) is very widely used
in heterocyclic chemistry, and organic chemistry generally, as it is much quicker and more convenient
than conventional heating. It is also much easier to control – heat input can be cut off at the flick of a
switch – and is very suitable for automated systems, for example in combinatorial chemistry and highthroughput synthesis. It can also improve the outcome of many reactions, when compared to conventional
heating.24
In contrast to conventional heating, which involves a slow and inefficient heat transfer through the vessel
walls from an external heat source, heating by microwaves occurs directly within the reaction mixture by
interaction of the radiation with dipoles. Therefore, one of the reaction components, or the solvent, must
have polar bonds25 (there may be subtle variations in the reaction depending on differential heating of the
solvent and reactants). Alternatively, passive heating elements, such as graphite or silicon carbide can
be added, which absorb the radiation, generating heat, and thus allowing reactions of weakly absorbing
substrates in low-polarity solvents.26 Addition of these passive heating elements to standard microwave
reactions can also be used to generate higher temperatures.
There are two basic types of microwave equipment – multimode and monomode. Multimode is the type
found in domestic microwave ovens, where reflections inside a metal casing may produce a non-homogenous field, leading to uneven heating with hot spots. However, with proper design, a completely random
field can be generated, which will give even heating. Monomode uses a waveguide to generate a standing
wave with a homogenous field, at least when not perturbed by a reaction, and the waveguide can also be
designed to focus the radiation, giving a more intense local field. Monomode reaction chambers are limited
to a relatively small volume (about 100 ml or so) due to the precise positional requirements for the reaction
vessel. Consequently, it is necessary to use multimode for large equipment, such as multi-reaction plates
and arrays, and for scale-up.
The use of domestic microwave ovens is to be greatly discouraged – although cheap, they allow for very
little control and give no information about precise conditions and therefore fall short of proper scientific
requirements. They are also dangerous, with the possibility of fires and explosions! Purpose-made commercial equipment is much more versatile and, with feedback control from sensors for temperature and
pressure, is much safer, and provides proper control and output data.
Reaction methodology usually needs to be modified for microwave reactions. Solvent-free reactions are
popular and eliminate the risk from flammable solvents. Reactions can also be carried out on pastes or with
the reactants adsorbed onto solid supports, such as alumina or bentonite.
The apparently perverse method of microwave heating with concomitant cooling (either by blowing air
onto the vessel or using more sophisticated jacket systems) has been shown to be beneficial, reducing side
reactions, and such cooling systems are now common on commercial microwave equipment designed for
synthesis. A demonstration of this principle is a study of Suzuki couplings using an encapsulated palladium
catalyst. Here, the catalyst absorbs most of the microwave radiation (an ideal situation, as it is the only
place where the reaction occurs!), but much of the heat produced is transferred to the solvent causing
unwanted and unproductive heating of the reactants and products, leading to decomposition of sensitive
components, for example some thiophene and benzofuran boronic acids. When the reaction is carried out
with cooling, reducing the bulk temperature during irradiation, the yields from problematic substrates are
considerably improved.27
The existence, or not, of non-heating effects of microwave radiation on reactions is somewhat controversial, as the energy of microwaves is too low to break chemical bonds directly. However, microwave
irradiation certainly can produce different results to conventional heating, for example isomer ratios in
N-alkylation of azoles. It can be argued that this is just due to the different rates of heating, but it can be
a useful feature.28
Batch scale-up of microwave reactions can be carried out to a certain extent (1 kg or so29), but for larger
reactions it is difficult, due to the limited depth of penetration of the radiation. However, combination of
104
Heterocyclic Chemistry
microwave heating with flow reactors is very promising, due to the relatively small volume of the reaction
zone.
5.3
Flow Reactors
Flow reactors are currently under intense investigation and development. They can be used in several different ways, but the most important application here is for carrying out ‘normal’ chemistry in a continuous
(rather than batch) mode, and can be applied at all scales from microsynthesis up to process development
and production.
Classically, a reaction is carried out as a batch process, i.e. a batch of starting material is placed in a
vessel, the reaction is carried out, worked up and the product isolated. If necessary, the vessel is then
reloaded and the sequence repeated, and so on. There are advantages and disadvantages in this approach.
The main advantage is that it is fairly straightforward to do and may use relatively simple equipment. The
disadvantages include inefficient use of time, limited throughput and, particularly as the scale increases,
increasing difficulty of heating and cooling efficiently, with longer reagent addition times, the worst
outcome being a runaway reaction. Batch scale-up synthesis is notorious for not following on from the
conditions used for the small-scale work. At the other extreme, library and analogue synthesis on a smallscale is also very time consuming and tedious. Flow reactors can provide solutions for both these
disadvantages.
In a flow reactor, the reaction occurs in relatively small diameter glass, plastic or metal tubes or channels
up to a few mm in diameter, with the reaction zone confined to a small heating/cooling chamber. Input of
starting materials and output of product is continuous, being fed simply by combining streams of reactants
in a T-junction or in a more sophisticated mixing chamber. Control valves can be added for operations
under pressure. The reactors can also be miniaturised, with channels down to a few tens of microns in
diameter, formed by etching onto small glass, ceramic or metal plates, similar to silicon chips – hence the
phrase ‘lab-on-a-chip’. These chip reactors are sometimes referred to as microreactors30 and the technique
as microfluidics (differentiation into microfluidics for sub-millimetre and mesofluidics for mm–cm diameters of flow reactors is useful).
Due to the small volumes of the reaction zone, high rates of heat transfer, both in and out, are possible.
Microwave heating is particularly suitable, provided metal tubing is not used, and low-temperature reactions
are easy to carry out – the exceptional efficiency of cooling may allow reactions to be carried out at a
higher temperature than in a batch reactor. It is also relatively easy to devise safe high-pressure systems.
Overall, flow reactors allow a much higher degree of control than classical methods. Highly sophisticated
integrated bench-top flow systems are available commercially that have the capacities to work up to 350 °C
and 2900 psi.31
There are many ingenious sophisticated variations on the reactor cells,32 but a simple, though not very
versatile, flow cell has been described for use in a microwave heater, where the reaction solution was
percolated through sand in a test tube as the equivalent of multiple microchannels. This set-up was used
to carry out a Bohlmann–Rahtz pyridine synthesis and a Fischer indolisation.33
Flow reactors have another major asset – safety. Although capable of producing substantial aggregate
quantities of product, the amount in the reaction zone at any one time is very small, therefore any reaction
hazard, that is where the hazard arises during the reaction rather than hazardous starting materials or products, is minimised.
In theory and usually in practice, the scale-up of flow reactions is relatively straightforward – just carry
on for longer and/or add more reactors of the same size in parallel. As the individual reaction scale doesn’t
change, neither do reaction conditions.
A scale-up preparation of ionic liquids is illustrative. Here the reaction of 1-methylimidazole with n-butyl
bromide under solvent-free conditions is highly exothermic and prone to runaway in a batch reaction of
any significant scale. However, using a flow reactor with reaction tubes between 2 mm and 6 mm diameter,
fed by a micromixer with 0.45 mm channels, a continuous flow reaction at 85 °C was able to produce over
Methods in Heterocyclic Chemistry
105
9 kg of product per day.34 A flow reactor has also been used to tame the very dangerous diazotisation of
aminotetrazole (see 29.1.1.3).35
Small-scale combinatorial chemistry for library and analogue generation is easily automated with microreactors, using similar technology to that used for automated hplc, where sequential syntheses can be carried
out on the same ‘chip’, for example in the preparation of analogues of ciprofloxacin.36
A significant limitation of flow reactors is that solids, either as suspensions of starting materials or precipitated products, easily block the channels, although solid-supported reagents and catalysts can be used
by immobilisation onto the walls or as packing.
5.4
Hazards: Explosions
Many compounds used or prepared by the chemist are hazardous, but most of the hazards can be controlled
by proper working practice. However, explosive hazards are the exception, as explosions are very difficult
to contain in the normal laboratory.
Physical explosions, such as those due to excessive pressure build-up in a closed vessel or ignition of
flammable gas mixtures, should not occur if procedures are followed. The main hazard is from intrinsically
explosive compounds detonation of which can be initiated by shock, heat or friction; the main substances
of concern in heterocyclic chemistry are azides, perchlorate salts and some high-nitrogen compounds. These
last are discussed in the appropriate ring chapters and simple inorganic and organic azides are discussed
in Section 29.1.1.3. A widely used reagent – tosyl azide – presents a significant explosive hazard and
although we describe reactions using such reagents, as they appear in the literature, safer substitutes, for
example 4-acetamidobenzenesulfonyl azide,37 which is commercially available, should be used whenever
possible. Dodecyl- and naphthylsulfonyl azides are other possible alternatives.38
The iminium perchlorate shown below is a useful reagent for the preparation of heterocycles, but is shock
sensitive and has the explosive power of TNT! Fortunately, the much safer tetrafluoroborate salt is a suitable substitute.39
Where an explosive reaction hazard (as opposed to an explosive product) is present, the use of flow
reactors can be particularly useful for mitigating risk.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
‘Recent advances in the preparation of heterocycles on solid support’, Franzén, R. G., J. Comb. Chem., 2000, 2, 195; ‘Recent progress in solid phase
heterocycle synthesis’, Corbett, J. W., Org. Prep. Proc. Int., 1998, 30, 489; ‘Solid phase organic reactions, III (for Nov 1996–Dec 1997)’ [and previous articles in the series], Booth, S., Hermkens, P. H. H., Ottenheijm, H. C. J. and Rees, D. C., Tetrahedron, 1998, 54, 15385.
An example of a high throughput robotic synthesis: Brooking, P., Crawshaw, M., Hird, M. W., Jones, C., MacLachlan, W. S., Readshaw, S. A. and
Wilding, S., Synthesis, 1999, 1986.
Nugiel, D. A., Cornelius, A. M. and Corbett, J. W., J. Org. Chem., 1997, 62, 201.
Chen, C. and Munoz, B., Tetrahedron Lett., 1998, 39, 6781.
Huang, W. and Scarborough, R. M., Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40, 2665.
Hu, Y., Baudart, S., and Porco, J. A., J. Org. Chem., 1999, 64, 1049.
Masquelin, T., Meunier, N., Gerber, F. and Rosse, G., Heterocycles, 1998, 48, 2489.
Lee, I. Y., Lee, J. Y., Lee, H. J. and Gong, Y-D., Synlett, 2006, 2483.
Gayo, L. M. and Suto, M. J., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 211.
Lorsbach, B. A., Bagdanoff, J. T., Miller, R. B. and Kurth, M. J., J. Org. Chem., 1998, 63, 2244.
Habermann, J., Ley, S. V., Scicinski, J. J., Scott, J. S., Smits, R. and Thomas, A. W., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1999, 2425.
Smith, C. D., Baxendale, I. R., Lanners, S., Hayward, J. J., Smith, S. C. and Ley, S. V., Org. Biomol. Chem., 2007, 5, 1559.
Raillard, S. P., Ji, G., Mann, A. D. and Baer, T. A., Org. Proc. Res. Dev., 1999, 3, 177.
Freeman, C. E. and Howard, A. G., Analyst, 2001, 126, 538; Swali, V. and Bradley, M., Anal. Commun., 1997, 34, 15H.
‘Soluble polymer-supported organic synthesis’, Toy, P. H. and Janda, K. D., Acc. Chem. Res., 2000, 33, 546.
106
16
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22
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26
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39
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Zhang, H., Yang, G., Chen, J. and Chen, Z., Synthesis, 2004, 3055.
‘Handbook of Fluorous Chemistry’, Gladysz, J. A., Curran, D. P., and Horvath, I. T. Eds., Wiley-VCH, 2004; ‘Fluorous synthesis of heterocyclic
systems’, Zhang, W. Chem. Rev., 2004, 104, 2531; ‘Organic synthesis with light-fluorous reagents, reactants, catalysts and scavengers’, Curran, D.
P., Aldrichimica Acta, 2006, 36, 3. Fluorous Technologies Inc. are the main suppliers of fluorous compounds and have a very informative web site:
www.fluorous.com.
Hoshino, M., Degenkolb, P. and Curran, D. P., J. Org. Chem., 1997, 62, 8341.
Matsugi, M., Suganuma, M., Yoshida, S., Hasebe, S., Kunda, Y., Hagihara, K. and Oka, S., Tetrahedron Lett., 2008, 49, 6573.
Zhang, W., Org. Lett., 2003, 5, 1011.
Legeay, J. C., Vanden Ende, J. J., Toupet, L. and Bazureau, J. P., Arkivoc, 2007, iii, 13.
Pathak, A. K., Yerneni, C. K., Young, Z. and Pathak, V., Org. Lett., 2008, 10, 145.
Microwave manufacturers web sites often provide libraries of references to applications, and informative videos or slide presentations: (September
2008) www.cem.com; www.biotage.com; www.milestonesci.com.
General reviews: Tierney, J. P. and Lidstrom, P. (Eds), ‘Microwave-Assisted Synthesis’, Blackwell, 2005; ‘Microwave irradiation for accelerating
organic reactions. Part I: Three-, four- and five-membered heterocycles’, El Ashry, E. S. H., Ramadan, E., Kassem, A. A. and Hagar, M., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 2005, 88, 1; ‘Part II: Six-, seven-membered, spiro, and fused heterocycles’, El Ashry, E. S. H., Ramadan, E. and Kassem, A. A., Adv.
Heterocycl. Chem., 2006, 90, 1.
For an analysis of the theoretical and technical aspects of microwaves in chemistry see Nüchter, M., Ondruschka, B., Bonrath, W. and Gum, A.,
Green Chem., 2004, 6, 128.
Kremsner, J. M. and Kappe, C. O., J. Org. Chem., 2006, 71, 4651.
Baxendale, I. R., Griffiths-Jones, C. M., Ley, S. V. and Tranmer, G. K., Chem. Eur. J., 2006, 12, 4407.
J. Cléophax, J., Liagre, M., Loupy, A. and Petit, A., Org. Proc. Res. Dev. 2000, 4, 498; Perreux, L. and Loupy, A. (Tetrahedron Report 588) Tetrahedron 2001, 57, 9199.
For example, the Biotage Advancer Kilobatch.
Microreactor suppliers: www.corning.com; www.syrris.com; www.micronit.com. ‘Application of microreactor technology in process development’,
Zhang, X., Stefanick, S. and Villani, F. J., Org. Proc. Res. Dev. 2004, 8, 455; ‘Microreactors in Organic Synthesis and Catalysis’, Ed. Wirth, T.,
Wiley-VCH: Weinheim, 2008; ‘Recent advances in synthetic micro reaction technology’, Watts, P. and Wiles, C. Chem. Commun. 2007, 443.
www.uniqsis.com; www.thalesnano.com
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Bagley, M. C., Jenkins, R. L., Lubinu, M. C., Mason, C. and Wood, R., J. Org. Chem. 2005, 79, 703.
Waterkemp, D. A., Heiland, M., Schlüter, M., Sauvageau, J., Beyersdorf, T. and Thöming, J., Green Chem., 2007, 9, 1084.
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July 2005, Tucson, Arizona. Paper AIAA 2005-3516. See also Renz, R. N., Williams, M. D., and Fronabarger, J. W., US patent 7253288 (publ.
08/07/2007) (Note: The introduction to the patent has a good discussion of the concept).
Schwalbe, T., Kadzimirsz, D. and Jas, G., QSAR Comb. Sci. 2005, 24, 758.
Baum, J. S., Shook, D. A., Davies, H. M. L. and Smith, D., Synth. Commun., 1987, 17, 1709.
Hazen, G. G., Weinstock, L. M., Connell, R. and Bollinger, F. W., Synth. Commun., 1981, 11, 947.
Ragan, J. A., McDermott, R. E., Jones, B. P., am Ende, D. J., Clifford, P. J., McHardy, S. J., Heck, S. D., Liras, S. and Segelstein, B. E., Synlett,
2000, 1172.
6
Ring Synthesis of Aromatic Heterocycles
The preparation of benzenoid compounds nearly always begins with an appropriately substituted, and often
readily available, benzene derivative. The preparation of heteroaromatic compounds presents a very different picture, for it often involves ring synthesis.1 Of course, when first considering a suitable route to a
desired target, it is always important to give thought to the possibility of utilising a commercially available
compound that contains the heterocyclic nucleus and which could be modified by manipulation, introduction and/or elimination of substituents2 – a synthesis of tryptophan, for example, would start from indole
– however if there is no obvious starting material, a ring synthesis has to be designed that leads to a heterocylic intermediate appropriately substituted for further elaboration into the desired target.
This chapter shows how just a few general principles allow one to understand the methods which are
used in the construction of the heterocyclic ring of an aromatic heterocyclic compound from precursors
that do not have that ring. It discusses the principles, and analyses the types of reaction frequently used in
constructing an aromatic heterocycle, and also the way in which appropriate functional groups are placed
in the reactants, in order to achieve the desired ring synthesis.
6.1
Reaction Types Most Frequently Used in Heterocyclic Ring Synthesis
By far the most frequently used process is the addition of a nucleophile to a carbonyl carbon (or the more
reactive carbon of an O-protonated carbonyl). When the reaction leads to C–C bond formation, then the
nucleophile is the β-carbon of an enol or an enolate anion, or of an enamine.
Typical C–C bonding processes in heteroaromatic ring synthesis
When the process leads to C–heteroatom bond formation, then the nucleophile is an appropriate heteroatom, either anionic (-X−) or neutral (-XH):
Typical C–Heteroatom bonding processes in heteroaromatic ring synthesis
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
108
Heterocyclic Chemistry
In all cases, subsequent loss of water produces a double bond, either a C–C or a C–heteroatom double
bond, i.e. formation of an aldol condensation product, or the formation of an imine or enamine.
Dehydrations produce alkenes, imines, or enamines or enol/thioenol ethers
These two basic processes, with minor variants, cover the majority of the steps involved in classical
heteroaromatic ring synthesis. We shall show below how a sequence of such simple steps leads, via a set
of equilibria, to the final product, driven to completion by the formation of an aromatic stabilised system.
In a few instances, displacements of halide, or other leaving groups, from saturated carbon are also involved.
In completely separate categories are heterocyclic ring syntheses that involve electrocyclic processes
(see 6.4) and in some transition metal-catalysed ring-forming steps.
6.2 Typical Reactant Combinations
Although there are some examples of nearly all possible retrosynthetic dissections and synthetic recombinations of five- and six-membered aromatic heterocycles, yet by far the majority of ring syntheses fall into
two categories; in the first, for each ring size, only C–heteroatom bonding is needed, i.e. the rest of the
skeleton is present, intact, in one starting component; in the second, for each ring size, one C–C bond and
one C–heteroatom linkage are required.
Typical disconnections for the synthesis of five- and six-membered aromatic heterocycles
6.2.1 Typical Ring Synthesis of a Pyrrole Involving Only C–Heteroatom Bond Formation
We can now look at specific examples, and see how the principles above can lead to the aromatic heterocycles. In the first of the two broad categories, where only C–heteroatom bonds need to be formed, and for
the synthesis of five-membered heterocycles, precursors with two carbonyl groups related 1,4 are required,
thus 1,4-diketones react with ammonia or primary amines to give 2,5-disubstituted pyrroles; two successive
heteroatom-to-carbonyl carbon additions and loss of two molecules of water produce the aromatic ring,
though the exact order of these several steps is never certain.
Ring Synthesis of Aromatic Heterocycles 109
Typical sequence for the synthesis of a pyrrole from a 1,4-dicarbonyl compound
6.2.2 Typical Ring Synthesis of a Pyridine Involving Only C–Heteroatom Bond Formation
For six-membered rings, the 1,5-dicarbonyl precursor has to contain a C–C double bond in order to lead
directly to the aromatic system.
Typical sequence for the synthesis of a pyridine from an unsaturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compound
The use of an otherwise saturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compound does not lead directly to an aromatic pyridine, though it is easy to dehydrogenate the dihydro-heterocycle.
Typical sequence for the synthesis of a pyridine from a saturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compound
6.2.3 Typical Ring Syntheses Involving C–Heteroatom C–C Bond Formations
In the second broad category, needing both C–C and C–heteroatom links to be made, one component must
contain an enol/enolate/enamine, or the equivalent thereof, while the second obviously must have electrophilic centres to match. The following general schemes show how this works out for the two ring sizes.
Typical sequence for the synthesis of a five-membered heterocycle from an enol and a C2XH compound
(note: R4 must be an acidifying group: ketone, ester, nitrile, or nitro)
110 Heterocyclic Chemistry
Typical sequence for the synthesis of a pyridine from a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound and an enamine
Where a carbonyl component at the oxidation level of an acid is used then the resultant product carries
an oxygen substituent at that carbon. Similarly, if a nitrile group is used instead of a carbonyl group, as an
electrophilic centre, then the resulting heterocycle carries an amino group at that carbon, thus:
Cyclisation onto a carbonyl group at the carboxylic acid oxidation level gives 2-pyridones
Cyclisation onto a cyano group gives α-amino-pyridines
• The exact sequence of nucleophilic additions, deprotonations/protonations, and dehydrations is never
known with certainty, but the sequences shown here, and indeed in the rest of the book, are reasonable
ones; the exact order of steps almost certainly varies with conditions,3 particularly pH.
• Some of the components shown in the examples above have two electrophilic centres and some have a
nucleophilic and an electrophilic centre; in other situations components with two nucleophilic centres
are required. In general, components in which the two reacting centres are either 1,2- or 1,3-related are
utilised most often in heterocyclic synthesis, but 1,4- (e.g. HX–C–C–YH) (X and Y are heteroatoms)
and 1,5-related (e.g. O=C–(C)3–C=O) bifunctional components, and reactants that provide one-carbon
units (formate, or a synthon for carbonic acid – phosgene, Cl2C=O, or a safer equivalent) are also
important.
• Amongst many examples of 1,2-difunctionalised compounds are 1,2-dicarbonyl compounds, enols (which
first react in a nucleophilic sense at carbon and then provide an electrophilic centre (the carbonyl carbon),
Hal–C–C=O, and systems with HX–YH units.
• Amongst often used 1,3-difunctionalised compounds are the doubly electrophilic 1,3-dicarbonyl
compounds and α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds (C=C–C=O), doubly nucleophilic HX–C–YH
(amidines and ureas are examples), and α-amino- or α-hydroxycarbonyl compounds (HX–C–C=O),
which have an electrophilic and a nucleophilic centre.
The two nucleophilic centres can both be heteroatoms, as in syntheses of pyrimidines and pyrazoles.
Ring Synthesis of Aromatic Heterocycles 111
Typical reactant combinations for the synthesis of pyrimidines and pyrazoles
In syntheses of benzanellated systems, phenols can take the part of enols, and anilines react in the same
way as enamines.4
In quinoline syntheses, anilines are like the enamines in pyridine syntheses
6.3
Summary
The chemical steps involved in heteroaromatic synthesis are mostly simple and straightforward, even
though a first look at the structures of starting materials and product might make the overall effect seem
very mysterious. In devising a sequence of sensible steps it is important to avoid obvious pitfalls, like suggesting that an electrophile react with electrophilic centre, or a nucleophile with a source of electrons.
As an illustration, a complete step-by-step analysis of the reaction of 1,3-diphenylpropane-1,3-dione with
acetophenone giving 2,4,6-triphenylpyrylium is presented below. Note that although many separate steps
are involved, each of them is very simple when considered individually. Note also, that the dicarbonyl
tautomer of the diketone is shown, which is in equilibrium with an appreciable percentage of mono-enol
tautomer.
The ring synthesis of 2,4,6-triphenylpyrylium cation, step by step
112 Heterocyclic Chemistry
The sequence shows an initiating step as nucleophilic attack by acetophenone enolate on the protonated
diketone, however an equally plausible sequence, shown below, starts with the nucleophilic addition of the
enolic hydroxyl of the diketone to protonated acetophenone. We show this alternative to emphasise the
uncertainty of the detailed order of events in such multi-step syntheses.
Alternative interpretation for the ring synthesis of 2,4,6-triphenylpyrylium cation, step by step
A final important point to be made is that most of the steps in such sequences are reversible; the overall
sequence proceeds to product nearly always because the product is the thermodynamically most stable
molecule in the sequence, or because the product is removed from the equilibria by a step which is irreversible under the conditions used. A nice example is the inter-relationship between 1,4-diketones and furans;
the latter can be synthesised by heating the former, in acid, under conditions which lead to the distillation
of the furan (18.13.1.1), but in the reverse sense, furans are hydrolysed to 1,4-diketones by aqueous acid
(18.1.1.1).
6.4
Electrocyclic Processes in Heterocyclic Ring Synthesis
There is a type of electrocyclic process that is of considerable value for heterocyclic ring synthesis: 1,3dipolar cycloadditions producing five-membered heterocycles.
1,3-Dipoles always contain a heteroatom as the central atom of the trio, either sp or sp2 hybridised.
Amongst other examples, cycloadditions have been demonstrated with azides (N≡N+–N−–R), nitrile oxides
(R–C≡N+–O−) and nitrile ylides (R–C≡N+–C−R2), where the central atom is sp-hybridised nitrogen, and
with nitrones (R2C=N+(R)–O−), carbonyl ylides (R2C=O+–C−R2) and azomethine ylides (R2C=N+(R)–C−R2),
where the central atom is sp2 hybridised.
General combinations to produce five-membered heterocycles via 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions
Dipolar cycloadditions5 can, of course, only produce five-membered rings. Addition of dipolarophiles
can generate tetrahydro, dihydro or aromatic oxidation level heterocycles, as illustrated above. Alkene
dipolarophiles, with a group that can be eliminated following cycloaddition, give the same result as equivalent alkyne dipolarophiles, for example enamines as the dipolarophile, interact with azides, as the 1,3dipole, with subsequent elimination of the amine, affording 1,2,3-triazoles.6
Ring Synthesis of Aromatic Heterocycles 113
Many mesoionic substances (2.6) can act as 1,3-dipoles, and, after elimination of a small molecule –
carbon dioxide in the example shown – produce aromatic heterocycles.7
6.5
Nitrenes in Heterocyclic Ring Synthesis8
The insertion of a nitrene into a C–H bond has been made the key step in several synthetic routes to both
five- and six-membered aromatic systems. A nitrene is a monovalent, six-electron, neutral nitrogen, most
often generated by thermolysis or photolysis of an azide (RN3 → RN + N2), or by deoxygenation of a nitro
group. The insertion process can be written in a general way:
Nitrene insertion can form a ring
The preparation of an indole9 (nitrene generated from an azide – the Hemetsberger–Knittel synthesis)
and of carbazole10 (nitrene generated by deoxygenation of a nitro group) illustrate the power of the method.
6.6
Palladium Catalysis in the Synthesis of Benzo-Fused Heterocycles
Nucleophilic cyclisations onto palladium-complexed alkenes have been used to prepare indoles, benzofurans and other fused systems. The process can be made catalytic in some cases by the use of reoxidants
such as p-benzoquinone or copper(II) salts.
114 Heterocyclic Chemistry
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
‘Synthesis of aromatic heterocycles’, Gilchrist, T. L., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1999, 2849, and previous reviews in the series.
‘C-substitution of nitrogen heterocycles’, Vorbrüggen, H. and Maas, M., Heterocycles, 1988, 27, 2659 (discusses electrophilic and radical substitutions, lithiations and the use of N-oxides); ‘Regioselective substitution in aromatic six-membered nitrogen heterocycles’, Comins, D. L. and O’Connor,
S., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1988, 44, 199 (discusses electrophilic, nucleophilic and radical substitution, and metallation).
‘The mechanisms of heterocyclic ring closures’, Katritzky, A. R., Ostercamp, D. L., and Yousaf, T. I., Tetrahedron, 1987, 43, 5171.
‘Heteroannelations with o-aminoaldehydes’, Caluwe, P., Tetrahedron, 1980, 36, 2359.
‘1,3-Dipolar cycloaddition chemistry’, Vols. 1 and 2, Ed. Padwa, A., Wiley-Interscience, 1984.
Nomura, Y., Takeuchi, Y., Tomoda, S. and Ito, M. M., Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn., 1981, 54, 261.
Huisgen, R., Gotthardt, H., Bayer, H. O. and Schaefer, F. C., Chem. Ber., 1970, 103, 2611; Potts, K. T. and McKeough, D., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1974,
96, 4268.
‘Synthesis of heterocycles through nitrenes’, Kametani, T., Ebetino, F. F., Yamanaka, T. and Nyu, Y., Heterocycles, 1974, 2, 209.
Kondo, K., Morohoshi, S., Mitsuhashi, M. and Murakami, Y., Chem. Pharm. Bull., 1999, 1227.
‘Recent advances in the chemistry of carbazoles’, Joule, J. A., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1984, 35, 84; ‘Phosphite-reduction of aromatic nitrocompounds as a route to heterocycles’, Cadogan, J. I. G., Synthesis, 1969, 11.
7
Typical Reactivity of Pyridines,
Quinolines and Isoquinolines
The detailed descriptions of the chemistry of the heterocyclic systems covered in this book are preceded
at intervals, by six highly condensed and simplified discussions (Chapters 07, 10, 13, 15, 19 and 23) of the
types of reaction, ease of such reactions and regiochemistry of such reactions for groups of related heterocycles. In this chapter the group comprises pyridine, as the prototype electron-poor six-membered
heterocycle, and its benzo-fused analogues, quinoline and isoquinoline. As in each of these summary
chapters, reactions are shown in brief and either as the simplest possible example, or in general terms.
Typical reactions of pyridine
The formal replacement of a CH in benzene by N leads to far-reaching changes in typical reactivity:
pyridines are much less susceptible to electrophilic substitution than benzene and much more susceptible
to nucleophilic attack. However, pyridine undergoes a range of simple electrophilic additions, some reversible, some forming isolable products, each involving donation of the nitrogen lone pair to an electrophile,
and thence the formation of ‘pyridinium’ salts which, of course, do not have a counterpart in benzene
chemistry at all. The ready donation of the pyridine lone pair in this way does not destroy the aromatic
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
116 Heterocyclic Chemistry
sextet (compare with pyrrole, Chapters 15 and 16) – pyridinium salts are still aromatic, though much more
polarised than neutral pyridines.
Pyridines react with electrophiles by donation of the nitrogen lone pair
Electrophilic substitution of aromatic compounds proceeds via a two-step sequence – addition (of X+)
then elimination (of H+), of which the former is usually the slower (rate-determining) step. Qualitative
predictions of relative rates of substitution at different ring positions can be made by inspecting the structures of the σ-complexes (Wheland intermediates) formed in the first step, on the assumption that their
relative stabilities reflect the relative energies of the transition states that lead to them.
Aromatic electrophilic substitution via an addition/elimination sequence
Electrophilic substitution at carbon, in simple pyridines at least, is very difficult, in contrast to the reactions of benzene – Friedel–Crafts acylations, for example, do not occur at all with pyridines. This unreactivity can be traced to two factors:
• Exposure of a pyridine to a medium containing electrophilic species immediately converts the heterocycle
into a pyridinium cation, with the electrophile (or a proton from the medium) attached to the nitrogen.
The extent of conversion depends on the nature and concentration of the electrophile (or protons) and
the basicity of the particular pyridine, and is usually nearly complete. Obviously, the positively charged
pyridinium cation is many orders of magnitude less easily attacked by the would-be electrophile, at
carbon, than the original neutral heterocycle. The electrophile, therefore, has Hobson’s choice – it must
either attack an already positively charged species, or seek out a neutral pyridine from the very low
concentration of uncharged pyridine molecules.
• The carbons of a pyridine are, in any case, electron-poor, particularly at the α- and γ-positions: formation
of a σ-complex between a pyridine and an electrophile is intrinsically disfavoured. The least disfavoured,
i.e. best option, is attack at a β-position – resonance contributors to the cation thus produced do not
include one with the particularly unfavourable sextet, positively-charged nitrogen situation (shown in
Typical Reactivity of Pyridines, Quinolines and Isoquinolines 117
parentheses for the α- and γ-intermediates). The situation has a direct counterpart in benzene chemistry,
where a consideration of possible intermediates for electrophilic substitution of nitrobenzene provides a
rationalisation of the observed meta-selectivity.
Substituents can exert a significant influence on the ease of electrophilic attack, just as in benzene chemistry. Strongly electron-withdrawing substituents simply render the pyridine even more inert, however
activating groups – amino and oxy, and even alkyl – allow substitution to take place, even though by way
of the protonated heterocycle i.e. via a dicationic intermediate. The presence of halogen substituents,
which have a base-weakening effect and are only weakly deactivating, can allow substitution to take place
in a different way – by allowing an appreciably larger concentration of the free, neutral pyridine to be
present.
Pyridine rings are resistant to oxidative destruction, as are benzene rings. In terms of reduction, however,
the heterocyclic system is much more easily catalytically reduced, especially in acidic solution. Similarly,
pyridinium salts can be easily reduced both with hydrogen over a catalyst, and by nucleophilic chemical
reducing agents.
Nucleophilic substitution of aromatic compounds proceeds via an addition (of Nu−) then elimination (of
a negatively charged entity, most often Hal−) two-step sequence, of which the former is usually ratedetermining. Rates of substitution at different ring positions can be assessed by inspecting the structures
of the negatively charged intermediates (Meisenheimer complexes) thus formed, on the assumption
that their relative stabilities (degree of delocalisation of negative charge) reflect the relative energies
of the transition states that lead to them. For example, 2- and 4-halonitro-benzenes are substituted by
nucleophiles because the anionic adduct derives stabilisation by delocalisation of the charge onto the nitro
group(s).
Aromatic nucleophilic substitution via an addition/elimination sequence
The electron-deficiency of the carbons in pyridines, particularly α- and γ-carbons, makes nucleophilic
addition and, especially nucleophilic displacement of halide (and other good leaving groups), a very important feature of pyridine chemistry.
118 Heterocyclic Chemistry
Nucleophilic displacement of pyridine α- and γ-leaving groups, e.g. halide, is easy
Such substitutions follow the same mechanistic route as the displacement of halide from 2- and 4halo-nitrobenzenes, i.e. the nucleophile first adds and then the halide departs. By analogy with the
benzenoid situation, the addition is facilitated by: (i) the electron-deficiency at α- and γ-carbons, further
increased by the halogen substituent, and (ii) the ability of the heteroatom to accommodate negative charge
in the intermediate thus produced. A comparison of the three possible intermediates makes it immediately
plain that this latter is not available for attack at a β-position, and thus β nucleophilic displacements are
very much slower – for practical purposes they do not occur (see, however, reactions with palladium
catalysis, 4.2)
Intermediates explain selectivity of nucleophilic attack on halopyridines
It is useful to compare the reactivity of α- and γ-halopyridines with the reaction of acid halides and βhalo-α,β-unsaturated ketones, respectively, both of which also interact easily with nucleophiles and also
by an addition/elimination sequence resulting in overall displacement of the halide by the nucleophile.
Comparison of the reactivity of an α-halopyridine with an acid chloride
Typical Reactivity of Pyridines, Quinolines and Isoquinolines 119
In the absence of an α- or γ-halogen, pyridines are less reactive and, of course, do not have a substituent
suitable for leaving as an anion to complete a nucleophilic substitution. Nucleophilic additions do however
take place, but the resultant dihydropyridine adduct requires removal of ‘hydride’ in some way, to complete
an overall substitution. Such reactions, for example with sodium amide or with organometallic reagents,
are selective for an α-position, possibly because the nucleophile is delivered via a complex involving
interaction of the ring nitrogen with the metal cation associated with the nucleophile. The addition of
organometallic or hydride reagents to N+-acylpyridinium salts is an extremely useful process: the products,
1,2- or 1,4-dihydropyridines, are stable because the nitrogen electron pair is involved with resonance in
the carbamate unit.
The generation and use of metallated aromatics has become extremely important for the introduction of
substituents, especially carbon substituents, by subsequent reaction with an electrophile. Despite the ease
of nucleophilic addition and substitution discussed above, iodine and bromine at all positions of a pyridine
undergo metal/halogen exchange, at low temperature, without nucleophilic displacement or addition, thus
forming the corresponding pyridyllithiums. Low-temperature direct lithiation of pyridines at an α-position,
or elsewhere via directed ortho-metallation, is also possible. Similarly, useful pyridyl Grignard reagents
are available by reaction of bromopyridines with iso-propylmagnesium chloride at room temperature.
Formation of pyridyllithiums and pyridyl Grignard reagents
Radical substitution of pyridines, in acid solution, is a preparatively useful process. For efficient reaction,
the radicals must be ‘nucleophilic’, like •CH2OH, alkyl•, and acyl•. A hydroxymethylation provides the
example shown.
Pyridines carrying oxygen at an α- or γ-position exist as tautomers having carbonyl groups – pyridones.
Nonetheless, there is considerable parallelism between their reactions and those of phenols: pyridones are
activated towards electrophilic substitution, attack taking place ortho and para to the oxygen. They readily
form anions, by loss of the N-hydrogen, which are analogous in structure and reactivity to phenolates,
though in the heterocyclic system, the anion can react with an electrophile at either oxygen or nitrogen,
depending on conditions.
120
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Typical reactions of pyridones, illustrated for 4-pyridone
Where pyridones differ from phenols is in their interaction with reagents such as POCl3, where transformation of the oxygen substituent into halide occurs. Here, the pyridones react in an amide-like fashion, the
inorganic reagent reacting first at the oxygen.
Mechanism of reaction of pyridones with phosphoryl chloride, illustrated for 2-pyridone
The special properties associated with pyridine α- and γ-positions are evident again in the reactions of
alkyl-pyridines: protons on alkyl groups at those positions are particularly acidified because the ‘enaminate’
anions formed by side-chain deprotonation are delocalised. The ability to form side-chain anions provides
a useful means for the manipulation of α- and γ-side-chains.
Deprotonation of α- and γ-alkyl groups is relatively easy
Pyridinium salts show the properties that have been discussed above, but in extreme, thus they are highly
resistant to electrophilic substitution but, conversely, nucleophiles add very easily. Especially useful are
the adducts formed from N+ -CO2R salts with alkyl- or aryllithiums (see above). The hydrogens of pyridinum
α- and γ-alkyl side-chains are further acidified compared with an uncharged alkyl pyridine.
N-oxide chemistry, which self-evidently has no parallel in benzenoid chemistry, is an extremely important and useful aspect of the chemistry of azines. The structure of N-oxides means that they are both more
susceptible to electrophilic substitution and react more easily with nucleophiles – an extraordinary concept
when first encountered. On the one hand, the formally negatively charged oxygen can release electrons to
stabilise an intermediate for electrophilic attack and, on the other, the positively charged ring nitrogen can
act as an electron sink to encourage nucleophilic addition.
Typical Reactivity of Pyridines, Quinolines and Isoquinolines 121
The N-oxide group facilitates both electrophilic and nucleophilic substitutions
There are a number of very useful processes in which the N-oxide function allows the introduction of
substituents, usually at an α position, and in the process the oxide function is removed; reaction with
phosphoryl chloride is an example.
Conversion of pyridine N-oxide into halopyridines (mechanism shown for α-substitution)
Quinoline and isoquinoline, the two possible structures in which a benzene ring is annelated to a pyridine
ring, represent an opportunity to examine the effect of fusing one aromatic ring to another. Clearly, both
the effect that the benzene ring has on the reactivity of the pyridine ring, and vice versa, as well as
comparison with the chemistry of naphthalene must be considered. Firstly, it will be clear from the discussion of pyridine with electrophiles that, of the two rings, electrophilic substitution favours the benzenoid
ring, rather than the pyridine ring. Regioselectivity, which in naphthalene favours an α-position, is mirrored
in quinoline/isoquinoline chemistry by preferred substitution at the 5- and 8-positions. It should be noted
that such substitutions usually involve attack on the species formed by electrophilic addition (often
protonation) at the nitrogen, which has the effect of further discouraging (preventing) attack on the heterocyclic ring.
Typical reactions of quinoline (isoquinoline is very similar)
122
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Just as for naphthalene, the regiochemistry of attack is readily interpreted by looking at the possible
intermediates: those for attack at C-5/8 allow delocalisation of charge, while an intermediate for attack at
C-6/7 would have a localised charge.
Electrophilic substitution of quinoline is selective for the benzene ring at 5- (shown) and 8-positions
Just as quinoline and isoquinoline are reactive towards electrophiles in their benzene rings, so they are
reactive to nucleophiles in the pyridine ring, especially (see above) at the positions α and γ to the nitrogen
and, further, are more reactive in this sense than pyridines. This is consistent with the structures of the
intermediates for, in these, a full and complete aromatic benzene ring is retained. Since the resonance
stabilisation of the bicyclic aromatic is considerably less than twice that of either benzene or pyridine, the
loss in resonance stabilisation in proceeding from the bicyclic system to the intermediate is considerably
less than in going from pyridine to an intermediate adduct. There is an obvious analogy: the rate of electrophilic substitution of naphthalene is greater than that of benzene for, in forming a σ-complex from the
former, less resonance energy is sacrificed.
Intermediate for nucleophilic substitution of 2- and 4-halo-quinolines retains a complete benzene ring
A significant difference in this typical behaviour applies to the isoquinoline 3-position – the special
reactivity that the discussion above has developed for positions α to pyridine nitrogen, and that also applies
to the isoquinoline 1-position, does not apply at C-3. In the context of nucleophilic displacements, for
example, an intermediate for reaction of a 3-halo-isoquinoline cannot achieve delocalisation of negative
charge onto the nitrogen unless the aromaticity of the benzene ring is disrupted. Therefore, such intermediates are considerably less stabilised and reactivity considerably tempered.
3-Haloisoquinolines do not undergo easy nucleophilic substitution
The displacement of halogen at all positions of the pyridine and quinoline/isoquinoline nucleus is achievable using palladium(0) catalysis (see 4.2 for a detailed discussion). Couplings with alkenes (Heck reac-
Typical Reactivity of Pyridines, Quinolines and Isoquinolines 123
tions), with alkynes, with alkenyl- or aryltin or -boron species are complemented by couplings in the
opposite sense using pyridinyl/quinolinyl/isoquinolinyl metal reagents, with alkenyl or aryl halides or triflates. The application of this extremely useful methodology allows transformations in one step that would
otherwise require extensive sequences of steps. Two examples, chosen at random, are shown below.
Transition-metal-catalysed processes are very important in pyridine/quinoline/isoquinoline chemistry
A great variety of methods is available for the ring synthesis of pyridines: the most obvious approach is
to construct a 1,5-dicarbonyl compound, preferably also having further unsaturation, and allow it to react
with ammonia, when loss of two mole equivalents of water produces the pyridine. 1,4-Dihydropyridines,
which can easily be dehydrogenated to the fully aromatic system, result from the interaction of saturated
1,5-dicarbonyl compounds and ammonia.
Typical pyridine ring synthesis
Nearly all quinoline syntheses begin from an arylamine; that shown generally below – the acid-catalysed
interaction with a 1,3-diketone – involves addition of the amine nitrogen to one of the carbonyl groups and
a ring closure onto the aromatic ring having the character of an aromatic electrophilic substitution. Another
much-used route utilises the interaction of an ortho-aminoaraldehyde (or -ketone) with a ketone having an
α methylene.
Typical quinoline ring syntheses
Amides of 2-(aryl)ethanamines can be made to ring close producing 3,4-dihydroisoquinolines (which
can be easily dehydrogenated to the aromatic systems) using reagents such as phosphoryl chloride; again,
the ring-closure step is an intramolecular electrophilic substitution of the aromatic ring.
A typical isoquinoline ring synthesis
8
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
Pyridine and its simple derivatives are stable and relatively unreactive liquids, with strong penetrating
odours that are unpleasant to some people. They are much used as solvents and bases, especially pyridine
itself, in reactions such as N- and O-acylation and -tosylation. Pyridine and the three monomethyl pyridines
(picolines) are completely miscible with water.
Pyridine was first isolated, like pyrrole, from bone pyrolysates: the name is constructed from the Greek
for fire, ‘pyr ’, and the suffix ‘idine’, which was at the time being used for all aromatic bases – phenetidine,
toluidine, etc. Pyridine and its simple alkyl derivatives were for a long time produced by isolation from
coal tar, in which they occur in quantity. In recent years this source has been displaced by synthetic processes: pyridine itself, for example, can be produced on a commercial scale in 60–70% yields by the gasphase high-temperature interaction of crotonaldehyde, formaldehyde, steam, air and ammonia over a
silica–alumina catalyst. Processes for the manufacture of alkyl-pyridines involve reaction of acetylenes and
nitriles over a cobalt catalyst.
8.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
8.1.1 Addition to Nitrogen
In reactions that involve bond formation using the lone pair of electrons on the ring nitrogen, such as
protonation and quaternisation, pyridines behave just like tertiary aliphatic or aromatic amines. When a
pyridine reacts as a base or a nucleophile it forms a ‘pyridinium’, cation in which the aromatic sextet is
retained and the nitrogen acquires a formal positive charge.
8.1.1.1 Protonation of Nitrogen
Pyridines form crystalline, frequently hygroscopic, salts with most protic acids. Pyridine itself, with pKaH
5.2 in water, is a much weaker base than saturated aliphatic amines which have pKaH values mostly between
9 and 11. Since the gas-phase proton affinity of pyridine is actually very similar to those of aliphatic amines,
the observed solution values reflect relatively strong solvation of aliphatic ammonium cations;1 this difference may in turn be related to the mesomerically delocalised charge in pyridinium ions and the consequent
reduced requirement for external stabilisation via solvation.
Electron-releasing substituents generally increase the basic strength; 2-methyl- (pKaH 5.97), 3-methyl
(5.68) and 4-methylpyridine (6.02) illustrate this. The basicities of pyridines carrying groups that can
interact mesomerically as well as inductively vary in more complex ways, for example 2-methoxypyridine
(3.3) is a weaker, but 4-methoxypyridine (6.6) a stronger base than pyridine; the effect of inductive withHeterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
126
Heterocyclic Chemistry
drawal of electrons by the electronegative oxygen is felt more strongly when it is closer to the nitrogen,
i.e. at C-2.
Large α-substituents impede solvation of the protonated form: 2,6-di-t-butylpyridine is less basic than
pyridine by one pKaH unit and 2,6-bis(tri-iso-propylsilyl)pyridine will not dissolve even in 6M hydrochloric
acid.2
8.1.1.2 Nitration at Nitrogen (see also 8.1.2.2)
This occurs readily by reaction of pyridines with nitronium salts, such as nitronium tetrafluoroborate.3 Protic
nitrating agents such as nitric acid of course lead exclusively to N-protonation.
1-Nitro-2,6-dimethylpyridinium tetrafluoroborate is one of several N-nitro-pyridinium salts that can be
used as non-acidic nitrating agents with good substrate and positional selectivity. The 2,6-disubstitution
serves to sterically inhibit resonance overlap between nitro group and ring and consequently increase reactivity as a nitronium ion donor, however the balance between this advantageous effect and hindering
approach of the aromatic substrate is illustrated by the lack of transfer nitration reactivity in
2,6-dihalo-analogues.4
8.1.1.3 Amination of Nitrogen
The introduction of nitrogen at a different oxidation level can be achieved with hydroxylamine O-sulfonic
acid5 or using [N-para-tolylsulfonylimino]phenyliodinane with copper(II) triflate;6 the attacking species is
a nitrene.
8.1.1.4 Oxidation of Nitrogen
In common with other tertiary amines, pyridines react smoothly with percarboxylic acids to give N-oxides,
which have their own rich chemistry (8.13). There are many other ways to N-oxidise pyridines: oxygen
with ruthenium trichloride as catalyst is one example;7 hydrogen-peroxide–urea with trifluoroacetic anhydride N-oxidises pyridines carrying electron-withdrawing groups.8 Similarly, there are many ways to
deoxygenate pyridine N-oxides: samarium iodide, chromous chloride, stannous chloride with low-valent
titanium, ammonium formate with palladium and catalytic hydrogenation all do the job at room temperature,9 molybdenum hexacarbonyl in hot ethanol is another alternative.10 The most frequently used methods
have involved oxygen transfer to trivalent phosphorus11 or divalent sulfur.12 Ammonium formate with a
palladium-on-carbon catalyst removes the oxygen and reduces the ring, smoothly giving piperidines.13
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
127
8.1.1.5 Sulfonation at Nitrogen
Pyridine reacts14 with sulfur trioxide to give the crystalline, zwitterionic pyridinium-1-sulfonate, usually
known as the pyridine sulfur trioxide complex. This compound is hydrolysed in hot water to sulfuric acid
and pyridine (for its reaction with hydroxide see 8.12.3), but more usefully it can serve as a mild sulfonating agent (for examples see 16.1.1.3 and 18.1.1.3) and as an activating agent for dimethylsulfoxide in
Moffat oxidations.
When pyridine is treated with thionyl chloride, a synthetically useful dichloride salt is formed, which
can, for example, be transformed into pyridine-4-sulfonic acid. The reaction is believed to involve initial
attack by sulfur at nitrogen, followed by nucleophilic addition of a second pyridine at C-4 (cf. 8.12.2).15
8.1.1.6 Halogenation at Nitrogen
Pyridines react easily with halogens and inter-halogens16 to give crystalline compounds, largely undissociated when dissolved in solvents such as carbon tetrachloride. Structurally they are best formulated as resonance hybrids related to trihalide anions. 1-Fluoropyridinium triflate is also crystalline and serves as an
electrophilic fluorinating agent (31.1).17
These salts must be distinguished from pyridinium tribromide, obtained by treating pyridine hydrobromide with bromine, which does not contain an N-halogen bond, but does have a trihalide anion. The stable,
crystalline, commercially available salt can be used as a source of molecular bromine, especially where
small accurately known quantities are required.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
8.1.1.7 Acylation at Nitrogen
Carboxylic, and arylsulfonic acid halides react rapidly with pyridines generating 1-acyl- and 1-arylsulfonylpyridinium salts in solution, and in suitable cases some of these can even be isolated as crystalline,
non-hygroscopic solids.18 Solutions of these salts, generally in excess pyridine, are commonly used
for the preparation of esters and sulfonates from alcohols, and of amides and sulfonamides from amines.
4-Dimethylaminopyridine19 (DMAP) is widely used (in catalytic quantities) to activate anhydrides in a
similar manner. The salt derived from DMAP and t-butyl chloroformate is stable even in aqueous solution
at room temperature.20 The more stable these salts are, the higher their catalytic activity in acylation
reactions.21
8.1.1.8 Alkylation at Nitrogen
Alkyl halides and sulfates react readily with pyridines at room temperature, giving quaternary Nsubstituted pyridinium salts. As with aliphatic tertiary amines, increasing substitution around the nitrogen,
or around the halogen-bearing carbon, causes an increase in the alternative, competing, elimination process,
which gives alkene and N-proto-pyridinium salt, thus 2,4,6-trimethylpyridine (collidine) is used as a base
in dehydrohalogenation reactions. A process which is useful when an alcohol, but not the halide, is available is to use the protonic borofluoride of the pyridine (this also works with imidazoles) and react this with
the alcohol in a Mitsunobu reaction.22
8.1.2 Substitution at Carbon
In most cases, electrophilic substitution of pyridines occurs very much less readily than for the correspondingly substituted benzene. The main reason is that the electrophilic reagent, or a proton in the reaction
medium, adds first to the pyridine nitrogen, generating a pyridinium cation, which is naturally very resistant
to attack by an electrophile. When it does occur, electrophilic substitution at carbon must involve either
highly unfavoured attack on a pyridinium cation or a relatively easier attack, but on a very low equilibrium
concentration of uncharged free pyridine base.
Some of the typical benzene electrophilic substitution reactions do not occur at all: Friedel–Crafts alkylation and acylation fail because pyridines form complexes with the Lewis-acid catalyst required, involving
donation of the nitrogen lone pair to the metal centre. Milder electrophilic species, such as Mannich cations,
diazonium ions or nitrous acid, which in any case require activated benzenes for success, naturally fail with
pyridines.
Electrophilic C-substitution in pyridines carrying strongly activating substituents (nitrogen and oxygen)
is discussed in Sections 8.9.3.1 and 8.9.2.1.
8.1.2.1 Proton Exchange
H–D exchange via an electrophilic substitution process, such as will operate for benzene, does not take
place with pyridine. A special mechanism allows selective exchange at the two α-positions in DCl–D2O,
or even in water at 200 °C, the key species being an ylide formed by 2/6-deprotonation of the 1H-pyridinium
cation (see also 8.11).23 Efficient exchange at all positions can be achieved at 110 °C in D2O in the presence of hydrogen and palladium-on-carbon (a method which also works for other heterocycles, including
indoles).24
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
129
8.1.2.2 Nitration
Pyridine itself can be converted into 3-nitropyridine only inefficiently by direct nitration, even with
extremely vigorous conditions,25 however a couple of ring methyl groups facilitate electrophilic substitution
sufficiently to allow nitration;26 both collidine (2,4,6-trimethylpyridine) and its N-methyl quaternary salt
are nitrated at similar rates under the same conditions, showing that the former reacts via its N-protonic
salt.27 Steric or/and inductive inhibition of N-nitration allows C-3-substitution using nitronium tetrafluoroborate; an example is the nitration of 2,6-dichloropyridine4 or of 2,6-difluoropyridine using tetramethylammonium nitrate with trifluoromethansulfonic anhydride.28
3-Nitropyridine itself, and substituted derivatives, can, however, be prepared efficiently from Nnitropyridinium salts. Initial reaction with dinitrogen pentoxide at nitrogen is followed by sulfur
dioxide, when this is used as solvent or co-solvent, or hydrogensulfite, addition at C-2 forming a 1,2dihydropyridine. Transfer of the nitro group to a β-position, via a [1,5]-sigmatropic migration, is then
followed by elimination of the nucleophile, regenerating the aromatic system.29
The same effect can be achieved more conveniently using a mixture of nitric acid and trifluoroacetic anhydride (NO2OCOCF3 adds NO2+ to the nitrogen) then the addition of sodium metabisulfite.30
Incidentally, if cyanide is added instead of metabisulfite, elimination of nitrous acid produces
2-cyanopyridines.31
8.1.2.3 Sulfonation
Pyridine is very resistant to sulfonation using concentrated sulfuric acid or oleum, only very low yields
of the 3-sulfonic acid being produced after prolonged reaction periods at 320 °C. However, addition
of mercuric sulfate in catalytic quantities allows smooth sulfonation at a somewhat lower temperature.
The role of the catalyst is not established; one possibility is that C-mercuration is the first step
(cf. 8.1.2.5).32
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
The C-sulfonation of 2,6-di-t-butylpyridine with sulfur trioxide33 is a good guide to the intrinsic reactivity
of a pyridine ring, for in this situation the bulky alkyl groups effectively prevent addition of sulfur trioxide
to the ring nitrogen, allowing progress to a ‘normal’ electrophilic C-substitution intermediate, at about the
same rate as for sulfonation of nitrobenzene. A maximum conversion of 50% is all that is achieved, because
for every C-substitution a proton is produced, which deactivates a molecule of starting material by
N-protonation.
8.1.2.4 Halogenation
3-Bromopyridine is produced in good yield by the action of bromine in oleum.34 The process is thought to
involve pyridinium-1-sulfonate as the reactive species, since no bromination occurs in 95% sulfuric acid.
3-Chloropyridine can be produced by chlorination at 200 °C, or at 100 °C in the presence of aluminium
chloride.35
2-Bromo- and 2-chloro-pyridines can be made efficiently by reaction of pyridine with the halogen, at
0–5 °C in the presence of palladium(II) chloride.36
8.1.2.5 Acetoxymercuration
The salt formed by the interaction of pyridine with mercuric acetate at room temperature can be rearranged
to 3-acetoxymercuripyridine by heating to only 180 °C.37 This process, where again there is C-attack by a
relatively weakly electrophilic reagent, like that described for mercuric-sulfate-catalysed sulfonation, may
involve attack on an equilibrium concentration of free pyridine.
8.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
The pyridine ring is generally resistant to oxidising agents, vigorous conditions being required for its
breakdown, thus pyridine itself is oxidised by neutral aqueous potassium permanganate at about the same
rate as benzene (sealed tube, 100 °C), to give carbon dioxide. In acidic solution, pyridine is more resistant,
but in alkaline media more rapidly oxidised, than benzene.
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
131
In most situations, carbon substituents can be oxidised with survival of the ring, thus alkyl-pyridines can
be converted into pyridine carboxylic acids with a variety of reagents.38 Some selectivity can be achieved:
only α- and γ-groups are attacked by selenium dioxide; the oxidation can be halted at the aldehyde oxidation level.39
8.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Just as electrophilic substitution is the characteristic reaction of benzene and electron-rich heteroaromatic
compounds (pyrrole, furan etc.), so substitution reactions with nucleophiles can be looked on as characteristic of pyridines.
Nucleophilic substitution of hydrogen differs in an important way from electrophilic substitution:
whereas the last step in electrophilic substitution is loss of proton, an easy process, the last step in
nucleophilic substitution of hydrogen has to be a hydride transfer, which is less straightforward and generally needs the presence of an oxidising agent as hydride acceptor. Nucleophilic substitution of an atom or
group at an α- or γ-position, that is a good leaving group, is, however, usually an easy and straightforward
process.
8.3.1 Nucleophilic Substitution with ‘Hydride’ Transfer40
8.3.1.1 Alkylation and Arylation
Reaction with alkyl- or aryl-lithiums proceeds in two discrete steps: addition to give a dihydro-pyridine
N-lithio-salt which can then be converted into the substituted aromatic pyridine by oxidation (e.g. by air),
disproportionation or elimination of lithium hydride.41 The N-lithio-salts can be observed spectroscopically
and in some cases isolated as solids.42 Attack is nearly always at an α-position; reaction with 3-substitutedpyridines usually takes place at both available α-positions, but predominantly at C-2;43 this regioselectivity
may be associated with relief of strain when C-2 rehybridises to sp3 during addition.
It is possible to trap the 2-substituted lithium derivatives produced by organometallic addition with
electrophiles: for example the use of di-t-butyl azodicarboxylate leads, after a simple aerial oxidative rearomatisation, to 2,5-disubstituted pyridines.44
132
Heterocyclic Chemistry
From the preparative viewpoint, nucleophilic alkylations can be greatly facilitated by the device of prior
quaternisation of the pyridine in such a way that the N-substituent can be subsequently removed – these
processes are dealt with in 8.12.2.
8.3.1.2 Amination
Amination of pyridines and related heterocycles, generally at a position α to the nitrogen, is called
the Chichibabin reaction,45 the pyridine reacting with sodamide with the evolution of hydrogen. The
‘hydride’ transfer and production of hydrogen probably involve interaction of amino-pyridine product,
acting as an acid, with the anionic intermediate. The preference for α-substitution may be associated with
an intramolecular delivery of the nucleophile, perhaps guided by complexation of ring nitrogen with metal
cation.
More vigorous conditions are required for the amination of 2- or 4-alkyl-pyridines, since proton abstraction from the side-chain (cf. 8.10) by the amide occurs first, and ring attack must therefore involve a
dianionic intermediate.46 Amination of 3-alkyl-pyridines is regioselective for the 2-position.47
Vicarious nucleophilic substitution (3.3.3) permits the introduction of amino groups para (or ortho if
para blocked) to nitro groups by reaction with methoxyamine48 or 1-amino-1,2,4-triazole.49 In contrast,
VNS substitution of 3-nitropyridine with benzyl chloroacetate proceeds at C-4.50
8.3.1.3 Silylation
In an exceptionally efficient process, pyridine is converted into 4-trimethylsilylpyridine on reaction with
trimethylsiliconide anion. This process probably proceeds via a 1,4-dihydro-adduct (which can be trapped
as its N-CO2Et derivative by addition of ethyl chloroformate), the fully aromatic product arising via hydride
shift to silicon.51
8.3.1.4 Hydroxylation
Hydroxide ion, being a much weaker nucleophile than amide, attacks pyridine only at very high
temperatures to produce a low yield of 2-pyridone,52 which can be usefully contrasted with the much
more efficient reaction of hydroxide with quinoline and isoquinoline (9.3.1.3) and with pyridinium salts
(8.12.3).
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
133
8.3.2 Nucleophilic Substitution with Displacement of Good Leaving Groups
Halogen, and also, though with fewer examples, nitro,53 alkoxysulfonyloxy54 and methoxy55 substituents at
α- or γ-positions, but not at β-positions, are relatively easily displaced by a wide range of nucleophiles via
an addition–elimination mechanism facilitated by: (i) electron withdrawal by the substituent and (ii) the
good leaving ability of the substituent. γ-Halo-pyridines are more reactive than the α-isomers; βhalo-pyridines are very much less reactive, being much closer to, but still somewhat more reactive than
halo-benzenes, but even 3-halogen can be displaced with heteroatom nucleophiles under microwave
irradiation.56
Fluorides are more reactive than the other halides,57 (cf. 3.3.2) for example 2-fluoropyridine can be
converted into 2-dialkylamino-pyridines using lithium amides at room temperature.58 This could be compared with the 130 °C required to displace α-bromine using the potassium salt of pyrazole.59 Displacement
of nitro can be made the means for the synthesis of α- and γ-fluoro-pyridines.53 Of the five fluorines in
pentafluoropyridine, the γ-fluorine is displaced most rapidly.60
Replacements of halide by reaction with ammonia can be achieved at considerably lower temperatures
than those illustrated, under 6–8 kbar pressure.61
The sulfonic acid substituent in 5-nitropyridine-2-sulfonic acid62 can be displaced by alcohols, amines
or chloride.63
In some displacements, an alternative mechanism operates. For example the reaction of either 3- or
4-bromopyridine with secondary amines in the presence of sodamide/sodium t-butoxide, produces the same
mixture of 3- and 4-dialkylamino-pyridines; this proceeds via an elimination process (SN(EA) – Substitution
Nucleophilic Elimination Addition) and the intermediacy of 3,4-didehydropyridine (3,4-pyridyne).64 That
no 2-aminated pyridine is produced shows a greater difficulty in generating 2,3-pyridyne; it can, however,
134
Heterocyclic Chemistry
be formed by reaction of 3-bromo-2-chloro-pyridines with n-butyllithium65 or via the reaction of 3trimethylsilyl-2-trifluoromethanesulfonyloxypyridine with fluoride.66 Significantly, a 4-aryloxy or 4phenylthio-substituent stabilises a 2,3-pyridyne.67
It is possible to replace α-chlorine with bromine or iodine by reaction with the halotrimethylsilane; no
doubt this involves an intermediate pyridinium salt, as shown (see also 8.12.2).68
Carbon nucleophiles can also be used: deprotonated nitriles will displace a halogen; 69,70 electron-rich
aromatic compounds will displace α-halogen ortho or para to nitro or cyano, using aluminium chloride
catalysis.71
8.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated-Pyridines
8.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation72
When pyridine is heated to 165 °C in MeONa–MeOD, H–D exchange occurs at all positions via small
concentrations of deprotonated species, at the relative rates α : β : γ, 1 : 9.3 : 12.73 Some pyridines have been
selectively lithiated at C-2 via complexes with hexafluoroacetone74 or boron trifluoride;75 complexation
removes the lone pair and additionally provides inductive (and in the former case also chelation) effects
to assist the regioselective α-metallation. The selective 2-lithiation of pyridine N-oxides can also be
achieved in favourable circumstances: one instructive example is the regioselective 6-lithiation of 2pivaloylaminopyridine N-oxide, i.e. adjacent to the N-oxide group, and not at C-3, ortho to the directing
2-substitutent. The regioselective C-2-lithiation of 3,4-dimethoxypyridine N-oxide also shows the influence
of the N-oxide functionality.76
Regioselective metallation at an α-position of a pyridine can be achieved with the mixed base produced
from two mole equivalents of n-butyllithium with one of dimethylaminoethanol i.e. it is a 1 : 1 mixture of
n-BuLi and Me2N(CH2)2OLi (BuLi-LiDMAE).77 The regioselectivity is ascribed to intramolecular delivery
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
135
of the butyllithium, as shown. With this complex base, the regioselectivity is maintained despite the presence of other groups which, with bases such as LDA, would direct an ortho-lithiation process: 2-chloro,
2-methoxy-, 2-methylthio- and 2-dimethylamino-pyridines all lithiate efficiently at C-6; 3-chloro- and
3-methoxypyridines are lithiated at C-2; 4-chloro-, 4-dimethylamino- and 4-methoxypyridines, again lithiate at an α-carbon;78 2-, 3- or 4-phenylpyridines are metallated only at an α position;79 it is even possible
to lithiate 4-picoline at C-2,80 despite potential loss of a side-chain proton (cf. 8.10). An extrapolation of
this idea is the use of Me3SiCH2Li-LiDMAE, which is less nuclophilic and so is a lesser problem with
respect to a subsequently added electrophile.81
A nice example of the use of α-lithiated pyridines is their nucleophilic addition to azines, oxidation
during work-up then producing bihetaryls.82
There are many example of direct lithiation with the assistance of ortho-directing groups. Halo-, particularly chloro-, or better, fluoro-pyridines, but even bromo-pyridines undergo lithiation ortho to the
halogen, using lithium di-iso-propylamide. 3-Halopyridines react mainly at C-4, and 2- and 4-halopyridines necessarily lithiate at a β-position. In the lithiation of methoxy-pyridines, using mesityllithium
the 3-isomer metallates at C-2,83 whereas 3-methoxymethoxypyridine,84 3-di-iso-propylaminocarbonyl-85
3-tetrahydropyranyloxy-86 and 3-t-butylcarbonylamino-87 -pyridines all lithiate at C-4. Each of the three
pyridine carboxylic acids undergoes ortho-lithiation, without protection, using lithium tetramethylpiperidide,88 which can also be used for the three isomeric cyanopyridines, trapped to give the corresponding
boronic acids.89 Metallation using lithium magnesates (Bu3MgLi) can be conducted at a somewhat higher
temperature, −10 °C.90
Lithiation of 2- and 4-t-butoxycarbonylaminopyridines can only take place at C-3; a neat sequence
involving, first, ring lithiation to allow introduction of a methyl group and, second, side-chain methyl
lithiation (8.10), provides one route to azaindoles (20.16), as illustrated below for the synthesis of 5azaindole (pyrrolo[3,2-c]pyridine).91
136
Heterocyclic Chemistry
An electrophile that can be used to introduce an aminomethyl unit is a formimine generated in situ from
N-(cyanomethyl)-para-methoxybenzylamine; subsequent ring-closure can produce pyrrolopyridinones.92
Lithiated pyridines can be converted into boronic acids, or esters, one example being shown below.93
The use of halogen to direct lithiation94 can be combined with the ability to subsequently displace the
halogen with a nucleophile.95
Two directing groups, 1,3-related, cause lithiation to occur between the two groups.96 A nice example
in which two directing groups do not direct to the same carbon is that of 2,5-dimethoxypyridine: lithiation
takes place 11 : 3 at C-4 versus C-3, by changing the protecting group on the 5-oxygen to methoxymethyl,
exclusive 4-lithiation is achieved and on changing to tri-iso-propylsilyl, exclusive 3-lithation results.97
Bromine and iodine also direct lithiations, but isomerisation – ‘halogen dance’ (see discussion in 17.4.2)
– can be a problem, however advantage can be taken of the isomerisation (to the more stable lithioderivative) in suitable cases. In the example below, the more stable lithio compound is that in which the
formally negatively charged ring carbon is located between two halogen-bearing carbon atoms.98
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
137
8.4.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
Lithium derivatives are easily prepared by standard procedures and behave as typical organometallic
nucleophiles, thus, for example, 3-bromopyridine undergoes efficient exchange with n-butyllithium in ether
at −78 °C. With the more basic tetrahydrofuran as solvent, and at this temperature, the alkyllithium becomes
more nucleophilic and only addition to the ring occurs, although the exchange can be carried out in tetrahydrofuran at lower temperatures.99
Lithio-pyridines can also be prepared from bromo-pyridines at 0 °C via exchange using trimethylsilylmethyllithium (TMSCH2Li) and lithium dimethylaminoethoxide (LiDMAE) in toluene (2,5dibromopyridine100 and 2,3-dibromopyridine101 react selectively at C-2) and from chloro-pyridines, via
naphthalene-catalysed reductive metallation.102 Metal–halogen exchange with 2,5-dibromopyridine can also
lead efficiently to 2-bromo-5-lithiopyridine;103 the example below illustrates its trapping with the ‘Weinreb
amide’ of formic acid as a formyl-transfer reagent,104 however the regioselectivity can be reversed by reaction in toluene.105 Monolithiation of 2,6-dibromopyridine is best achieved by ‘inverse addition’ – dibromide
to n-butyllithium, or by using dichloromethane as solvent.106 Reaction in toluene is also favourable for
exchange at a β-position and 3-bromopyridine can be converted into the 3-boronic acid in toluene;107 3- and
4-stannanes can be made from the bromides using ether as solvent.108
The combination of metal–halogen exchange with the presence of a directing substituent can lead to
regioselective metallation.109
138
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Pyridyl Grignard reagents are readily prepared by exchange of bromine or iodine using iso-propyl Grignard reagents.110 In 2,5-dibromopyridine, the exchange is selective at C-5; other dibromo-pyridines,
including 2,6-dibromopyridine, also give clean mono-exchange.111 Formation of pyridyl Grignard species
in this way will even tolerate functional groups such as esters and nitriles, provided the temperature is
kept low.
The regioselectivity noted above for 2,5-dibromopyridine in both lithiations and Grignard formation, can
be contrasted with the regioselectivity observed with 5-bromo-2-iodopyridine with iso-propylmagnesium
chloride, where the greater reactivity of iodine overcomes the tendency for β- over α-exchange.112 The use
of iso-PrMgCl.LiCl gives very fast exchange with bromopyridines,113 and pyridine Grignard reagents can
also be obtained using ‘active magnesium’.114
8.5
Reactions with Radicals; Reactions of Pyridyl Radicals
8.5.1 Halogenation
At temperatures where bromine (500 °C) and chlorine (270 °C) are appreciably dissociated into atoms,
2- and 2,6-dihalo-pyridines are obtained via radical substitution.115
8.5.2 Carbon Radicals116
This same preference for α-attack is demonstrated by phenyl-radical attack, but the exact proportions of
products depend on the method of generation of the radicals.117 Greater selectivity for phenylation at the
2- and 4-positions is found in pyridinium salts.118 Aryl radicals will add intramolecularly, to a neutral pyridine, at any of the pyridine ring positions.119
Of more preparative value are the reactions of nucleophilic radicals, such as HOCH2• and R2NCO•,
which can be easily generated under mild conditions, for example HOCH2• from ethylene glycol by persulfate oxidation with silver nitrate as catalyst.120 These substitutions are carried out on the pyridine protonic
salt, which provides both increased reactivity and selectivity for an α-position; the process is known as the
Minisci reaction (cf. 3.4.1).121 It is accelerated by electron-withdrawing substituents on the ring.
8.5.3 Dimerisation
Both sodium and nickel bring about ‘oxidative’ dimerisations,122 despite the apparently reducing conditions,
the former giving 4,4′-bipyridine and the latter 2,2′-bipyridine.123 Each reaction is considered to involve
the same anion-radical resulting from transfer of an electron from metal to heterocycle, and the species has
been observed by ESR spectroscopy, when generated by single electron transfer (SET) from lithium diisopropylamide.124 In the case of nickel, the 2,2′-mode of dimerisation may be favoured by chelation to the
metal surface. Bipyridyls are important for the preparation of Paraquat-type weedkillers.
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
139
Intermediate, reduced dimers can be trapped under milder conditions,125 and reduced monomers when
the pyridine carries a 4-substituent.126
8.5.4 Pyridinyl Radicals
Irradiation of iodopyridines generates pyridinyl radicals, which will effect radical substitution of
aromatic compounds.127 Pyridinyl radicals can be generated from halo-pyridines, using tin hydrides, and
participate in typical radical cyclisation reactions.128,129 Each of the three bromo-pyridines is converted, by
tris(trimethylsilyl)silane and azobis(isobutyronitrile), into a radical which substitutes benzene.130
8.6
Reactions with Reducing Agents
Pyridines are much more easily reduced than benzenes, for example catalytic reduction proceeds easily at
atmospheric temperature and pressure, usually in weakly acidic solution, but also in dilute alkali over
nickel.131 Reduction in neutral solution is accelerated by microwave heating.132
Of the hydride reagents, sodium borohydride is without effect on pyridines, though it does reduce pyridinium salts (8.12.1), lithium aluminium hydride effects the addition of one hydride equivalent to pyridine,133 but lithium triethylborohydride reduces it to piperidine efficiently.134
The combination lithium/chlorotrimethylsilane produces a 1,4-dihydro doubly silylated product, the
enamine character in which can be utilised for the introduction of 3-alkyl groups via reaction with
aldehydes.135
Metal/acid combinations, which in other contexts do bring about reduction of iminium groups, are
without effect on pyridines. Samarium(II) iodide in the presence of water smoothly reduces pyridine to
piperidine.136 Sodium in liquid ammonia, in the presence of ethanol, affords the 1,4-dihydropyridine137
and 4-pyridones are reduced to 2,3-dihydro derivatives.138 Birch reduction of pyridines carrying esters,
140
Heterocyclic Chemistry
followed by trapping with alkyl halides, produces dihydro-pyridines, and methyl 4-methoxypicolinate
quaternary salts are comparably reduced and trapped giving 1,2-dihydro-derivatives, which can be smoothly
hydrolysed to enones.139
8.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
There are no reports of thermal electrocyclic reactions involving simple pyridines. 2-Pyridones, however,
participate as 4π components in Diels–Alder additions, especially under high pressure.140
N-Tosyl-2-pyridones with a 3-alkoxy or 3-arylthio substituent, undergo cycloaddition with electrondeficient alkenes under milder conditions, as illustrated below,141 and the cycloaddition of the corresponding
3-hydroxypyridone is promoted by O-deprotonation.142
The quaternary salts of 3-hydroxy-pyridines are converted by mild base into zwitterionic, organicsolvent-soluble species, for which no neutral resonance form can be drawn. These pyridinium-3-olates
undergo a number of dipolar cycloaddition reactions, especially across the 2,6-positions.143
8.8
Photochemical Reactions
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
141
Ultraviolet irradiation of pyridines can produce highly strained species that can lead to isomerised pyridines or can be trapped. The three picolines and the three cyano-substituted pyridines constitute ‘photochemical triads’: irradiation of any isomer, in the vapour phase at 254 nm, results in the formation of all
three isomers.144 From pyridines145 and from 2-pyridones146 2-azabicyclo[2.2.0]-hexadienes and -hexenones
can be obtained; in the case of pyridines these are usually unstable and revert thermally to the aromatic
heterocycle. Pyridone-derived bicycles are relatively stable, 4-alkoxy- and -acyloxy-pyridones are converted in particularly good yields. Irradiation of N-methyl-2-pyridone in aqueous solution produces a
mixture of regio- and stereoisomeric 4π plus 4π photo-dimers.147
Photocatalysed 2π plus 2π cycloadditions between a pair of tethered 4-pyridones148 can generate spectacularly complex rings systems easily, as shown.
The photoreactions of pyridinium salts in water give 6-azabicyclo[3.1.0]hex-3-en-2-ols or the corresponding ethers, which can undergo regio- and stereoselective ring-openings of the aziridine by attack of
nucleophiles under acidic conditions. These products are useful starting materials for synthesis.149
Photolysis of pyridine N-oxides in alkaline solution induces ring opening to cyano-dienolates.150
8.9
Oxy- and Amino-Pyridines
8.9.1 Structure
The three oxy-pyridines are subject to tautomerism involving hydrogen interchange between oxygen and
nitrogen, but with a significant difference between α- and γ- on the one hand and β-isomers on the other.
Under all normal conditions, α- and γ-isomers exist almost entirely in the carbonyl tautomeric form, and
are accordingly known as ‘pyridones’; the hydroxy-tautomers are detected in significant amounts only in
142
Heterocyclic Chemistry
very dilute solutions in non-polar solvents like petrol, or in the gas phase, where, for the α-isomer,
2-hydroxypyridine is actually the dominant tautomer by 2.5:1.151 The polarised pyridone form is favoured
by solvation.152 3-Hydroxypyridine exists in equilibrium with a corresponding zwitterionic tautomer, the
exact ratio depending on solvent.
In this chapter we utilise the generally accepted terms ‘2-pyridone’, ‘4-pyridone’ rather than the strictly
correct ‘2(1H)-pyridinone’, etc.
All three amino-pyridines exist in the amino form; the α- and γ-isomers are polarised in a sense opposite
to that in the pyridones.
8.9.2 Reactions of Pyridones
8.9.2.1 Electrophilic Addition and Substitution
3-Hydroxypyridine protonates on nitrogen, with a typical pyridine pKaH of 5.2; the pyridones are much less
basic and, like amides, protonate on oxygen.153 However, the reaction of 4-pyridone with acid chlorides
produces N-acyl derivatives. 1-Acetyl-4-pyridone subsequently equilibrates in solution affording a mixture
with 4-acetoxypyridine.154
Electrophilic substitution at carbon can be effected much more readily with the three oxy-pyridines than
with pyridine itself, and it occurs ortho and para to the oxygen function, as indicated below. Acid catalysed
exchange of 4-pyridone in deuterium oxide, for example, gives 3,5-dideuterio-4-pyridone, via Cprotonation of the neutral pyridone.155
Positions of electrophilic substitution of oxy-pyridines
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
143
Substitutions usually proceed via attack on the neutral pyridone,156 but in very strong acid, where there
is almost complete O-protonation, 4-pyridone undergoes a slower nitration, via attack on the salt, but with
the same regioselectivity.157
Electrophilic substitutions of 3-hydroxypyridine take place at C-2, for example nitration,158
Mannich substitution159 and iodination.160 Its phenol-like character is nicely illustrated by efficient 2,4,6tribromination with N-bromosuccinimide.161 2-Methoxypyridine brominates at C-5162 and 4methoxypyridine at C-3.161
8.9.2.2 Deprotonation and Reaction of Salts
N-Unsubstituted pyridones are acidic, with pKa values of about 11 for N-deprotonation giving mesomeric
anions. These ambident anions can be alkylated on either oxygen or nitrogen, producing alkoxy-pyridines
or N-alkyl-pyridones, respectively, the relative proportions depending on the reaction conditions;163 Nalkylation is usually predominant for primary halides; O-alkylation for secondary halides.164 The reagent
combination sodium hydride with lithium bromide in dimethylformamide and dimethoxyethane gives
mainly N-alkylation.165 A clean method for the synthesis of N-alkylated 4-pyridones is to convert the pyridone first into the O-trimethylsilyl ether166 which can then be reacted selectively at nitrogen, subsequent
removal of the silicon giving the N-alkylpyridone.138 Alternatively, 2-alkoxy-pyridines, generated by alkoxide displacement on a 2-halo-pyridine, can be isomerised: for example 2-benzyloxypyridine is converted
into 1-benzyl-2-pyridone on heating with lithium iodide at 100 °C.167 2-Pyridone is sufficiently acidic to
take part in Mitsunobu reactions with alcohols, though, again, mixtures of O- and N-alkylation products
result.168
8.9.2.3 Replacement of Oxygen
The conversion of the carbonyl group in pyridones into a leaving group has a very important place in the
chemistry of pyridones, the most frequently encountered examples involving reaction with phosphoryl
chloride and/or phosphorus pentachloride leading to the chloro-pyridine, via an assumed dichlorophosphate
144
Heterocyclic Chemistry
intermediate as indicated below. Conversion into bromo derivatives is possible with phosphorus oxybromide but can be more conveniently achieved with N-bromosuccinimide and triphenylphosphine in refluxing
dioxane169 or with phosphorus pentoxide with tetra-n-butylammonium bromide in hot toluene.170 Similarly,
treatment with phosphorus pentoxide and a secondary amine, or of 2- or 4-trimethylsilyloxypyridines
(prepared in situ) with secondary amines,166 produces dialkylamino-pyridines. Pyridones are converted into
triflates by reaction with trifluoromethanesulfonic anhydride and a base;171 these derivatives are of particular
interest in the context of palladium(0)-catalysed cross-couplings (4.2).
The usual way to remove oxygen completely from a pyridone is by conversion, as described, into halogen
followed by catalytic hydrogenolysis.172 Alternatively, reaction of the pyridone salt with 5-chloro-1-phenyltetrazole then hydrogenolysis of the resulting ether can be used.173
8.9.3 Reactions of Amino-Pyridines
8.9.3.1 Electrophilic Addition and Substitution
The three amino-pyridines are all more basic than pyridine itself and form crystalline salts by protonation
at the ring nitrogen. The α- and γ-isomers are monobasic only, because charge delocalisation over both
nitrogen atoms, in the manner of an amidinium cation, prevents the addition of a second proton. The effect
of the delocalisation is strongest in 4-aminopyridine (pKaH 9.1) and much weaker in 2-aminopyridine
(pKaH 7.2). Delocalisation is not possible for the β-isomer, which thus can form a di-cation in strong acid
(pKaHs 6.6 and −1.5).174
Whereas alkylation of amino-pyridines, irreversible at room temperature, gives the product of kinetically
controlled attack at the most nucleophilic nitrogen, the ring nitrogen,175 acetylation gives the product of
reaction at a side-chain amino group. The acetylamino-pyridine which is isolated probably results from
N-deprotonation of an N-acyl-pyridinium salt followed by side-chain N-acylation, with loss of the ring Nacetyl during aqueous work-up, as suggested below.
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
145
As in benzene chemistry, electron-releasing amino groups facilitate electrophilic substitution, so that,
for example, 2-aminopyridine undergoes 5-bromination in acetic acid even at room temperature; this
product can then be nitrated, at room temperature, forming 2-amino-5-bromo-3-nitropyridine.176 Bromination of all three amino-pyridines is best achieved with N-bromosuccinimide at room temperature, products
being 2-amino-5-bromo-, 3-amino-2-bromo- and 4-amino-3-bromopyridines.161 Similarly, chlorination of
3-amino-pyridines affords 3-amino-2-chloro-pyridines.177 Nitration of amino-pyridines in acid solution
is also relatively easy, with selective attack of 2- and 4-isomers at β-positions. A mechanistic study of
dialkylamino-pyridines showed nitration to involve attack on the salts.178
A limited number of examples of C-alkylations of aminopyridines have been reported. With 1hydroxymethylbenzotriazole (29.3) in the presence of acid, 2-aminopyridine reacts at C-5.179 4Dimethylaminopyridine is trifluoroacetylated at C-3 with trifluoroacetic anhydride; the example shows the
subsequent intramolecular nucleophilic displacement of the dimethylamino group and thence formation of
a pyrazolo[4,3-c]pyridine.180
8.9.3.2 Reactions of the Amino Group
β-Amino-pyridines give normal diazonium salts on reaction with nitrous acid, but with α- and γ-isomers,
unless precautions are taken, the corresponding pyridones are then produced via easy hydrolysis,171,181 water
addition at the diazonium-bearing carbon being rapid.182 With care, however, this same susceptibility to
nucleophilic displacement can be harnessed in effecting Sandmeyer-type reactions, without the use of
copper, of diazonium salts from either 2- or 4-aminopyridines.181,183,184
146
Heterocyclic Chemistry
8.10 Alkyl-Pyridines
The main feature of the reactivity of alkyl-pyridines is deprotonation of the alkyl group at the carbon
adjacent to the ring.185 Measurements of side-chain exchange in methanolic sodium methoxide, 4 : 2 : 3,
1800 : 130 : 1,186 and of pKa values in tetrahydrofuran187 each have the γ-isomer more acidic than the αisomer, both being much more acidic than the β-isomer, though the actual carbanion produced in competitive situations can depend on both the counter ion and the solvent. Alkyllithiums selectively deprotonate
an α-methyl whereas amide bases produce the more stable γ-anion.188 The much greater ease of deprotonation189 of the α- and γ-isomers is related to mesomeric stabilisation of the anion involving the ring nitrogen,
not available to the β-isomer, for which there is only inductive facilitation, but deprotonation can be effected
at a β-methyl under suitable conditions;190 the difference in acidity between 2- and 3-methyl groups allows
selective reaction at the former.191
Resonance stabilisation of ‘enaminate’ anions formed by deprotonating the methyl groups
of 4- and 2-picolines
The ‘enaminate’ anions produced by deprotonating α- and γ-alkyl-pyridines can participate in a wide
range of reactions,192 being closely analogous to enolate anions; some examples are given below. Note
that dimethyl-pyridines are often referred to as ‘lutidines’ – thus the example below is 2,4-lutidine
(2,4-dimethylpyridine).
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
147
An important aspect is the oxidation of side-chain methyl to hydroxymethyl or aldehyde oxidation levels.
The former can be achieved by reaction of the lithiated species with molecular oxygen, then quenching
with dimethyl sulfide in acetic acid.193 Conversion of methyl to the aldehyde oxidation level (see also 8.2)
can be achieved by dibromination, then hydrolysis.194
It is even possible to lithiate a methyl in the presence of a free amino group and this can be made the
means to synthesise 6-azaindoles (pyrrolo[2,3-c]pyridines).195
In the quaternary salts of alkyl-pyridines, the side-chain hydrogens are considerably more acidic and
condensations can be brought about under quite mild conditions, the reactive species being a dienamine.196
Dienamides are the reacting nucleophiles in aldol-type condensations brought about with acetic anhydride
or in side-chain trifluoroacetylation of 2-picoline.197
A further consequence of the stabilisation of carbanionic centres at pyridine α- and γ-positions is the
facility with which vinyl-pyridines,198 and alkynyl-pyridines, add nucleophiles, in Michael-like processes
(mercury-catalysed hydration of alkynyl-pyridines goes in the opposite sense199).
148
8.11
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Pyridine Aldehydes, Ketones, Carboxylic Acids and Esters
These compounds all closely resemble the corresponding benzene compounds in their reactivity because
the carbonyl group cannot interact mesomerically with the ring nitrogen. The pyridine 2- (picolinic), 3(nicotinic), and 4- (isonicotinic) acids exist almost entirely in their zwitterionic forms in aqueous solution;
they are slightly stronger acids than benzoic acid. Decarboxylation of picolinic acids is relatively easy and
results in the transient formation of the same type of ylide that is responsible for specific proton α-exchange
of pyridine in acid solution (see 8.1.2.1).200 This transient ylide can be trapped by aromatic or aliphatic
aldehydes in a reaction known as the Hammick reaction.201 As implied by this mechanism, quaternary salts
of picolinic acids also undergo easy decarboxylation.202 The Hammick reaction can also be carried out by
heating a silyl ester of picolinic acid in the presence of a carbonyl electrophile.203
8.12
Quaternary Pyridinium Salts
The main features of the reactivity of pyridinium salts are: (i) the greatly enhanced susceptibility to nucleophilic addition and displacement at the α- and γ-positions, sometimes followed by ring opening236 and
(ii) the easy deprotonation of α- and γ-alkyl groups (see also 8.10).
8.12.1 Reduction and Oxidation
The oxidation of pyridinium salts204 to pyridones by alkaline ferricyanide is presumed to involve a very
small concentration of hydroxide adduct. 3-Substituted pyridinium ions are transformed into mixtures
of 2- and 6-pyridones; for example oxidation of 1,3-dimethylpyridinium iodide gives a 9:1 ratio of
1,3-dimethyl-2- and -6-pyridones.
Catalytic reduction of pyridinium salts to piperidines is particularly easy in ethanol at room temperature
and pressure; they are also susceptible to hydride addition by complex metal hydrides205 or formate,206 and
lithium/ammonia reduction.207 In the reduction with sodium borohydride in protic media, the main product
is a tetrahydro derivative with the double bond at the allylic, 3,4-position, formed by initial hydride addi-
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
149
tion at C-2, followed by enamine β-protonation and a second hydride addition. Some fully reduced material
is always produced and its relative percentage increases with increasing N-substituent bulk, consistent with
a competing sequence having initial attack at C-4, generating a dienamine, which can then undergo two
successive proton-then-hydride addition steps. When 3-substituted pyridinium salts are reduced with
sodium borohydride, 3-substituted-1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridines result.
N-Alkoxy- or N-aryloxycarbonyl-pyridiniums can be reductively trapped as dihydro derivatives by
borohydride;208 no further reduction occurs because the immediate product is an enamide and not an
enamine and therefore does not protonate under the conditions of the reduction.209 The 1,2-dihydro-isomers,
which can be produced essentially exclusively by reduction at −70 °C in methanol, can serve as dienes in
Diels–Alder reactions. Irradiation causes conversion into 2-azabicyclo[2.2.0]hexenes; removal of the carbamate and N-alkylation gives derivatives that are synthons for unstable N-alkyl-dihydropyridines, and
convertible into the latter thermally.210
The easy specific reduction of 3-acyl-pyridinium salts giving stable 3-acyl-1,4-dihydropyridines using
sodium dithionite (Na2S2O4) is often quoted, because of its perceived relevance to nicotinamide coenzyme
activity (32.2.1). The mechanism involves addition of oxygen at C-4 as its first step; the first intermediate
protonates on sulfur and the subsequent C-4-protonation may involve intramolecular hydrogen transfer
from the sulfur, with sulfur dioxide loss.211 1,4-Dihydropyridines are normally air-sensitive, easily rearomatised molecules; the stability of 3-acyl-1,4-dihydropyridines is related to the conjugation between
ring nitrogen and side-chain carbonyl group (see also Hantzsch synthesis, 8.14.1.2). However, even simple
pyridinium salts, provided the N-substituent is larger than propyl, or for example benzyl, can be reduced
to 1,4-dihydropyridines with sodium dithionite.212
150
Heterocyclic Chemistry
8.12.2 Organometallic and Other Nucleophilic Additions
Organometallic reagents add very readily to N-alkyl-, N-aryl- and, with important synthetic significance,
N-alkoxy- or N-aryloxycarbonyl-pyridinium salts. In N-alkyl- or N-aryl-pyridinium cations, addition is to
an α-carbon; the resulting 2-substituted-1,2-dihydropyridines are unstable, but can be handled and spectroscopically identified, with care, and more importantly can be easily oxidised to a 2-substituted pyridinium
salt.213
The great significance of the later discovery, that exactly comparable additions to N-alkoxycarbonyl- or
N-aryloxycarbonyl-pyridinium cations, generated and reacted in situ, is that the dihydro-pyridines that
result are stable, and can be further manipulated. If re-aromatisation214 is required, the N-substituent
can be easily removed to give a substituted pyridine. It is worth noting the contrast to the use of N-acylpyridinium salts for reaction with alcohol, amine nucleophiles (8.1.1.7), when attack is at the carbonyl
carbon; the use of an N-alkoxy/aryloxycarbonyl-pyridinium salt in the present context diverts attack to a
ring carbon.
Generally, organometallic addition to N-alkoxycarbonyl- or N-aryloxycarbonyl-pyridinium salts192 takes
place at either the 2- or 4-positions,215 however higher selectivity for the 4-position can be achieved using
copper reagents.216 High selectivity for the 2-position is found in the addition of phenyl,217 alkenyl and
alkynyl organometallics,218 including ethoxycarbonylmethyl219 and alkynyl220 tin reagents.
The dihydropyridines produced by the methods described above are multifunctional and can be manipulated, for example the enamide character in these products can be utilised by interaction with an electrophile
(iodine in the example) which brings about intramolecular attack and formation of a lactone.221
Silylation at nitrogen with t-butyldimethylsilyl triflate, generates pyridinium salts which, because of the
size of the N-substitutent, react with Grignard reagents exclusively at C-4.222 Similarly, 4-substituted N-triiso-propylsilyl-pyridinium salts react with hindered dialkylmagnesiums at C-4, providing a route through
to 4,4-dialkyl-piperidines, as shown.223
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
151
4-Substituents tend to direct attack to an α-carbon;224,225 the use of a removable 4-blocking group –
trimethyltin in the example below – can be made the means for the production of 2-substituted
isomers.226
The use of chiral chloroformates, such as that derived from trans-2-(α-cumyl)cyclohexanol, allows
diastereoselective additions to 4-methoxypyridine. The introduction of a tri-iso-propylsilyl group at C-3
greatly enhances the diastereoselectivity. The products of these reactions are multifunctional chiral piperidines which have found use in the asymmetric synthesis of natural products.227
Some nucleophiles add to N-fluoro-pyridinium salts to give dihydropyridines in which elimination of
fluoride occurs in situ to give the 2-substituted pyridine.228 However, the preparation of the pyridinium salts
requires the use of elemental fluorine (31.1) and also, some carbanions are subject to competitive reactions
such as C-fluorination. However, silyl enol ethers do react efficiently; stabilised heteronucleophiles
(phenolate, azide) can also be used, and isonitriles produce picolinamides.229
152
Heterocyclic Chemistry
In a similar way, pyridine phosphonium salts and phosphonates can be prepared by reaction of trivalent
phosphorus compounds with the more accessible N-trifluoromethanesulfonyl-pyridinium salts, when trifluoromethanesulfone is the leaving group from nitrogen (as sulfinate anion); attack is normally at C-4, as
illustrated below.230 The N-trifluoromethanesulfonyl-pyridinium salts also react with ketones231 or with
electron-rich aromatic compounds232 to give 1,4-dihydropyridine adducts. Subsequent treatment with potassium t-butoxide brings about elimination of trifluoromethanesulfinic acid, and thus aromatisation. It is also
possible to utilise phosphonates in reaction with aldehydes, leading finally to 4-substituted pyridines.233
8.12.3 Nucleophilic Addition Followed by Ring Opening234
There are many examples of pyridinium salts, particularly, but not exclusively, those with powerful electron-withdrawing N-substituents, adding a nucleophile at C-2 and then undergoing a ring opening. The
classic example is addition of hydroxide to the pyridine sulfur trioxide complex, which produces the sodium
salt of glutaconaldehyde, as shown below.235
Another intriguing example is a synthesis of azulene that utilises the bis(dimethylamine) derivative of
glutaconaldehyde produced with loss of 2,4-dinitroaniline from 1-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)pyridinium chloride
(Zincke’s salt).236,237
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
153
The reaction of Zincke’s salt with primary amines, including α-amino acid esters, is a useful synthesis
of variously N-substituted pyridinium salts; the nitrogen of the final product is the nitrogen of the primary
amine reactant.238,239
8.12.4 Cyclisations Involving an α-Position or an α-Substituent
It is often possible to convert pyridinium salts into bicyclic, neutral products, with nitrogen at a ring
junction, in which the ring closure involves an α-substituent or the electrophilic nature of the α-position
– Sections 28.1.2 and 28.2.3 give examples.
8.12.5 N-Dealkylation
The conversion of N-alkyl- or -aryl-pyridinium salts into the corresponding pyridine, i.e. the removal of
the N-substitutent, is generally not an easy process; however triphenylphosphine240 or simply heating the
iodide salt241 can work for metho-salts. 1-Triphenylmethyl-4-dimethylaminopyridinium chloride242 and
1-trialkylsilyl-pyridinium triflates243 are isolable and relatively stable salts; O-tritylations and O-silylations
involving transfer of trityl or trialkylsilyl from the positively charged nitrogen in such salts are usually
carried out without isolation, using mixtures of 4-dimethylaminopyridine (DMAP) with chlorotriphenylmethane or, for example, chloro-t-butyldimethylsilane.244
8.13
Pyridine N-oxides245
The reactions of pyridine N-oxides are of great interest,246 differing significantly from those of both neutral
pyridines and pyridinium salts.
A striking difference between pyridines and their N-oxides is the susceptibility of the latter to electrophilic nitration. This can be understood in terms of mesomeric release from the oxide oxygen, and is parallel
to electron release by oxygen and hence increased reactivity towards electrophilic substitution in phenols
and phenoxides. One can find support for this rationalisation by a comparison of the dipole moments of
trimethylamine and its N-oxide, on the one hand, and pyridine and its N-oxide, on the other: the difference
154
Heterocyclic Chemistry
of 2.03 D for the latter pair is much smaller than the 4.37 D found for the former. The smaller difference
signals significant contributions from those canonical forms in which the oxygen is neutral and the ring
negatively charged. Clearly, however, the situation is subtle, as those contributors carrying formal positive
charges on α- and γ-carbons suggest a polarisation in the opposite sense and thus an increased susceptibility
to nucleophilic attack too, compared with the neutral pyridine, and this is indeed found to be the case.
Summarising: the N-oxide function in pyridine N-oxides serves to facilitate, on demand, both electrophilic
and nucleophilic addition to the α- and γ-positions.
8.13.1 Electrophilic Addition and Substitution
Pyridine N-oxides protonate and are alkylated at oxygen; stable salts can be isolated in some cases.247 OAlkylation with benzylic and allylic halides in the presence of silver oxide produces the corresponding
aldehydes, the oxygen being derived from the N-oxide.248
Electrophilic nitration and bromination of pyridine N-oxides can be controlled to give 4-substituted
products249 by way of attack on the free N-oxide.250 Under conditions where the N-oxide is O-protonated,
substitution follows the typical pyridine/pyridinium reactivity pattern thus, in fuming sulfuric acid, bromination shows β-regioselectivity.251 Mercuration takes place at the α-position,252 however mercuric-catalysed
sulfonation produces the 3-sulfonic acid.253
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
155
8.13.2 Nucleophilic Addition and Substitution
The N-oxide function enhances the rate of nucleophilic displacement of halogen from α- and γ-positions.
The relative rates 4 > 2 > 3 found for pyridines are echoed for the N-oxides (but significantly are 2 > 4 > 3
in pyridinium salts).254
Grignard reagents add to pyridine N-oxide, forming adducts, which can be characterised from a lowtemperature reaction, but which at room temperature undergo disrotatory ring opening, the isolated product
being an acyclic, unsaturated oxime. Heating with acetic anhydride brings about re-aromatisation, via
electrocyclic ring closure rendered irreversible by the loss of acetic acid.255 Comparable additions/ring
openings are observed with 1-alkoxy-pyridiniums.256,257
The direct introduction of an acetylide moiety, using pyridine N-oxide (or quinoline, diazine and triazine
N-oxides) can be achieved in a comparable way, by reaction with potassium phenylacetylide; reaction with
the lithium salt requires addition of acetyl chloride at the end of the reaction to aromatise.258 At low temperature, and using i-PrMgCl, 2-metallation of pyridine N-oxides can be achieved, and thus, the introduction
of electrophiles at the 2-position.259
8.13.3 Addition of Nucleophiles then Loss of Oxide
A range of synthetically useful rearrangements convert pyridine N-oxides into variously substituted pyridines in which an α-(γ-)position, or an α-substituent has been modified.
Reaction with phosphorus oxychloride260 or with acetic anhydride leads to the formation of 2-chloro- or
2-acetoxy-pyridines, respectively. Mechanistically, electrophilic addition to oxide is followed by nucleophilic addition to an α- or γ-position, the process being completed by an elimination. Similarly, conversions
of pyridine N-oxides into 2-cyanopyridines depend on prior conversion of oxide into silyloxy or
carbamate.261
It is also possible to introduce a nitrogen function using these types of process: O-tosylation then tbutylamine as a synthon for ammonia leads to 2-aminopyridines262 and oxalyl chloride, together with a
secondary amide, produces 2-amino-pyridine amides.263
156
Heterocyclic Chemistry
2-Methyl-pyridine N-oxides react with hot acetic anhydride and produce 2-acetoxymethyl-pyridines;
trifluoroacetic anhydride reacts at room temperature, with fewer by-products.264 Repetition of the sequence
affords 2-aldehydes after hydrolysis.265 The course266 of the rearrangement would seem to be most simply
explained by invoking an electrocyclic sequence, as shown below.
The following sequence illustrates several aspects of N-oxide chemistry, including easy nucleophilic
substitution (of nitro) at a γ-position.267
8.14
Synthesis of Pyridines
8.14.1 Ring Synthesis268
There are very many ways of achieving the synthesis of a pyridine ring; in this section, the main general
methods and some less general sequences are described and exemplified.
8.14.1.1 From 1,5-Dicarbonyl Compounds and Ammonia
Ammonia reacts with 1,5-dicarbonyl compounds to give 1,4-dihydropyridines, which are easily dehydrogenated to pyridines. With unsaturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compounds, or their equivalents (e.g. pyrylium ions),
ammonia reacts to give pyridines directly.
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
157
1,5-Diketones are accessible via a number routes, for example by Michael addition of enolate to
enone (or precursor Mannich base269) or by ozonolysis of a cyclopentene precursor. They react with
ammonia, with loss of two mole equivalents of water to produce cyclic bis-enamines, i.e. 1,4-dihydropyridines, which are generally unstable, but can be easily and efficiently dehydrogenated to the aromatic
heterocycle.
The oxidative final step can be neatly avoided by the use of hydroxylamine270 instead of ammonia, when
a final 1,4-loss of water produces the aromatic heterocycle. In an extension of this concept, the construction
of a 1,5-diketone equivalent by tandem Michael addition of an N,N-dimethylhydrazone anion to an enone,
then acylation, has loss of dimethylamine from nitrogen as the final aromatisation step.271
The use of an unsaturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compound will afford an aromatic pyridine directly; a
number of methods are available for the assembly of the unsaturated diketone, including the use of
pyrylium ions or pyrones272 (see Chapter 11) as synthons, or the alkylation of an enolate with a
3,3-bis(methylthio)-enone.273 2,2′:6′,2′′-Terpyridine can be synthesised in one pot from 2-acetylpyridine,
dimethylformamide dimethylacetal (DMFDMA) and ammonia; the first step is presumed to be dimethylaminomethylenation of the ketone methyl group, followed then by addition/elimination by the enolate of
the starting ketone.274
158
Heterocyclic Chemistry
When one of the carbonyl carbons is at the oxidation level of acid (as in a 2-pyrone), then the product,
reflecting this oxidation level, is a 2-pyridone.275 Similarly, 4-pyrones react with ammonia or
primary amines to give 4-pyridones276 and the bis-enamines which can be obtained directly from ketones
by condensation on both sides of the carbonyl group with DMFDMA, produce 4-pyridones on reaction
with primary amines.277 When one of the ‘carbonyl’ units is actually a nitrile, then an amino-pyridine
results.278
8.14.1.2 From an Aldehyde, Two Equivalents of a 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compound and Ammonia
Symmetrical 1,4-dihydropyridines, which can be easily dehydrogenated, are produced from the interaction
of ammonia, an aldehyde and two equivalents of a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound, which must have a central
methylene.
The Hantzsch Synthesis279
The product from the classical Hantzsch synthesis is necessarily a symmetrically substituted 1,4-dihydropyridine, since two mole equivalents of one dicarbonyl component are utilised, the aldehyde carbonyl
carbon becoming the pyridine C-4. The precise sequence of intermediate steps is not known for certain,
and may indeed vary from case to case, for example the ammonia may become involved early or late, but
a reasonable sequence would be: aldol condensation followed by Michael addition generating, in situ, a
1,5-dicarbonyl compound.
The 1,4-dihydropyridines produced in this approach, carrying conjugating substituents at each βposition, are stable, and can be easily isolated before dehydrogenation; classically the oxidation has been
achieved with nitric acid, or nitrous acid, but other oxidants such as ceric ammonium nitrate, cupric nitrate
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
159
or manganese dioxide on Montmorillonite, amongst many, also achieve this objective smoothly.280 Iodine
with potassium hydroxide at 0 °C is amongst the mildest.281
Hantzsch reactions to produce 5,6,7,8-tetrahydroquinolines, i.e. unsymmetrically substituted pyridines,
work well using ceric ammonium nitrate (CAN) as a catalyst.282
More often, unsymmetrical 1,4-dihydropyridines are produced by conducting the Hantzsch synthesis in
two stages, i.e. by making the (presumed) aldol condensation product separately, then reacting with
ammonia and a different 1,3-dicarbonyl component, or an enamino-ketone, in a second step.283
This strategy can also be applied for the synthesis of 2,2′ : 6′,2′′-terpyridines with in situ aromatisation,
there being no β-carbonyl groups to stabilise the dihydro-pyridine.284
160
Heterocyclic Chemistry
8.14.1.3 From 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds (or Synthons) and 3-Amino-Enones or -Nitriles
Pyridines are formed from the interaction between a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound and a 3-amino-enone or
3-amino-acrylate; 3-cyano-2-pyridones result if cyanoacetamide is used instead of an amino-enone.
This approach, in its various forms, is one of the most versatile and useful, since it allows the construction of unsymmetrically substituted pyridines from relatively simple precursors. Again, in this pyridine-ring
construction, intermediates are not isolated and it is usually difficult to be sure of the exact sequence of
events.285
3-Amino-enones or 3-amino-acrylates can be prepared by the straightforward reaction of ammonia with
a 1,3-diketone or a 1,3-keto-ester. The simplest 1,3-dicarbonyl compound, malondialdehyde, is too unstable
to be useful, but its acetal enol ether can be used instead, as shown below.286
Vinamidinium (R2NCH=CR5CH=N+R2) salts (best as non-hygroscopic hexafluorophosphates) will serve
as synthons for substituted malondialdehydes in these syntheses; this is one case in which the intermediate
is known.287 Using hydroxylamine instead of ammonia leads to N-oxides.288 The vinamidinium salts are
available by reaction of the relevant substituted acetic acid (R5CH2CO2H) with phosphorus oxychloride
and dimethylformamide.289
The Guareschi Synthesis
This variation makes use of cyanoacetamide as the nitrogen-containing component and thus leads to
3-cyano-2-pyridones.
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
161
Providing the two carbonyl groups are sufficiently different in reactivity, only one of the two possible
isomeric pyridine/pyridone products is formed via reaction of the more electrophilic carbonyl group with
the central carbon of the 3-amino-enone, 3-amino-acrylate, or cyanoacetamide.290,291
Variations include the use of 3-alkoxy-enones (i.e. the enol ethers of 1,3-diketones) when the initial
Michael-type interaction dictates the regiochemistry.292 Using nitroacetamide instead of cyanoacetamide
produces 3-nitro-2-pyridones293 and using H2NCOCH2C(NH2)=N+H2 Cl− gives 2-aminopyridine3-carboxamides.294
Ring closures to produce pyridines and pyridones can also be carried out with starting materials at a
lower oxidation level, with in situ dehydrogenation by air or added oxygen, i.e. instead of using a 1,3dicarbonyl component, an α,β-unsaturated ketone/aldehyde is employed, as illustrated below.295 If
such condensations are carried out in the absence of oxygen, loss of hydrogen cyanide brings about aromatisation giving 2-pyridones with no substituent at C-3, particularly when the pyridone-4-substituent is
aryl.296
The reaction of yne-ones (also synthons for 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds) with 3-amino-enones or 3-aminoacrylates (the Bohlmann–Rahtz reaction) is regioselective, since conjugate addition of the ketone enamine
is the first step; the intermediates thus produced can be isolated from reactions in ethanol and converted
on to the aromatic pyridine.297,298 Acetic acid or ytterbium triflate299 give good results.
162
Heterocyclic Chemistry
As a final example, malonate anions will add to yne-imines to produce pyridones directly.300
8.14.1.4 Via Cycloadditions
A number of 6π cycloadditions, some with inverse electron-demand, some with subsequent extrusion of a
small molecule to achieve aromaticity, have been used to construct pyridines.
From Oxazoles
Historically, the first of these was the addition of a dienophile to an oxazole; using acrylonitrile, hydrogen
cyanide is lost to aromatise and the oxazole oxygen is retained (giving 3-hydroxypyridines) and using
acrylic acid, the oxygen is lost as water, as illustrated below.301
From Triazines
1,2,3-302 and 1,2,4-Triazines, acting as inverse electron-demand azadienes, add to enamines (sometimes
prepared in situ303) and thus, following extrusion of nitrogen and loss of amine, a pyridine is produced (see
29.2.1).304 1,2,4-Triazines will also react with other dienophiles: reaction with ethynyltributyltin, for
example, gives 4-stannyl-pyridines;305 norbornadiene is useful as an acetylene equivalent, cyclopentadiene
being lost finally.306 Oxazinones can also be used as the ‘diene’ component, with carbon dioxide as a final
loss.307
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
163
From Acyclic Azadienes
The O,O′-bis-t-butyldimethylsilyl derivative of an imide serves as an azadiene in reaction with dienophiles;
2-pyridones are the result, following desilylation.308
Unsaturated O-silylated oximes or unsaturated hydrazones, in particular those with a silylated oxygen
at C-3 as well, take part in cycloadditions, with loss of the N-substituent (see also 8.14.1.1) giving
3-hydroxypyridines.309,310 The starting 1-azadienes are easily available via α-nitrosation of a ketone, then
oxime and enol O-silylations.
A three-component, one-pot process involving formation of a vinyl imine from a palladium(0)-catalysed
coupling followed by the cycloaddition and then aromatisation via toluenesulfinate elimination gives bicyclic 2-amino-pyridines.311
By Thermal Electrocyclisation of Aza-1,3,5-Trienes
Electrocyclisation of 1-aza-1,3,5-trienes generates dihydropyridines, which can be oxidised to pyridines;
however, if an oxime or hydrazine derivative is used, elimination of water or an amine in situ gives the
pyridine directly. This method is particularly useful for fusion of pyridines to other ring systems and is
illustrated by the example below.312
164
Heterocyclic Chemistry
By Metal-Mediated [2 + 2 + 2] Cycloadditions313
The cobalt-catalysed interaction of a nitrile and two equivalents of an acetylene (or one equivalent of each
of two different acetylenes) brings three components together to form an aromatic pyridine ring.314
Cobalt has been used most often, in some cases on solid support,315 but the ring construction can be
brought about using a titanium(II) alkoxide,316 or with a nickel(0) catalyst.317 Isocyanates with a ruthenium
catalyst generate 2-pyridones.318
8.14.1.5 Miscellaneous Methods
This section includes a selection of examples that are of interest both mechanistically and preparatively.
From Furans
Ring-opening and reclosure processes using furans include several significant methods for the construction
of pyridines. 2,5-Dihydro-2,5-dimethoxy-furans (see 18.1.1.4) carrying as a C-2 side-chain an aminoalkyl
group, give rise to 3-hydroxy-pyridines.319
From Propargylamine
Following the interaction of propargylamine amino group with a ketone, producing an enamine, ring closure
can be effected with a gold catalyst, the whole process being conducted in one pot.320
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
165
From Enamides
Enamides, easily available by N-acylation of imines, can be converted into 2-chloronicotinaldehydes by
exposure to the Vilsmeier reagent: the example shows the putative intermediate.321
8.14.1.6 Industrial Syntheses
Many alkyl-pyridines are manufactured commercially by chemically complex processes that often produce
them as mixtures. A good example is the extraordinary Chichibabin synthesis, in which paraldehyde and
ammonium hydroxide react together at 230 °C under pressure to afford 52% of 5-ethyl-2-methylpyridine;
so here, four mole equivalents of acetaldehyde and one of ammonia combine.322
8.14.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses of Pyridine Compounds
8.14.2.1 Fusarinic Acid
Fusarinic acid is a mould metabolite with antibiotic and antihypertensive activity. Two syntheses of
this substance employ cycloadditions, one323 to produce a 1,5-diketone and the other324 to generate a
1-dimethylamino-1,4-dihydropyridine.
8.14.2.2 Pyridoxine
Pyridoxine, vitamin B6, has been synthesised by several routes, including one that utilises a Guareschi ring
synthesis, as shown below.325 Another utilises a cycloaddition to an oxazole (8.14.1.4).326
166
Heterocyclic Chemistry
8.14.2.3 Nemertelline
The total synthesis of nemertelline, a hoploemertin worm toxin, illustrates the use of metallation and
palladium-catalysed couplings.327
8.14.2.4 Louisanin A
Louisianin A is one of a family of Streptomyces-derived inhibitors of the growth of testosterone-responsive
Shionogi carcinoma cells.328
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 7 and 8):
(a) In what way does pyridine react with electrophilic reagents such as acids and alkyl halides?
(b) What factors make it much more difficult to bring about electrophilic substitution of pyridine than
benzene?
(c) How do pyridines compare with benzenes with regard to: (i) oxidative destruction of the ring and (ii)
reduction of the ring?
Pyridines: Reactions and Synthesis
167
(d) Give two examples of pyridines reacting with nucleophilic reagents with substitution of a
hydrogen.
(e) What are the relative reactivities of bromobenzene, 2-bromopyridine, 3-bromopyridine towards replacement of the halide with ethoxide on treatment with NaOEt?
(f) How could one generate 2-lithiopyridine?
(g) What would result from treatment of 3-chloropyridine with LDA at low temperature?
(h) Draw the main tautomeric forms of 2-hydroxypyridine (2-pyridone), 3-hydroxypyridine and
2-aminopyridine.
(i) How could one convert 4-pyridone cleanly into 1-ethyl-4-pyridone?
(j) What would be the result of treating a 1 : 1 mixture of 2- and 3-methylpyridines with 0.5 equivalents
of LDA and then 0.5 equivalents of MeI?
(k) Draw the structure of the product(s) you would expect to be formed if pyridine were reacted successively with methyl chloroformate and then phenyllithium.
(l) In pyridine N-oxides, both electrophilic substitution and nucleophilic displacement of halide from C-4
go more rapidly than in pyridine – explain.
(m) Describe two important methods for the synthesis of pyridines from precursors that do not contain the
ring.
(n) What compounds would result from the following reagent combinations: (i) H2NCOCH2CN
(cyanoacetamide) with MeCOCH2COMe; (ii) MeC(NH2)=CHCO2Et (ethyl 3-aminocrotonate) with
MeCOCH2COMe; (iii) PhCH=O, MeCOCH2COMe and NH3?
More advanced exercises:
1. Suggest a structure for the products: (i) C7H8N2O3 produced by treating 3-ethoxypyridine with f.
HNO3/c. H2SO4 at 100 °C, (ii) C6H4BrNO2 produced by reaction of 4-methylpyridine first with Br2/
H2SO4/oleum then with hot KMnO4.
2. Deduce a structure for the product C9H15N3 produced by reacting pyridine with the potassium salt of
Me2N(CH2)2NH2.
3. Deduce structures for the product formed by: (i) reacting 2-chloropyridine with (a) hydrazine → C5H7N3,
(b) water → C5H5NO; (ii) 4-nitropyridine heated with water at 60 °C → C5H5NO.
4. Deduce structures for the products formed in turn by reacting 4-chloropyridine with: (i) sodium methoxide → C6H7NO, A, this with iodomethane → C7H10INO, then this heated at 185 °C → C6H7NO, isomeric
with A.
5. Treatment of 4-bromopyridine with NaNH2 in NH3 (liq.) gives two products (isomers, C5H6N2) but
reaction with sodium methoxide gives a single product, C6H7NO. What are the products and why is
there a difference ?
6. Write structures for the products to be expected in the following sequences: (i) 4diisopropylaminocarbonyl pyridine with LDA then with benzophenone, then with hot acid → C19H13NO2;
(ii) 2-chloropyridine with LDA then iodine → C5H3ClNI; (iii) 3-fluoropyridine with LDA, then
with acetone → C8H10FNO; (iv) 2-bromopyridine with butyllithium at −78 °C, then
chlorotrimethylstannane → C8H13NSn.
7. A crystalline solid C9H11BrN2O3 is formed when 2-methyl-5-nitropyridine is reacted with bromoacetone. Subsequent treatment with NaHCO3 affords C9H8N2O2 – deduce the structures and write out a
mechanism.
8. When the salt, C9H13IN+ I− produced by reacting pyridine with 1,4-diiodobutane is then treated with
Bu3SnH in the presence of AIBN, a new salt, C9H12N+ I− is formed, which has 1H NMR signals for
four aromatic protons. Suggest structures for the two salts and a mechanism of formation of the
latter.
168
Heterocyclic Chemistry
9. Deduce a structure for the product, C6H11NO3, produced by exposing 4-methyl-2-pyridone to the following sequence: (i) irradiation at 310 nm, (ii) O3/MeOH/−78 °C then NaBH4.
10. Write structures for the compounds produced at each stage in the following sequence: 4-methylpyridine
reacted with NaNH2 → C6H8N2, this then with NaNO2/H2SO4 at 0 °C → rt → C6H7NO, then this with
sodium methoxide and iodomethane → C7H9NO and finally this with KOEt/(CO2Et)2 → C11H13NO4.
11. Nitration of aniline is not generally possible, yet nitration of 2- and 4-aminopyridines can be achieved
easily – why?
12. When 3-hydroxypyridine is reacted with 5-bromopent-1-ene, a crystalline salt C10H14NBrO is formed.
Treatment of the salt with mild base gives a dipolar substance C10H13NO, which on heating provides
a neutral, non-aromatic isomer. Deduce the structures of these compounds.
13. Give an explanation for the relatively easy decarboxylation of pyridine-2-acetic acid; what is the
organic product?
14. Suggest a structure for the product, C16H22N2O5 resulting from the interaction of 4-vinylpyridine with
diethyl acetamidomalonate (AcNHCH(CO2Et)2) and base.
15. Write structures for the products of reacting: (i) 2,3-dimethylpyridine with butyllithium then diphenyldisulfide → C13H13NS; (ii) 2,3-dimethylpyridine with NBS then with PhSH → C13H13NS isomeric with
the product in (i).
16. Write structures for the isomeric compounds C7H6N2O (formed in a ratio of 4 : 3) when 3-cyanopyridine
methiodide is reacted with alkaline potassium ferricyanide.
17. Predict the sites at which deuterium would be found when 1-butylpyridinium iodide is reduced with
NaBD4 in EtOH forming (mainly) 1-butyl-1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine.
18. Deduce structures for the final product, and intermediate, in the following sequence: pyridine with
methyl chloroformate and sodium borohydride gave C7H9NO2, then this irradiated gave an isomer
which had NMR signals for only two alkene protons – what are the compounds?
19. When pyridine N-oxide is heated with c. H2SO4 and c. HNO3, a product C5H4N2O3 is formed; separate
reactions of this with PCl3 then H2/Pd-C produces C5H4N2O2 and C5H6N2 sequentially. What are the
three products?
20. Write a structure for the cyclic product, C18H21NO4, from the reaction of ammonia, phenylacetaldehyde
(PhCH2CH=O), and two mole equivalents of methyl acetoacetate. How might it be converted into a
pyridine?
21. 2,3-Dihydrofuran reacts with acrolein to give C7H10O2; reaction of this with aq. H2NOH/HCl gives a
pyridine, C7H9NO: deduce structures.
22. What pyridines or pyridones would be produced from the following combinations of reactants:
(a) H2NCOCH2CN (cyanoacetamide) with: (i) EtCOCH2CO2Et; (ii) 2-acetylcyclohexanone;
(iii) ethyl propiolate; (b) MeC(NH2)=CHCO2Et (ethyl 3-aminocrotonate) with (i) but-3-yne-2-one;
(ii) MeCOC(CO2Et)=CHOEt.
23. When the sodium salt of formyl acetone (MeCOCH=CHO− Na+) is treated with ammonia, a pyridine
C8H9NO is formed. Deduce a structure and explain the regiochemistry of reaction.
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9
Quinolines and Isoquinolines:
Reactions and Synthesis
Quinoline is a high-boiling liquid; isoquinoline is a low-melting solid; each has a sweetish odour. Both
bases have been known for a long time: quinoline was first isolated from coal tar in 1834, isoquinoline
from the same source in 1885. Shortly after the isolation of quinoline from coal tar, it was also recognised
as a pyrolytic degradation product of cinchonamine, an alkaloid closely related to quinine, from which the
name quinoline is derived; the word quinine, in turn, derives from quina, a Spanish version of a local South
American name for the bark of quinine-containing Cinchona species.
9.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
9.1.1 Addition to Nitrogen
All the reactions noted in this category for pyridine (see 8.1.1), which involve donation of the nitrogen
lone pair to electrophiles, also occur with quinoline and isoquinoline and little further comment is necessary, for example the respective pKaH values, 4.94 and 5.4, show them to be of similar basicity to pyridine.
Each, like pyridine, readily forms an N-oxide and quaternary salts.
9.1.2 Substitution at Carbon
9.1.2.1 Proton Exchange
Benzene ring C-protonation, and thence exchange, via N-protonated quinoline, requires strong sulfuric acid
and occurs fastest at C-8, then at C-5 and C-6; comparable exchange in isoquinoline takes place somewhat
faster at C-5 than at C-8.1 At lower acid strengths each system undergoes exchange α to nitrogen, at C-2
for quinoline and C-1 for isoquinoline. These processes involve a zwitterion produced by deprotonation of
the N-protonated heterocycle.
9.1.2.2 Nitration (see also 9.3.1.2)
The positional selectivity for proton exchange is partly mirrored in nitrations, quinoline gives approximately equal amounts of 5- and 8-nitro-quinolines, whereas isoquinoline produces almost exclusively the
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
178
Heterocyclic Chemistry
5-nitro-isomer;2 mechanistically the substitutions involve nitronium ion attack on the N-protonated
heterocycles. Nitration in the pyridine ring, at a position β to the heteroatom, can be achieved via
the Baake–Katritzky protocol (8.1.2.2).3 7-Nitroisoquinoline can be obtained by nitration of 1,2,3,4,tetrahydroisoquinoline and then dehydrogenation of the hetero ring with potassium nitrosodisulfonate.4
9.1.2.3 Sulfonation
Sulfonation of quinoline gives largely the 8-sulfonic acid, whereas isoquinoline affords the 5-acid.5
Reactions at higher temperatures produce other isomers, under thermodynamic control, for example both
quinoline 8-sulfonic acid and quinoline 5-sulfonic acid are isomerised to the 6-acid.6
9.1.2.4 Halogenation
Ring substitution of quinoline and isoquinoline by halogens is rather complex, products depending on the
conditions used.7 In concentrated sulfuric acid, quinoline gives a mixture of 5- and 8-bromo derivatives;
comparably, isoquinoline is efficiently converted into the 5-bromo-derivative in the presence of aluminium
chloride,8 or with N-bromosuccinimide in concentrated sulfuric acid.9
Introduction of halogen to the hetero-rings occurs under remarkably mild conditions in which halide
addition to a salt initiates the sequence. Thus treatment of quinoline or isoquinoline hydrochlorides with
bromine produces 3-bromoquinoline and 4-bromoisoquinoline, respectively, as illustrated below for the
latter.10
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
179
9.1.2.5 Acylation and Alkylation
There are no generally useful processes for the introduction of carbon substituents by electrophilic
substitution of quinolines or isoquinolines, except for a few examples in which a ring has a strong electronreleasing substituent, for example 4-dimethylaminoquinoline undergoes smooth trifluoroacetylation
at C-3.11
9.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
It requires vigorous conditions to degrade a ring in quinoline and isoquinoline: examples of attack at
both rings are known, though degradation of the benzene ring, generating pyridine diacids, should be
considered usual;12 ozonolysis can be employed to produce pyridine dialdehydes,13 or after subsequent
hydrogen peroxide treatment, diacids.14 Electrolytic oxidation of quinoline is the optimal way to convert
quinoline into pyridine-2,3-dicarboxylic acid (‘quinolinic acid’)15; alkaline potassium permanganate
converts isoquinoline into a mixture of pyridine-3,4-dicarboxylic acid (‘cinchomeronic acid’) and
phthalic acid.16
9.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
9.3.1 Nucleophilic Substitution with ‘Hydride’ Transfer
Reactions of this type occur fastest at C-2 in quinoline and at C-1 in isoquinolines.
9.3.1.1 Alkylation and Arylation
The immediate products of addition of alkyl and aryl Grignard reagents and alkyl- and aryllithiums are
dihydro-quinolines and -isoquinolines and can be characterised as such, but can be oxidised to afford the
C-substituted, re-aromatised heterocycles; illustrated below is a 2-arylation of quinoline.17
Vicarious nucleophilic substitution (3.3.3) allows the introduction of substituents into nitroquinolines:
cyanomethyl and phenylsulfonylmethyl groups, for example, can be introduced ortho to the nitro group,
in 5-nitroquinolines at C-6 and in 6-nitroquinolines at C-5.18,19
9.3.1.2 Amination20 and Nitration
Sodium amide reacts rapidly and completely with quinoline and isoquinoline, even at −45 °C, to give
dihydro-adducts with initial amide attack at C-2 (main) and C-4 (minor) in quinoline, and C-1 in isoquinoline. The quinoline 2-adduct rearranges to the more stable 4-aminated adduct at higher temperatures.21
Oxidative trapping of the quinoline adducts provides 2- or 4-aminoquinoline;22 isoquinoline reacts with
potassium amide in liquid ammonia at room temperature to give 1-aminoisoquinoline.23
180
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Oxidative aminations are possible at other quinoline and isoquinoline positions, even on the benzene
ring, providing a nitro group is present to promote the nucleophilic addition.24
The introduction of a nitro group at C-1 in isoquinolines can be achieved using a mixture of potassium
nitrite, dimethylsulfoxide and acetic anhydride.25 The key step is the nucleophilic addition of nitrite to the
heterocycle previously quaternised by reaction at nitrogen with a complex of dimethylsulfoxide and the
anhydride.
9.3.1.3 Hydroxylation
Both quinoline and isoquinoline can be directly hydroxylated with potassium hydroxide at high temperature
with the evolution of hydrogen.26 2-Quinolone (‘carbostyril’) and 1-isoquinolone (‘isocarbostyril’) are the
isolated products.
9.3.2 Nucleophilic Substitution with Displacement of Good Leaving Groups
The main principle here is that halogen on the homocyclic rings of quinoline and isoquinoline, and at the
quinoline-3- and the isoquinoline-4 positions, behaves as would a halo-benzene. In contrast, 2- and 4-haloquinolines and 1-halo-isoquinolines have the same susceptibility as α- and γ-halopyridines (see 8.3.2).
3-Halo-isoquinolines are intermediate in their reactivity to nucleophiles.27
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
181
An apparent exception to the relative unreactivity of 3-halo-isoquinolines is provided by the reaction of
3-bromoisoquinoline with sodium amide. Here, a different mechanism, known by the acronym ANRORC
(Addition of Nucleophile, Ring Opening and Ring Closure), leads to the product, apparently of direct
displacement, but in which a switching of the ring nitrogen to become the substituent nitrogen, has
occurred.28
A useful method for the conversion of quinoline-2- and -4- and isoquinoline-1-chlorides into iodides
utilizes the hydrochloride salt of the heterocycle in reaction with sodium iodide in hot acetonitrile; presumably it is the N-protonated species that is attacked by the iodide.29
The reaction of 2,4-dichloro-quinolines with an equivalent of sodium azide results in selective displacement at the 4-position, but, if an acid is added, the 2-position is preferred; the 2-azides exist as a ring/chain
mixture, the tricyclic tetrazolo[1,5-a]quinoline predominating.30
9.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Quinolines and Isoquinolines
9.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
Direct lithiation, i.e. C-deprotonation of quinolines31 requires an adjacent substituent, such as chlorine,
fluorine or alkoxy. Historically, what is probably the first ever strong base C-lithiation of a six-membered
heterocycle was the 3-lithiation of 2-ethoxyquinoline.32 Both 4- and 2-dimethylaminocarbonyloxyquinolines
lithiate at C-3; 4-pivaloylaminoquinoline lithiates at the peri position, C-5. Quinolines with an ortho-directing
182
Heterocyclic Chemistry
group at C-3 lithiate at C-4, not at C-2.33 Quinoline 2-, 3- and 4-carboxylic acids C-lithiate (C-3, C-4 and C-3
respectively) using two mole equivalents of lithium tetramethylpiperidide.34
2-Lithiation of 1-substituted 4-quinolones35 and 3-lithiation of 2-quinolone36 provides derivatives with
the usual nucleophilic propensity, as illustrated below.
9.4.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
The preparation of lithio-quinolines and -isoquinolines via metal–halogen exchange is complicated by
competing nucleophilic addition, however the use of low temperatures does allow metal–halogen exchange
at both pyridine37 and benzene ring positions38 in quinolines, and the isoquinoline-1-36 and 4-positions,39
subsequent reaction with electrophiles generating C-substituted products. It seems that for benzene ring
lithiation, two mole equivalents of butyllithium are necessary so that one equivalent can associate with the
ring nitrogen, as suggested below.
Quinolinylzinc reagents can be produced by reaction of a halide with activated zinc,40 and 2-, 3- and
4-bromoquinolines can be converted into the corresponding lithium tri(quinolyl)magnesates at −10 °C by
treatment with n-Bu3MgLi in THF or toluene, the 3-isomer giving the best yields of final products.41
9.5
Reactions with Radicals
Regioselective substitutions can be achieved α to the nitrogen, with nucleophilic radicals, in acid solution
– the Minisci reaction (3.4.1).
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
9.6
183
Reactions with Reducing Agents
Selective reduction of either the pyridine or the benzene rings in quinoline and isoquinoline can be achieved:
the heterocyclic ring is reduced to the tetrahydro level by sodium cyanoborohydride in acid solution,42 by
sodium borohydride in the presence of nickel(II) chloride,43 by zinc borohydride44 or, traditionally, by room
temperature and room pressure catalytic hydrogenation in methanol. In strong acid solution it is the benzene
ring which is selectively saturated;45 longer reaction times can then lead to decahydro derivatives. Treatment of quinoline and isoquinoline with sodium borohydride in a mixture of acetic acid and acetic anhydride
gives good yields of N-acetyl-1,2-dihydro derivatives.46
Lithium in liquid ammonia conditions can produce 1,4-dihydroquinoline47 and 3,4-dihydroisoquinoline.48
Conversely, lithium aluminium hydride reduces generating 1,2-dihydroquinoline49 and 1,2dihydroisoquinoline.50 These dihydro-heterocycles51 can be easily oxidised back to the fully aromatic
systems, or disproportionate,52 especially in acid solution, to give a mixture of tetrahydro and re-aromatised
compounds. Stable dihydro-derivatives (see also 9.13) can be obtained by trapping following reduction,
as a urethane, by reaction with a chloroformate.53 Quaternary salts of quinoline and isoquinoline are
particularly easily reduced, either catalytically or with a borohydride in protic solution, giving
1,2,3,4-tetrahydro-derivatives.
9.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
The tendency for relatively easy nucleophilic addition to the pyridinium ring in isoquinolinium salts is
echoed in the cycloaddition (shown above) of electron-rich dienophiles such as ethoxyethene, which is
reversed on refluxing in acetonitrile.54
9.8
Photochemical Reactions
Of a comparatively small range of photochemical reactions described for quinolines and isoquinolines,
perhaps the most intriguing are some hetero-ring rearrangements of quaternary derivatives, which can
be illustrated by the ring expansions of their N-oxides to 3,1-benzoxazepines.55 As with 2-pyridones, 2quinolones undergo 2+2 photo-dimerisation involving the C-3–C-4 double bond.56
9.9
Oxy-Quinolines and Oxy-Isoquinolines
Quinolinols and isoquinolinols in which the oxygen is at any position other than C-2 or C-4 for quinolines
and C-1 or C-3 for isoquinolines are true phenols i.e. have an hydroxyl group, though they exist in equilibrium with variable concentrations of zwitterionic structures, with the nitrogen protonated and the oxygen
deprotonated. They show the typical reactivity of naphthols.57 8-Quinolinol has long been used in analysis
as a chelating agent, especially for Zn(II), Mg(II) and Al(III) cations; the Cu(II) chelate is used as a
fungicide.
184
Heterocyclic Chemistry
2-Quinolone (strictly 2(1H)-quinolinone), 4-quinolone58 and 1-isoquinolone are completely in the carbonyl tautomeric form59 for all practical purposes – the hydroxyl tautomers lack a favourable polarised
resonance contribution, as illustrated below for 1-isoquinolone.
In 3-oxy-isoquinoline there is an interesting and instructive situation: here the two tautomers are of
comparable stability. 3-Isoquinolinol is dominant in dry ether solution, 3-isoquinolone is dominant in
aqueous solution. A colourless ether solution of 3-isoquinolinol turns yellow on addition of a little methanol
because of the production of some of the carbonyl tautomer. The similar stabilities are the consequence of
the balancing of two opposing tendencies: the presence of an amide unit in 3-isoquinolone forces the
benzene ring into a less favoured quinoid structure; conversely, the complete benzene ring in isoquinolinol
necessarily means loss of the amide unit and its contribution to stability. One may contrast this with 1isoquinolone which has an amide, as well as a complete benzene unit.60
The position of electrophilic substitution of quinolones and isoquinolones depends upon the pH of the
reaction medium. Each type protonates on carbonyl oxygen, so reactions in strongly acidic media involve
attack on this cation and therefore in the benzene ring: the contrast is illustrated below by the nitration of
4-quinolone at different acid strengths.61 The balance between benzene ring and unprotonated heterocyclic
ring selectivity is small, for example 2-quinolone chlorinates preferentially, as a neutral molecule, at C-6,
and only secondly at C-3.
Strong acid-catalysed H-exchange of 2-quinolone proceeds fastest at C-6 and C-8; of 1-isoquinolone at
C-4, then at C-5∼C-7.62 This is echoed in various electrophilic substitutions, for example formylation.63
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
185
The carbonyl tautomers deprotonate at N–H, generating ambident anions that can react at either oxygen
or nitrogen, depending on the exact conditions; for example O-alkylation can be achieved with silver
carbonate.64 They are converted, as with the pyridones, into halo-quinolines and halo-isoquinolines65 by
reaction with phosphorus halides.
9.10 Amino-Quinolines and Amino-Isoquinolines
Amino-quinolines and -isoquinolines exist as amino tautomers and all protonate on ring nitrogen. Only
4-aminoquinoline shows appreciably enhanced basicity (pKaH 9.2); the most basic amino-isoquinoline is
the 6-isomer (pKaH 7.2), indeed this is the most basic of all the benzene-ring-substituted amino-quinolines
and -isoquinolines.
9.11 Alkyl-Quinolines and Alkyl-Isoquinolines
The particular acidity of the protons of pyridine α- and γ-alkyl groups is echoed by quinoline-2-66 and
4-alkyl groups and by alkyl at the isoquinoline 1-position, but to a much lesser extent by alkyl at isoquinoline C-3. Condensation reactions with alkyl groups at these activated positions can be achieved in either
basic or acidic media; the key nucleophilic species in the latter cases is probably an enamine,67 or enamide,68
and in the former, a side-chain carbanion.69
The selectivity is nicely illustrated by the oxidation of only the 2-methyl of 2,3,8-trimethylquinoline with
selenium dioxide, giving the 2-aldehyde.70
9.12
Quinoline and Isoquinoline Carboxylic Acids and Esters
There is little to differentiate these derivatives from benzenoid acids and esters, save for the easy
decarboxylation of quinoline-2- and isoquinoline-1-acids, via an ylide that can be trapped with aldehydes
as electrophiles – the Hammick reaction.71 Loss of carbon dioxide from N-methylquinolinium-2- and
-isoquinolinium-1-acids, and trapping of resulting ylides, can be achieved with stronger heating.72
186
9.13
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Quaternary Quinolinium and Isoquinolinium Salts
The predominant property of these salts is the ease with which nucleophiles add to the quinolinium-2and the isoquinolinium-1-positions. Such additions are favoured in these bicyclic compounds since the
products retain a complete aromatic benzene ring. Hydroxide, hydride73 and organometallic nucleophiles
all add with facility, though the resulting dihydroaromatic products require careful handling if they are not
to disproportionate or be oxidised.74 This approach can give 2-trifluoromethyl-quinolines: CF3 carbanion
(from trifluoro(trimethylsilyl)methane and fluoride) is added to an N-(para-methoxybenzyl)-quinolinium
salt, then the N-substituent is removed and oxidation to the aromatic level achieved with ceric ammonium
nitrate.75
The position of fastest addition to quinolinium salts is C-2, but with reversible reactions, a thermodynamic adduct with the addend at C-4 and the residual double bond in conjugation with the nitrogen, can
be obtained.76
The Zincke salt (N-(2,4-dinitrophenyl) salt) of isoquinoline77 is easily transformed into chiral isoquinolinium salts on reaction with chiral amines – an ANRORC sequence in which the nitrogen of the chiral
amine ends up as the nitrogen of the isoquinolinium product78 – nucleophilic addition of Grignard reagents
to these salts shows good stereoselectivity.79
More practically significant, are the many examples of nucleophilic addition to salts in which an Nsubstituent conjugates with the nitrogen, and thus stabilizes the product – Reissert compounds were the
first examples. These are produced by cyanide addition to an N+-acyl-quinolinium or -isoquinolinium salt;
in the classical process80 the acylating agent is benzoyl chloride. Reissert compounds81 are traditionally
prepared using a dichloromethane–water two-phase medium; improvements include utilising phase-transfer
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
187
catalysts with ultrasound82 or crown ether catalysis.83 Stereoselectivity can be achieved by the use of chiral
acylating agents.84
Reissert compounds have utility in a number of ways: deprotonation, alkylation and removal of acyl
and cyanide groups leads to the corresponding substituted heterocycles. N-Sulfonyl analogues of
Reissert adducts easily eliminate arylsulfinate, thus providing a method for the introduction of a cyano
group.85
Allylsilanes will also trap N-acyl-quinolinium86 and N-acyl-isoquinolinium87 salts, silyl alkynes will add
with silver ion catalysis,88 and terminal alkynes using copper(I) iodide.89
There are many examples of the preparation of stable 1,2-dihydro-isoquinolines via N+-quaternisation
with dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate and then nucleophile addition to the generated iminium unit or its
involvement in a subsequent cycloaddition90 – two examples are shown below.91,92
188
9.14
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Quinoline and Isoquinoline N-Oxides
N-Oxide chemistry in these bicyclic systems largely parallels the processes described for pyridine N-oxide,
with the additional possibility of benzene ring electrophilic substitution, for example mixed acid nitration
of quinoline N-oxide takes place at C-5 and C-8 via the O-protonated species, but at C-4 at lower acid
strength;93 nitration of isoquinoline N-oxide takes place at C-5.94
Diethyl cyanophosphonate converts quinoline and isoquinoline N-oxides into the 1- and 2-cyanoheterocycles in high yields in a process which must have O-phosphorylation as a first step, and in which
the elimination of diethylphosphate may proceed via a cyclic transition state;95 trimethylsilyl cyanide
and diazabicycloundecene effect the same transformation.96 A chloroformate and an alcohol convert the
N-oxides into ethers, as illustrated below for isoquinoline N-oxide,97 a chloroformate and a Grignard
reagent produce 2-substituted quinolines,98 and a chloroformate then an isonitrile produce 2-carbamoyl1,2-dihydro-isoquinolines.99
9.15
Synthesis of Quinolines and Isoquinolines
9.15.1 Ring Syntheses
The more generally important approaches to quinoline and isoquinoline compounds from non-heterocyclic
precursors are summarised in this section.
9.15.1.1 Quinolines from Aryl-Amines and 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds
Anilines react with 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds to give intermediates which can be cyclised with acid.
The Combes Synthesis
Condensation of a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound with an arylamine gives a high yield of a β-aminoenone, which can then be cyclised with concentrated acid.100 Mechanistically, the cyclisation step is an
electrophilic substitution by the O-protonated amino-enone, followed by loss of water to give the aromatic
quinoline.
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
189
In order to access 4-unsubstituted quinolines, a 1,3-ketoaldehyde, in protected form, guarantees the
required regioselectivity; the example below produces a 1,8-naphthyridine101 (pyrido[2,3-b]pyridine).102
Conrad–Limpach–Knorr Reaction
If the 1,3-dicarbonyl component is at the 1,3-keto acid oxidation level, then the product is a quinolone.103
Anilines and β-keto esters react at lower temperatures to give the kinetic product, a β-aminoacrylate,
cyclisation of which gives a 4-quinolone. At higher temperatures, β-keto acid anilides are formed and
cyclisation of these affords 2-quinolones.
β-Aminoacrylates, for cyclisation to 4-quinolones, are also available via the addition of anilines to acetylenic esters104,105 or by displacement of ethoxy from ethoxymethylenemalonate (EtOCH=C(CO2Et)2.106
190
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Usefully functionalised quinolines are easily accessible from anilines: the N-acetyl derivative is simply
reacted with the Vilsmeier reagent and a 2-chloro-3-formyl-quinoline results. One may speculate that a
3-formyl-anilide, or an equivalent (shown), is involved, placing this useful reaction into the Combes
category.107,108
Cyclisations where the benzene ring carries an electron-withdrawing group, which would disfavour the
electrophilic cyclising step, can be effected using the variant shown below – the substrate is simply heated
strongly – the mechanism of ring closure is probably best viewed as the electrocyclisation of a
1,3,5-3-azatriene.109
9.15.1.2 Quinolines from Aryl-Amines and a,b-Unsaturated Carbonyl Compounds
Arylamines react with an α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compound in the presence of an oxidising agent to give
quinolines. When glycerol is used as an in situ source of acrolein, quinolines carrying no substituents on
the heterocyclic ring are produced.
The Skraup Synthesis110
In this extraordinary reaction, quinoline is produced when aniline, concentrated sulfuric acid, glycerol
and a mild oxidising agent are heated together.111 The reaction has been shown to proceed via dehydration
of the glycerol to acrolein, to which aniline then adds in a conjugate fashion. Acid-catalysed cyclisation
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
191
produces a 1,2-dihydro-quinoline, finally dehydrogenated by the oxidising agent – the corresponding nitrobenzene or arsenic acid have been used classically. The Skraup synthesis is best for the ring synthesis of
quinolines unsubstituted on the hetero-ring.112
In principle, meta-substituted arylamines could give rise to both 5- and 7-substituted quinolines. In
practice, electron-donating substituents direct ring closure para, thus producing 7-substituted-quinolines;
meta-halo-aryl-amines produce mainly the 7-halo-isomer. Arylamines with a strong electron-withdrawing
meta-substituent give rise mainly to the 5-substituted quinoline.
Skraup syntheses sometimes become very vigorous and care must be taken to control their potential
violence; pre-forming the Michael adduct and using an alternative oxidant (p-chloranil is the best) has been
shown to be advantageous in terms of yield and as a better means for controlling the reaction.113
A more controlled, stepwise variant utilises an N-tosyl-aniline, carrying out the conjugate addition first,
the ring closure second, and the aromatisation via the elimination of toluenesulfinate, each of the intermediates being isolated.114
Doebner–Miller Synthesis
The use of an enone confirms the mechanism, showing that interaction of the aniline amino group with the
carbonyl group is not the first step, and this variation is known as the Doebner–Miller synthesis.
Improvements to the regime for Doebner–Miller ring closures include the use of a two-phase organic/
aqueous acid system115 to minimize alkene polymerization and the use of indium(III) chloride on silica with
microwave irradiation.116 It is significant that the accepted and proved regiochemistry for these cyclisations
is reversed when the reaction is carried out in trifluoroacetic acid, imine formation being the first step, at
least for unsaturated 2-keto esters.117
192
Heterocyclic Chemistry
1-(Arylamino)prop-2-ynes are at the same oxidation level as the intermediates in the Skraup and
Doebner–Miller strategies. The cyclising step for such substrates requires electrophilic activation of the
alkyne, the electrophile ending at the quinoline 3-position.118
9.15.1.3 Quinolines from ortho-Acyl-Arylamines and Carbonyl Compounds
ortho-Acyl-arylamines react with ketones having an α-methylene to give quinolines.
The Friedländer Synthesis119
This route has been used extensively for the synthesis of substituted quinolines. In the original sequence,
an ortho-acyl-arylamine120 is condensed with a ketone or aldehyde (which must contain an α-methylene
group) by base or acid catalysis to yield the quinoline. The orientation of condensation depends on the
regioselectivity of enolate or enol formation.121 Control of regiochemistry can be obtained by using a
removable phosphonate, to direct enolisation, as in RCOCH2P(O)(OMe)2.122 2-Substituted quinolines can
be obtained regioselectively from methyl ketones using pyrrolidine as catalyst.123
Several improved conditions are available: the use of toluenesulfonic acid,124 molecular iodine,125 chlorotrimethylsilane,126 dodecylphophonic acid127 and sodium tetrachloroaurate(III) (NaAuCl4) all produce
excellent yields of structurally varied quinolines. ortho-Aminobenzyl-alcohol can serve as starting material,
being oxidized to the amino-aldehyde in situ, which then takes part in the condensation, using catalytic
copper(II) chloride and potassium hydroxide under oxygen.128 One can also utilize ortho-nitrobenzaldehyde,
carrying out reduction to amine and condensation in one pot utilising a mixture of tin(II) chloride and zinc
chloride.129
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
193
Naphthyridines can also be obtained utilising the Friedländer strategy. 122,123,130
The Pfitzinger Synthesis
Hydrolysis of isatins, which are easy to synthesise (20.16.4), gives ortho-aminoaryl-glyoxylates, which
react with ketones affording quinoline-4-carboxylic acids.131 The carboxylic acid group can be removed, if
required, by pyrolysis with calcium oxide.
9.15.1.4 Quinolines by Forming the N–C-2 Bond
Conjugate addition of a nucleophile to an alkynyl ketone unit ortho to amino allows interaction of the
amine and carbonyl groups and thus the formation of a quinoline.132
The ring closure of ortho-nitroaryl-dimethylaminomethylene ketones is related and produces 4quinolones via selective reduction of the nitro group and then cyclisation.133
Also in this category is the generation of the cyclisation intermediate by reacting an ortho-lithiated
N-acyl-aniline with a vinamidinium salt.134 A dimethylaminomethylene-ketone was used for the related
reaction of 3-lithiated 2- or 4-acylamino-pyridines, probably via the intermediate shown.135
194
Heterocyclic Chemistry
9.15.1.5 Other Methods for Quinolines
Ring closure of ortho-aminoaryl-alkynyl-carbinols, readily available by acetylide addition to an arylketone or -aldehyde, can be achieved with copper or palladium catalysis.136 Comparable ortho-nitroarylcarbinols undergo nitro group reduction and ring closure simply by treatment with a metal/acid
combination.137
Palladium-catalysed amidation of halo-arenes allows simple assembly of precursors (above) to 4-quinolones, in which the 2,3-bond is formed by base-catalysed condensation.138
9.15.1.6 Isoquinolines from Aryl-aldehydes and Aminoacetal
Aromatic aldehydes react with aminoacetal (2,2-diethoxyethanamine) to generate imines that can be
cyclised with acid to isoquinolines carrying no substituents on the heterocyclic ring.
The Pomeranz–Fritsch Synthesis
This synthesis139 is normally carried out in two stages. Firstly, an aryl aldehyde is condensed with
aminoacetal to form an aryl-aldimine. This stage proceeds in high yield under mild conditions. Secondly,
the aldimine is cyclised by treatment with strong acid; hydrolysis of the imine competes and reduces
the efficiency of this step and for this reason trifluoroacetic acid with boron trifluoride is a useful
reagent.140
The second step is similar to those in the Combes and Skraup syntheses, in that the acid initially protonates, causing elimination of ethanol and the production of a species that can attack the aromatic ring as an
electrophile. Final elimination of a second mole of alcohol completes the process.
The electrophilic nature of the cyclisation step explains why the process works best for araldehyde-imines
carrying electron-donating substituents (especially when these are oriented para to the point of closure
leading to 7-substituted isoquinolines) and least well for systems deactivated by electron-withdrawing
groups.
The problem of imine hydrolysis can be avoided by cyclising at a lower oxidation level, with tosyl on
nitrogen for subsequent elimination as toluenesulfinic acid. The ring closure substrates can be obtained
by reduction and tosylation of imine condensation products,141 by benzylating the sodium salt of an
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
195
N-tosylaminoethanal-acetal,142 or via a Mitsunobu reaction between a benzylic alcohol and an N-sulfonylaminoacetal.143 Cyclisation of benzylaminoethanal-acetals using chlorosulfonic acid gives the aromatic
isoquinoline directly.144
9.15.1.7 Isoquinolines from 2-Aryl-Ethanamides or 2-Aryl-Ethamine-Imines
The amide or imine from reaction of 2-aryl-ethanamines with an acid derivative or with an aldehyde, can
be ring-closed to a 3,4-dihydro- or 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline respectively. Subsequent dehydrogenation can produce the aromatic heterocycle.
The Bischler–Napieralski Synthesis145
In the classical process, a 2-aryl-ethanamine reacts with a carboxylic acid chloride or anhydride to form
an amide, which can be cyclised, with loss of water, to a 3,4-dihydro-isoquinoline, then readily dehydrogenated to the isoquinoline using, for example, palladium, sulfur or diphenyl disulfide. Common cyclisation
agents are phosphorus pentoxide, often with phosphoryl chloride,146 and phosphorus pentachloride. The
electrophilic intermediate is very probably an imino chloride,147 or imino phosphate; the former have been
isolated and treated with Lewis acids when they are converted into isonitrilium salts, which cyclise
efficiently to 3,4-dihydroisoquinolines.148
196
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Here, once again, the cyclising step involves electrophilic attack on the aromatic ring so the
method works best for activated rings, and meta-substituted-aryl ethanamides give exclusively 6-substituted
isoquinolines.
Carbamates can be cyclised to 1-isoquinolones using trifluoromethanesulfonic anhydride and 4-dimethylaminopyridine,149 or phosphorus pentoxide and phosphoryl chloride.150 One of the mildest combinations
for ring closure is the use of trifluomethanesulfonic anhydride with 2-chloropyridine.151
The Pictet–Gams Modification
Conducting the Bischler–Napieralski sequence with a potentially unsaturated aryl-ethanamine, a fully
aromatic isoquinoline can be obtained directly. The amide of a 2-methoxy- or 2-hydroxy-2-aryl-ethanamine
is heated with the usual type of cyclisation catalyst. It is not clear whether dehydration to an unsaturated
amide or to an oxazolidine152 is an initial stage in the overall sequence.
9.15.1.8 Isoquinolines from Activated 2-Aryl-Ethanamines and Aldehydes (The Pictet–Spengler
synthesis153)
2-Aryl-ethanamines react with aldehydes easily and in good yields to give imines. 1,2,3,4-Tetrahydroisoquinolines result from their cyclisation with acid catalysis. Note that the lower oxidation level imine,
versus amide, leads to a tetrahydro- not a dihydroisoquinoline. Routine dehydrogenation easily converts
the tetrahydro-isoquinolines into fully aromatic species.
After protonation of the imine, a Mannich-type electrophile is generated; since these are intrinsically
less electrophilic than the intermediates in Bischler–Napieralski closures, a strong activating substituent
must normally be present on the benzene ring, and appropriately sited, for efficient ring closure. However
the use of triflic acid, even with unactivated imines, brings about ring closure, probably via a dication,154
and 2-aryl-ethanamine-carbamates can be converted in tetrahydro-isoquinolines by reaction with aldehydes
using perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOSA) with hexafluoropropan-2-ol (HFIP), and in water.155
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
197
Highly activated, hydroxylated aromatic rings permit Pictet–Spengler ring closure under very mild,
‘physiological’ conditions.156
9.15.1.9 Isoquinolines from ortho-Alkynyl-Araldehyde-Imines
ortho-Iodo-araldehyde imines react directly with internal alkynes, using palladium(0) catalysis, generating
isoquinolines in which the original nitrogen substituent has been lost as isobutene; the scheme shows one
of many examples of this important process.157
Electrophile-prompted closures of this same type of substrate are also successful, the electrophile ending
at the isoquinoline 4-position; these processes are also successful with pyridine starting materials, in the
example shown a 1,6-naphthyridine (pyrido[3,2-c]pyridine) is produced.158
If, instead of an imine, an oxime is used, the result is an isoquinoline N-oxide. Such closures can be
effected with silver catalysis, 159 or with iodine, 4-iodoisoquinoline N-oxides being the products in the latter
cases.160
Even simpler, for the naphthyridines, all the isomeric ortho-alkynyl-pyridinyl aldehydes react
with ammonia in refluxing ethanol to produce naphthyridines (or with hydroxylamine to give
naphthyridine-N-oxides).161
9.15.1.10 Other Methods for Isoquinolines
ortho-Dialdehydes can be converted into isoquinoline-3-esters by condensation with a derivative of glycine,
the process involving a Wittig–Horner reaction and imine formation.
198
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Usefully difunctionalised, 1,3-dichloro-isoquinolines are readily synthesized via Beckmann rearrangement of indanedione monoximes.162
9.15.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses of Quinoline and Isoquinoline Compounds
9.15.2.1 Chloroquine
Chloroquine163 is a synthetic antimalarial.
9.15.2.2 Papaverine
Papaverine164 is an alkaloid from opium; it is a smooth-muscle relaxant and thus useful as a coronary
vasodilator – the synthesis illustrates the Pictet–Gams variation of the Bischler–Napieralski sequence.
9.15.2.3 Methoxatin
Methoxatin165 is an enzyme cofactor of bacteria which metabolises methanol and latterly was recognized,166
55 years after the 13th, to be a 14th vitamin, also now referred to as pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ). This
total synthesis is a particularly instructive one since it includes an isatin synthesis (20.16.4), a quinoline
synthesis and an indole synthesis.
Quinolines and Isoquinolines: Reactions and Synthesis
199
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 7 and 9):
(a) At which positions do quinoline and isoquinoline undergo nitration? Why these positions?
(b) At which positions do quinoline and isoquinoline react most readily with nucleophiles? Why these
positions?
(c) At which positions do quinoline and isoquinoline react most readily with radical reagents?
(d) How might one selectively reduce the heterocyclic ring of quinoline or isoquinoline?
(e) How could one convert 4-methylquinoline into 4-ethylquinoline?
(f) How could one convert: (i) isoquinoline into 2-methyl-1-isoquinolone; (ii) quinoline into
2-cyanoquinoline?
(g) What reactants would combine to produce 6-methoxy-2,4-diethylquinoline?
(h) What ring synthesis method would be suitable for converting 4-methoxyaniline into
6-methoxyquinoline?
(i) How could one prepare 2-ethyl-3-methylquinoline-4-carboxylic acid from aniline?
(j) What ring synthesis method would be suitable for the preparation of 6-methoxyisoquinoline?
(k) How could 2-(4-methoxyphenyl)ethanamine be converted into 7-methoxy-1-phenylisoquinoline?
More advanced exercises:
1. Predict the structures of the high yield mono-nitration products: (i) C16H12N2O2 from 1-benzylisoquinoline; (ii) C10H8N2O3 from 6-methoxyquinoline; (iii) C10H8N2O3 from 7-methoxyisoquinoline.
2. Write a sequence to rationalise the conversion of quinoline into 3-bromoquinoline by reaction with Br2
in CCl4/pyridine.
3. Suggest a structure for product C16H16ClNO4 from 1,3-dichloroisoquinoline and NaCH(CO2Et)2
200
Heterocyclic Chemistry
4. Deduce a structure for the product, C15H18N2OS formed on treatment of 2-t-BuCONH-quinoline
successively with 3 × n-BuLi then dimethyl disulfide.
5. Write a sequence of mechanistic steps to explain the conversion of 2-methylisoquinolinium iodide into
2-methyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline with sodium borohydride in ethanol.
6. Draw the most stable tautomer of 3-oxyquinoline, and of 1-, 4- and 8-oxyisoquinolines.
7. Suggest a mechanistic sequence to rationalise the formation of methyl 2-methylquinoline-3-carboxylate
from the reaction of aniline with methyl acetoacetate (→ C11H13NO2) and then this with DMF/POCl3.
8. Deduce the structure of the product quinolones: (i) C12H11NO4 resulting from reaction of 2methoxyaniline with dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate then heating at 250 °C; (ii) C10H6ClNO3 from
3-chloroaniline and diethyl ethoxymethylenemalonate (EtOCH=C(CO2Et)2) then heating at 250 °C,
then heating with aq. NaOH.
9. Deduce structures for the quinolines produced from the following combinations: (i) C16H11NO2
from isatin/NaOH then acetophenone; (ii) C10H7NO3 from isatin/KOH then 3-chloropyruvic acid;
(iii) C10H7NO3 from N-acetylisatin and NaOH.
10. Deduce structures for the heterocyclic products from the following combinations: (i) C11H7N3O2
from 2-aminobenzaldehyde and barbituric acid; (ii) C14H11NO6 from 4,5-methylenedioxy-2aminobenzaldehyde and dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate; (iii) C14H11NS from 2-aminoacetophenone
and 2-acetylthiophen; (iv) C21H19NO from 2-aminobenzophenone and dimedone; (v) C15H12N2O2S from
2-aminopyridine-3-aldehyde and 1-phenylsulfonylacetone; (vi) C15H11N3 from 4-amino-pyrimidine-5aldehyde and α-tetralone.
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Commun., 1995, 2551.
Wang, X., Tan, J. and Grozinger, K., Tetrahedron Lett., 1998, 39, 6609.
Movassaghi, M. and Hill, M. D., Org. Lett., 2008, 10, 3485.
Fitton, A. O., Frost, J. R., Zakaria, M. M. and Andrew, G., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun, 1973, 889.
‘The Pictet–Spengler synthesis of tetrahydroisoquinolines and related compounds’, Whaley, W. M. and Govindachari, T. R., Org. React., 1951, 6,
151.
Yokoyama, A., Ohwada, T. and Shudo, K., J. Org. Chem., 1999, 64, 611.
Saito, A., Takayama, M., Yamazaki, A., Numaguchi, J. and Hanzawa, Y., Tetrahedron, 2007, 63, 4039.
Schöpf, C. and Salzer, W., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1940, 544, 1.
Roesch, K. R., Zhang, H. and Larock, R. C., J. Org. Chem., 2001, 66, 8042.
Huang, Q., Hunter, J. A. and Larock, R. C., J. Org. Chem., 2002, 67, 3437.
Yeom, H.-S., Kim, S. and Shin, S., Synlett, 2008, 924.
Huo, Z., Tomeba, H. and Yamamoto, Y., Tetrahedron Lett., 2008, 49, 5531.
Numata, A., Kondo, Y. and Sakamoto, T., Synthesis, 1999, 306.
Bartmann, W., Konz, E. and Rüger, W., J. Heterocycl. Chem. 1987, 24, 677.
Surrey, A. R. and Hammer, H. F., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1946, 68, 113.
Pictet A. and Gams, A., Chem. Ber., 1909, 42, 2943.
Gainor, J. A. and Weinreb, S. M., J. Org. Chem., 1982, 47, 2833.
Kasahara, T. and Kato, T., Nature, 2003, 422, 832.
10
Typical Reactivity of Pyrylium and
Benzopyrylium Ions, Pyrones and
Benzopyrones
The pyrylium cation presents an intriguing dichotomy – it is both ‘aromatic’, and therefore, one would be
tempted to understand, ‘stable’, yet it is very reactive – the tropylium cation and the cyclopentadienyl anion
can also be described in this way. However, all is relative, and that pyrylium cations react rapidly with
nucleophiles to produce adducts that are not aromatic, is merely an expression of their relative stability – if
they were not aromatic it is doubtful whether such cations could exist at all. Pyrylium perchlorate is actually surprisingly stable – it does not decompose below 275 °C, but, nonetheless, it will react with water,
even at room temperature, producing a non-aromatic product. (NOTE: All perchlorates should be treated
with caution – heating can cause explosive decomposition.)
Typical reactions of pyrylium cations
The properties of pyrylium cations are best compared with those of pyridinium cations: the system does
not undergo electrophilic substitution nor, indeed, are benzopyrylium cations substituted in the benzene
ring. This is a contrast with the chemistry of quinolinium and isoquinolinium cations and is a comment on
the stronger deactivating effect of the positively charged oxygen.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
Pyrylium ions readily add nucleophilic reagents, at an α-position, generating 1,2-dihydro-pyrans, which
then often ring open. Virtually all the known reactions of pyrylium salts fall into this general category.
Pyrylium cations are more reactive in such nucleophilic additions than pyridinium cations – oxygen tolerates a positive charge less well than nitrogen. The analogy with carbonyl chemistry is obvious – the
nucleophilic additions that characterise pyrylium systems are nothing more or less than those that are
encountered frequently in acid-catalysed (O-protonated) chemistry of carbonyl groups.
The initial product of ring opening can take part in an alternative ring closure, generating a benzenoid
aromatic system (if Nu contains active hydrogen attached to carbon) or a pyridine (if Nu is an amine
nitrogen).
Comparison of nucleophilic addition to pyrylium systems with that to O-protonated aldehydes/ketones
In benzopyrylium systems, one finds exactly comparable behaviour – a readiness to add nucleophiles,
adjacent to the positively charged oxygen, in the heterocyclic ring. The interaction of the two isomeric
bicycles with ammonia is instructive: benzo[c]pyrylium can be converted into isoquinoline, but benzo[b]
pyrylium cannot be converted into quinoline for, although in the last case the addition can and does take
place, in the subsequent ring-opened species, no low-energy mechanism is available to allow the nitrogen
to become attached to the benzene ring.
Pyrones, which are the ring-oxygen equivalents of pyridones, are simply α- and γ-hydroxy-pyrylium
salts from which an O-proton has been removed. There is little to recommend that 2- and 4-pyrones be
viewed as aromatic: they are perhaps best seen as cyclic unsaturated lactones and cyclic β-oxy-α,βunsaturated-ketones, respectively, for example 2-pyrones are hydrolysed by alkali, just like simpler esters
(lactones). It is instructive that, whereas the pyrones are converted into pyridones by reaction with amines
or ammonia, the reverse is not the case – pyridones are not transformed into pyrones by water or hydroxide.
Some electrophilic C-substitutions are known for pyrones and benzopyrones, the oxygen guiding the electrophile ortho or para, however there is a tendency for electrophilic addition to the C–C double bond of
the heterocyclic ring, again reflecting their non-aromatic nature. Easy Diels–Alder additions to 2-pyrones
are further evidence for diene, rather than aromatic, character.
Typical Reactivity of Pyrylium and Benzopyrylium Ions, Pyrones and Benzopyrones
207
Some typical reactions of pyrones
The cyclisation of an unsaturated 1,5-dicarbonyl compound produces pyrylium salts, providing of course
that a suitable acidic medium is chosen – it must not contain nucleophilic species that would add to the
salt, once formed. Acid-catalysed ring closure of 1,3,5-triketones produces 4-pyrones, as shown; 2-pyrones
are formed via the construction of an α,β-unsaturated ester that has a 5-carbonyl group.
Typical pyrylium and 4-pyrone ring syntheses
Benzopyrylium salts are formed when phenols react with 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds under acidic, dehydrating conditions. The comparable use of 1,3-keto-esters with phenols leads to benzopyrones.
Typical benzo[b]pyrylium ring synthesis
11
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones:
Reactions and Synthesis
Pyrylium salts, especially perchlorates, tetrafluoroborates and hexachloroantimonates(V), are stable,
but reactive compounds. Perchlorates have been used extensively, since pyrylium perchlorates tend to be
sparingly soluble, and thus relatively easily isolated, however all perchlorates should be treated with
CAUTION: perchlorates, particularly dry perchlorates can decompose explosively. Wherever possible,
other salts should be substituted, for example comparative preparations for 2,4,6-trimethylpyrylium
salts have been described: perchlorate,1 tetrafluoroborate2 and trifluoromethanesulfonate,3 the last having
the advantage of better solubility in organic solvents. No pyrylium salts have been identified in
living organisms, though the benzo[b]pyrylium system plays an important role in the flower pigments (see
32.5.6).
Almost all the known reactions of the pyrylium nucleus involve addition of a nucleophile, usually at an
α-position, occasionally at C-4, as the first step. A feature of pyrylium chemistry is the ring opening of
adducts produced by such additions, followed by cyclisation in a different manner, to give a new heterocyclic or homocyclic product (ANRORC processes).
Straightforward electrophilic or radical substitutions at ring positions are unknown. Controlled oxidations, like those of pyridinium salts to 2-pyridones, are likewise not known in pyrylium chemistry.
11.1
Reactions of Pyrylium Cations4,5
11.1.1 Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
11.1.1.1 Proton Exchange
2,4,6-Triphenylpyrylium undergoes exchange at the 3- and 5-positions in hot deuterioacetic acid, but the
process probably involves, not protonation of the pyrylium cation, but formation of an equilibrium concentration of an adduct, with acetate added to C-2, allowing enol ether protonation and thus exchange.6
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John Joule and Keith Mills
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
11.1.1.2 Nitration
Nitration of 2,4,6-triphenylpyrylium proceeds on the benzene rings;7 no nitrations of pyrylium rings are
known.
11.1.2 Addition Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Pyrylium salts usually add nucleophiles at a carbon adjacent to the oxygen, and such reactions are analogous
with those of O-protonated carbonyl compounds.
11.1.2.1 Water and Hydroxide Ion
The degree of susceptibility of pyrylium salts to nucleophilic attack varies widely: pyrylium cation itself
is even attacked by water at 0 °C, whereas 2,4,6-trimethylpyrylium is stable in water at 100 °C. Hydroxide
anion, however, adds very readily to C-2 in all cases.
The reaction of 2-methyl-4,6-diphenylpyrylium is typical:8 the immediate 2-hydroxy-2H-pyran, which
is a cyclic enol hemiacetal, is in equilibrium with a dominant concentration of the acyclic tautomer, reached
probably via a proton-catalysed process, since methoxide adducts remain cyclic.9 Treatment of such acyclic
unsaturated diketones with acid regenerates the original pyrylium salt (11.3.1).
With pyryliums carrying α-alkyl groups, more vigorous alkaline treatment leads to an alternative closure,
producing arenes, for example reaction of 2,4,6-trimethylpyrylium with warm alkali causes a subsequent
cyclising aldol condensation of the acyclic intermediate to give 3,5-dimethylphenol.10
11.1.2.2 Ammonia and Primary and Secondary Amines
Ammonia and primary amines react with pyrylium salts to give pyridines and N-alkyl- or N-aryl-pyridinium
salts, respectively.11 The transformation represents a good method for preparing the nitrogen heterocycles,
providing the pyrylium salt can be accessed in the first place. The initial adduct exists as one of a number
of ring-opened tautomeric possibilities,12 depending upon conditions; it is probably an amino-dienone that
recloses to give the nitrogen heterocycle.
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 211
The reaction of a secondary amine cannot, of course, lead to a pyridine, however in pyryliums carrying
an α-methyl, ring closure to an arene can occur, this time via an enamine.6a
Other reactants containing a primary amino group will also convert pyryliums into N-substituted nitrogen
heterocycles: N-amino azoles13 are amongst several types of hydrazine derivatives to have been utilised:
these give N-(heteroaryl)-pyridinium salts. Reaction of pyryliums with hydroxylamine comparably leads
(predominantly) to the formation of pyridine N-oxides.1,14
11.1.2.3 Organometallic Addition
Organometallic addition takes place at an α-position, or occasionally at C-4 when the α-positions are
substituted and C-4 is unsubstituted15 or when organocuprates are used.16 The initial 2H-pyrans undergo
electrocyclic ring opening (and more rapidly than the comparable cyclohexadiene/hexatriene transformation17) affording dienones or dienals with retention of geometrical integrity.
11.1.2.4 Other Carbanionic Additions
By processes comparable to organometallic addition, cyanide addition to 2,4,6-trimethylpyrylium leads
to a ring-opened dienone.18 Reactions with stabilised anions, such as those from nitromethane or 1,3dicarbonyl compounds, proceed though a series of equilibria to recyclised, aromatic compounds.4a
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
Following addition of triphenylphosphonium methylide, Wittig condensation, electrocyclic ring opening
and double bond equilibration, all trans-7-substituted 2,4,6-heptatrienals can be accessed.19
11.1.3 Substitution Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
There are a small number of pyrylium reactions that can be categorised as nucleophilic substitutions.
4-Pyrones react with acetic anhydride at carbonyl oxygen to produce 4-acetoxy-pyryliums, in situ, allowing
nucleophilic substitution at C-4: the reaction of 2,6-dimethylpyrone with methyl cyanoacetate is typical.20
Phosphorus pentachloride likewise converts 4-pyrones into 4-chloropyryliums.21
11.1.4 Reactions with Radicals
4-Alkylation of 2,6-disubstituted pyryliums has been achieved using tetraalkyltin compounds in the presence of UV light; the initial adducts are re-oxidised in situ to produce 4-substituted pyrylium salts.22
11.1.5 Reactions with Reducing Agents
The addition of hydride to pyryliums takes place mainly at an α-position, generating 2H-pyrans, which
rapidly open to form the isolated products, dienones, best extracted immediately into an organic solvent to
minimise further reaction; the minor products are the isomeric 4H-pyrans.23 One-electron polarographic
reduction generates radicals, which dimerise (cf. 8.5.3).24
11.1.6 Photochemical Reactions
At first sight, the photochemistry of 4-hydroxy-pyryliums, i.e. of 4-pyrones in acid solution, seems
extraordinary, in that they are converted into 2-pyrones, however a rationalisation involving, first, a
bicyclic hydroxyallyl cation, second, a bicyclic epoxy-cyclopentenone, and then a second photoexcitation, makes the transformation clear; the sequence is shown below.25 Irradiation at higher pH leads to
a trapping of the first-formed photointermediate by solvent and thus the isolation of dihydroxycyclopentenones.26
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 213
11.1.7 Reactions with Dipolarophiles; Cycloadditions
Pyrylium-3-olates,27 formally 3-hydroxy-pyryliums rendered overall neutral by loss of the phenolic
proton, though this is not usually the method for their formation, undergo cycloadditions across the 2,6positions and in so doing parallel the reactivity of pyridinium-3-olates (8.7). Even unactivated alkenes
will cycloadd when tethered and thus the process is intramolecular.25 Usually, the pyrylium-3-olate is
generated by elimination of acetic acid from a 6-acetoxy-2H-pyran-3(6H)-one (a ‘pyranulose acetate’28)
(see 18.2).
Borohydride reduction of the ketone carbonyl in such adducts, then ozonolysis, generates 2,5-cis disubstituted tetrahydrofurans.29
Another ingenious route for the generation of the dipolar species involves the carbonyl-O-alkylation30
or O-silylation31 of 3-oxygenated 4-pyrones. The example below shows O-methylation of a kojic
acid derivative, then deprotonation of the 3-hydroxyl using a hindered base to trigger the dipolar
cycloaddition.
11.1.8 Alkyl-Pyryliums32
Hydrogens on alkyl groups at the α- and γ-positions of pyrylium salts are, as might be expected, quite
acidic: reaction at a γ-methyl is somewhat faster than at an α-methyl.33 Condensations with aromatic aldehydes (illustrated below),34 triethyl orthoformate35 and dimethylformamide36 are all possible.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
11.2 2-Pyrones and 4-Pyrones (2H-Pyran-2-ones and 4H-Pyran-4-ones; α- and
γ-Pyrones)
11.2.1 Structure of Pyrones
2- and 4-Hydroxy-pyrylium salts are quite strongly acidic and are therefore much better known as their
conjugate bases, the 2- and 4-pyrones. The simple 4-pyrones are quite stable crystalline substances, whereas
the 2-pyrones are much less stable: 2-pyrone itself, which has the smell of fresh-mown hay, polymerises
slowly on standing. There are relatively few simple pyrone natural products, in great contrast with the
widespread occurrence and importance of their benzo derivatives, the coumarins and chromones (32.5.6),
in nature.
11.2.2 Reactions of Pyrones
11.2.2.1 Electrophilic Addition and Substitution
4-Pyrone is a weak base, pKaH −0.3 that is protonated on the carbonyl oxygen to afford 4-hydroxy-pyrylium
salts, often crystalline. The reaction of 2,6-dimethyl-4-pyrone with t-butyl bromide in hot chloroform provides a neat way to form the corresponding 4-hydroxy-2,6-dimethylpyrylium bromide.37 2-Pyrones are
much weaker bases and, though they are likewise protonated on carbonyl oxygen in solution in strong
acids, salts cannot be isolated. This difference is mirrored in reactions with alkylating agents: the former
give 4-methoxy-pyrylium salts with dimethyl sulfate,38 whereas 2-pyrones require Meerwein salts,
Me3 O + BF4− , for carbonyl-O-methylation. Acid-catalysed exchange in 4-pyrone, presumably via Cprotonation of a concentration of neutral molecule, takes place at the 3/5-positions.39
With bromine, 2-pyrone forms an unstable adduct that gives the substitution product 3-bromo-2-pyrone
on warming,40 however this can also be obtained satisfactorily by bromodecarboxylation of 2-pyrone-3carboxylic acid; coumalic acid (2-pyrone-5-carboxylic acid) gives 5-bromo-2-pyrone41 or 3,5-dibromo-2pyrone42 (See also 11.2.2.3 and 11.4.2 for syntheses of halo-2-pyrones).
With nitronium tetrafluoroborate, the electrophile is assumed to attack first at carbonyl oxygen, leading
subsequently to 5-nitro-2-pyrone.43 Simple examples of electrophilic substitution of 4-pyrones are
rare, however bis-dimethylaminomethylation of the parent heterocycle takes place under quite mild
conditions.44
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 215
11.2.2.2 Attack by Nucleophilic Reagents
2-Pyrones are in many ways best viewed as unsaturated lactones, and as such they are easily hydrolysed
by aqueous alkali; 4-pyrones, too, easily undergo ring-opening with base, though for these vinylogous
lactones, initial attack is at C-2.45
2-Pyrones can in principle add nucleophilic reactants at either C-2 (carbonyl carbon), C-4 or C-6: their
reactions with cyanide anion,46 and ammonia/amines are examples of the latter, whereas the addition of
Grignard nucleophiles occurs at carbonyl carbon.
4-Pyrones also add Grignard nucleophiles at the carbonyl carbon, C-4; dehydration of the immediate
tertiary alcohol product with mineral acid provides an important route to 4-mono-substituted pyrylium
salts.47 More vigorous conditions lead to the reaction of both 2- and 4-pyrones with two mole equivalents
of organometallic reagent and the formation of 2,2-disubstituted-2H- and 4,4-disubstituted-4H-pyrans,
respectively.48 Perhaps surprisingly, hydride (lithium aluminium hydride) addition to 4,6-dimethyl-2pyrone takes place, in contrast, at C-6.49
Ammonia and primary aliphatic and aromatic amines convert 4-pyrones into 4-pyridones:50 this must
involve attack at an α-position, then ring opening and reclosure; in some cases ring-opened products of
reaction with two mole equivalents of the amine have been isolated, though such structures are not necessarily intermediates on the route to pyridones.51 The transformation can also be achieved by, first, hydrolytic
ring opening using barium hydroxide (see above), and then reaction of the barium salt with ammonium
chloride.52
The reactions of 4-pyrones with hydrazines and hydroxylamine, can lead to recyclisations involving the
second heteroatom of the attacking nucleophile, producing pyrazoles and isoxazoles, respectively, however
in the simplest examples 4-pyrones react with hydroxylamine, giving either 1-hydroxy-4-pyridones or
4-hydroxy-amino-pyridine N-oxides;53 again, prior hydrolytic ring opening using barium hydroxide has
been employed.43
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
Nucleophilic displacement of leaving groups can also be carried out in suitable cases, for example, of
the 4-methylthio in 3-cyano-2-pyrones.54
11.2.2.3 Organometallic Derivatives
3-Bromo-2-pyrone does not undergo exchange (or C-H-deprotonation) with n-butyllithium, however it has
been transformed into a cuprate, albeit of singularly less nucleophilic character than typical cuprates.55
6-Substituted 5-iodo-2-pyrones, obtained by iodolactonisation, react with activated zinc, giving species that
can be protonolysed or used to make 5,6-disubstituted 2-pyrones via Pd(0)-catalysed coupling.56
11.2.2.4 Cycloaddition Reactions57
2-Pyrone reacts readily as a diene in Diels–Alder additions, but the initial adduct often loses carbon dioxide,
generating a second diene that then adds a second mole of the dienophile: reaction with maleic anhydride,
shown below, is typical – a monoadduct can be isolated, which under more vigorous conditions loses carbon
dioxide and undergoes a second addition.58 When the dienophile is an alkyne, methyl propiolate for
example, benzenoid products result from the expulsion of carbon dioxide.59 Primary adducts, which have
not lost carbon dioxide, can be obtained from reactions conducted at lower temperatures under very high
pressure or in the presence of lanthanide catalysts.60 A useful example is the reaction of 2-pyrone and
substituted derivatives with alkynyl boronates leading to aryl boronates; 2-pyrone itself reacts in 86% yield
with trimethylsilylethynyl boronate.61
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 217
3-62 and 5-Bromo63 -2-pyrones present remarkable properties in their abilities to act as efficient dienes
towards both electron-rich and electron-poor dienophiles (illustrated below); 3-( para-tolylthio)-2-pyrone
also undergoes ready cycloadditions with electron-deficient alkenes.64
Under appropriate conditions, even unactivated alkenes will take part in intermolecular cycloadditions
with 3- and 5-bromo-2-pyrones and with 3-methoxycarbonyl-2-pyrone.65 Reactions can be conducted at
100 °C, or at room temperature under 10–12 kbar and with zinc chloride catalysis.
3,5-Dibromo-2-pyrone is a more reactive diene in both normal and inverse electron demand Diels–Alder
cycloadditions: an example is shown below.66
5-Alkenyl-2-pyrones, react as dienes, but in the alternative way indicated below.67
11.2.2.5 Photochemical Reactions
In addition to the photocatalysed rearrangement of 4-pyrones in acid solution (11.1.6) the other clear-cut
photochemical reactions undergone are the transformation of 2-pyrone into a bicyclic β-lactone on irradiation in a non-hydroxylic solvent, and into an acyclic unsaturated ester-aldehyde on irradiation in the
presence of methanol.68
218
Heterocyclic Chemistry
11.2.2.6 Side-Chain Reactions
4-Pyrones69 and 2-pyrones70 condense with aromatic aldehydes at 2- and 6-methyl groups and 2,6-dimethyl4-pyrone can be lithiated at a methyl.71
11.2.2.7 2,4-Dioxygenated Pyrones
2,4-Dioxygenated pyrones exist as the 4-hydroxy tautomers. Such molecules are easily substituted by
electrophiles, at the position between the two oxygens (C-3)72 and can be side-chain deprotonated using
two mole equivalents of strong base.73
11.3
Synthesis of Pyryliums1,7a
Pyrylium rings are assembled by the cyclisation of a 1,5-dicarbonyl precursor, separately synthesised or
generated in situ.
11.3.1 From 1,5-Dicarbonyl Compounds
1,5-Dicarbonyl compounds can be cyclised, with dehydration and in the presence of an oxidising agent.
Mono-enolisation of a 1,5-diketone, then the formation of a cyclic hemiacetal, and its dehydration, produces 4H-pyrans, which require only hydride abstraction to arrive at the pyrylium oxidation level. The
diketones are often prepared in situ by the reaction of an aldehyde with two moles of a ketone (compare
Hantzsch synthesis, 8.14.1.2) or of a ketone with a previously prepared conjugated ketone – a ‘chalcone’
in the case of aromatic ketones/aldehydes. It is the excess chalcone that serves as the hydride acceptor in
this approach.
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 219
Early work utilised acetic anhydride as solvent with the incorporation of an oxidising agent, often
iron(III) chloride (though it is believed that the acylium cation is the hydride acceptor); latterly the
incorporation of 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyano-1,4-benzoquinone,74 2,6-dimethylpyrylium or, most often, the
triphenylmethyl cation75 have proved efficient. In some cases the 4H-pyran is isolated then oxidised in a
separate step.76
If an unsaturated dicarbonyl precursor is available, no oxidant needs to be added: a synthesis of the
perchlorate of pyrylium itself, shown below, falls into this category: careful perchloric acid treatment of
either glutaconaldehyde, or of its sodium salt, produces the parent salt.12,77 (CAUTION: potentially
explosive).
11.3.2 Alkene Acylation
Alkenes can be diacylated with an acid chloride or anhydride, generating an unsaturated 1,5-dicarbonyl
compound, which then cyclises with loss of water.
The aliphatic version of the classical aromatic Friedel–Crafts acylation process, produces, by loss of
proton, a non-conjugated enone, which can then undergo a second acylation, thus generating an unsaturated
1,5-diketone. Clearly, if the alkene is not symmetrical, two isomeric diketones are formed.78 Under the
conditions of these acylations, the unsaturated diketone cyclises, loses water and forms a pyrylium salt.
The formation of 2,6-di-t-butyl-4-methylpyrylium79 illustrates the process – here a precursor alcohol generates the alkene in situ; halides that dehydrohalogenate can also be used.80 A comparable sequence using
acetic anhydride gives 2,4,6-trimethylpyrylium, best isolated as its much more stable and non-hygroscopic
carboxymethanesulfonate.81
220
Heterocyclic Chemistry
11.3.3 From 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds and Ketones
The acid-catalysed condensation of a ketone with a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound, with dehydration in situ
produces pyrylium salts.
Aldol condensation between a 1,3-dicarbonyl component and a ketone with an α-methylene, under
acidic, dehydrating conditions, produces pyrylium salts.82 It is likely that the initial condensation is followed
by a dehydration before the cyclic hemiacetal formation and loss of a second water molecule. The use of
the bis-acetal of malondialdehyde, as a synthon for malondialdehyde, is one of the few ways available for
preparing α-unsubstituted pyryliums.1
Variations on this theme include the use, as synthons for the 1,3-dicarbonyl component, of β-chloroα,β-unsaturated ketones,83 or of conjugated alkynyl aldehydes.84
11.4
Synthesis of 2-Pyrones
11.4.1 From 1,3-Keto(aldehydo)-Acids and Carbonyl Compounds
The classical general method for constructing 2-pyrones is that based on the cyclising condensation of a
1,3-keto(aldehydo)-acid with a second component that provides the other two ring carbons.
The long known synthesis of coumalic acid from treatment of malic acid with hot sulfuric acid
illustrates this route: decarbonylation produces formylacetic acid, in situ, which serves as both the 1,3aldehydo-acid component and the second component.85 Decarboxylation of coumalic acid gives access to
2-pyrone itself.86
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 221
Conjugate additions of enolates to alkynyl-ketones87 or to alkynyl-esters88 are further variations on the
synthetic theme.
11.4.2 Other Methods
2-Pyrone itself can be prepared via Prins alkylation of but-3-enoic acid with subsequent lactonisation,
giving 5,6-dihydro-2-pyrone, which, via allylic bromination and then dehydrobromination, is converted
into 2-pyrone.89 Alternative manipulation90 of the dihydropyrone affords a convenient synthesis of a separable mixture of the important 3- and 5-bromo-2-pyrones (see 11.2.2.4).
Phosphine-catalysed addition of ethyl allene carboxylate to aldehydes also involves the construction of
the 5,6-bond.91
The esterification of a 1,3-ketoaldehyde enol with a diethoxyphosphinyl-alkanoic acid, forming the ester
linkage of the final molecule first, allows ring closure involving C-3–C-4 bond formation via an intramolecular Horner–Emmons reaction.92
The palladium-catalysed coupling of alkynes with a 3-iodo-α,β-unsaturated ester, or with the enol triflate
of a β-keto-ester as illustrated below, must surely be one of the shortest and most direct routes to
2-pyrones.93
222
Heterocyclic Chemistry
6-Chloro-2-pyrone is easily available by reaction of trans-glutaconic acid with phosphorus
pentachloride.94
Acylation of the anion derived by deprotonating the methyl in a 2,2,6-trimethyl-1,3-dioxin-4-one, then
thermolysis, provides a neat route to 2,4-dioxygenated pyrones.95
11.5
Synthesis of 4-Pyrones
4-Pyrones result from the acid-catalysed closure of 1,3,5-tricarbonyl precursors.
The construction of a 4-pyrone is essentially the construction of a 1,3,5-tricarbonyl compound, since
such compounds easily form cyclic hemiacetals then requiring only dehydration. Strong acid has usually
been used for this purpose, but where stereochemically sensitive centres are close, the reagent from triphenylphosphine and carbon tetrachloride can be employed.96
Several methods are available for the assembly of tricarbonyl precursors: the synthesis of chelidonic acid
(4-pyrone-2,6-dicarboxylic acid)97 represents the obvious approach of bringing about two Claisen condensations, one on each side of a ketone carbonyl group. Chelidonic acid can be decarboxylated to produce
4-pyrone itself.98
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 223
A variety of symmetrically substituted 4-pyrones can be made very simply by heating an alkanoic acid
with polyphosphoric acid;99 presumably a series of Claisen-type condensations, with a decarboxylation,
lead to the assembly of the requisite acyclic, tricarbonyl precursor.
The Claisen condensation of a 1,3-diketone, via its dianion, with an ester,100 or of a ketone enolate with
an alkyne ester,101 also give the desired tricarbonyl arrays. Applying this principle to 1,3-keto-esters leads
through to 2,4-dioxygenated heterocycles.102
Another strategy to bring about acylation at the less acidic carbon of a β-keto ester, is to condense, firstly
at the central methylene, with DMFDMA; this has the added advantage that the added carbon can then
provide the fifth carbon of the target heterocycle.103
α-Unsubstituted 4-pyrones have similarly been constructed via acylation of 2-methoxyvinyl
ketones.104
Dehydroacetic acid105 was first synthesised in 1866;106 it is formed very simply from ethyl acetoacetate
by a Claisen condensation between two molecules, followed by the usual cyclisation and finally loss of
ethanol. In a modern version, β-keto-acids can be self-condensed using carbonyl diimidazole as the condensing agent.107
224
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The acylation of the enamine of a cyclic ketone with diketene leads directly to bicyclic 4-pyrones, as
indicated below.108
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 10 and 11):
(a) Specify three nucleophiles that add easily to pyrylium salts, and draw the structures of the products
produced thereby.
(b) Certain derivatives of six-membered oxygen heterocycles undergo 4+2 cycloaddition reactions: draw
out three examples.
(c) Draw a mechanism for the transformation of 2-pyrone into 1-methyl-2-pyridone on reaction with
methylamine.
(d) What steps must take place to achieve the conversion of a saturated 1,5-diketone into a pyrylium salt?
(e) Describe how 5,6-dihydro-2-pyrone can be utilised to prepare either 2-pyrone, or 3- and 5-bromo2-pyrones.
(f) 1,3,5-Tricarbonyl compounds are easily converted into 4-pyrones. Describe two ways to produce a
1,3,5-trione or a synthon thereof.
More advanced exercises:
1. Write a sequence for the transformation of 2,4,6-trimethylpyrylium into 1-phenyl-2,4,6-trimethylpyridinium by reaction with aniline.
2. Devise a mechanism to explain the formation of 1,3,5-triphenylbenzene from reaction of 2,4,6-triphenylpyrylium perchlorate on reaction with 2 mole equivalents of Ph3P=CH2.
3. Suggest structures for the compounds in the following sequence: 2-methyl-5-hydroxy-4-pyrone reacted
with MeOTf → C7 H 9 O3+ TfO − (a salt), then this with 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine (a hindered
base) → C7H8O3, a dipolar substance, and this then with acrylonitrile → C10H11NO3.
4. Write out a mechanism for the conversion of 4-pyrone into 1-phenyl-4-pyridone by reaction with aniline.
Write structures for the products you would expect from reaction of methyl coumalate (5-methoxycarbonyl-2-pyrone) with benzylamine.
5. Deduce structures for the pyrylium salts formed by the following sequences: (i) pinacolone
(Me3CCOMe) condensed with pivaldehyde (Me3CCH=O) gave C11H20O, which was then reacted with
pinacolone in the presence of NaNH2, generating C17H32O2 and this with Ph 3C+ ClO −4 in AcOH gave a
pyrylium salt; (ii) cyclodecene and Ac2O/HClO4; (iii) PhCOMe and MeCOCH2CHO with Ac2O and
HClO4.
6. When dehydroacetic acid is heated with c. HCl 2,6-dimethyl-4-pyrone is formed in 97% yield
– explain.
7. When ethyl acetoacetate is reacted with HCl, isodehydroacetic acid (ethyl 4,6-dimethyl-2-pyrone-5carboxylate) is formed – explain.
8. Deduce structures for the pyrones formed by the following sequences: (i) PhCOCH3 with PhC≡CCO2Et
in the presence of NaOEt; (ii) butanoic acid heated with PPA at 200 °C; (iii) n-BuCOCH2CO2H with
carbonyl diimidazole; (iv) PhCOCH2COCH3 with excess NaH then methyl 4-chlorobenzoate;
(v) CH3COCH=CHOMe with KOt-Bu and PhCOCl.
Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 225
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Pyryliums, 2- and 4-Pyrones: Reactions and Synthesis 227
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12
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones:
Reactions and Synthesis
1-Benzopyryliums, coumarins and chromones are very widely distributed throughout the plant kingdom,
where many secondary metabolites contain them. Not the least of these are the ‘flavonoids’, which make
up the majority of flower pigments (see 32.5.6). In addition, many flavone (2-arylchromone) and coumarin
derivatives have marked toxic and other physiological properties in animals, though they play no part in
the normal metabolism. The isomeric 2-benzopyrylium1 system does not occur naturally and only a few
isocoumarins2 occur as natural products, and as a consequence much less work on these has been described.
Processes initiated by nucleophilic additions to the positively charged heterocyclic ring are the main,
almost the only, types of reaction known for benzopyryliums. The absence of examples of electrophilic
substitution in the benzene ring is to be contrasted with substitution in quinolinium and isoquinolinium
salts, emphasising the greater electron-withdrawing, and thus deactivating, effect of positively charged
oxygen.
Coumarins, chromones, and isocoumarins react with both nucleophiles and electrophiles in much the
same way as do quinolones and isoquinolones.
12.1
Reactions of Benzopyryliums
Much more work has been done on 1-benzopyryliums than on 2-benzopyryliums, because of their relevance
to the flavylium (2-phenyl-1-benzopyrylium) nucleus, which occurs widely in the anthocyanins, and much
of that work has been conducted on flavylium itself. As with pyrylium salts, benzopyrylium salts usually
add nucleophiles at the carbon adjacent to the oxygen.
12.1.1 Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
No simple examples are known of electrophilic or radical substitution of either heterocyclic or homocyclic
rings of benzopyrylium salts; flavylium3 and 1-phenyl-2-benzopyrylium5 salts nitrate in the substituent
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
230
Heterocyclic Chemistry
benzene ring. Having said this, the cyclisation of coumarin-4-propanoic acid may represent Friedel–Craftstype intramolecular attack on the carbonyl-O-protonated form, i.e. on a 2-hydroxy-1-benzopyrylium system,
at C-3.4
12.1.2 Reactions with Oxidising Agents
Oxidative general breakdown of flavylium salts was utilised in early structural work on the natural compounds. Baeyer–Villiger oxidation is such a process, whereby the two ‘halves’ of the molecule can be
separately examined (after ester hydrolysis of the product).5 Flavylium salts can be oxidised to flavones
using thallium(III) nitrate,6 and benzopyrylium itself can be converted into coumarin with manganese
dioxide.7
12.1.3 Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
12.1.3.1 Water and Alcohols
Water and alcohols add readily at C-2, and sometimes at C-4, generating chromenols or chromenol ethers.8
It is difficult to obtain 2H-chromenols pure, since they are always in equilibrium with ring-opened
chalcones.9
Controlled conditions are required for the production of simple adducts, for under more vigorous alkaline
treatment, ring opening, then carbon–carbon bond cleavage via a retro-aldol mechanism takes place, and
such processes, which are essentially the reverse of a route used for the synthesis of 1-benzopyryliums
(12.3.1.2) were utilised in early structural work on anthocyanin flower pigments.
12.1.3.2 Ammonia and Amines
Ammonia and amines add to benzopyryliums, and simple adducts from secondary amines have been
isolated.10
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
231
It is important to realise that 1-benzopyrylium salts cannot be converted into quinolines or quinolinium
salts by reaction with ammonia or primary amines (cf. pyryliums to pyridines, 11.1.2.2), whereas 2benzopyrylium salts are converted, efficiently, into isoquinolines or isoquinolinium salts, respectively.11
12.1.3.3 Carbon Nucleophiles
Organometallic carbon nucleophiles add to flavylium salts,12 as do activated aromatics like phenol,13 and
enolates such as those from cyanoacetate, nitromethane14 and dimedone,15 all very efficiently, at C-4.
Cyanide and azide add to 2-benzopyryliums at C-1.16
Silyl enol ethers, or allylsilanes will add at C-2 to 1-benzopyrylium salts generated by O-silylation of
chromones; in the case of silyl ethers of α,β-unsaturated ketones, cyclisation of the initial adduct is observed
(cf. 8.12.2).17
12.1.4 Reactions with Reducing Agents
Catalytic hydrogenation of flavylium salts is generally straightforward and results in the saturation of the
heterocyclic ring. Lithium aluminium hydride reduces flavylium salts, generating 4H-chromenes,18 unless
there is a 3-methoxyl, when 2H-chromenes are the products.19 2-Benzopyryliums add hydride at C-1.20
12.1.5 Alkyl-Benzopyryliums
Alkyl groups oriented α or γ to the positively charged oxygen in benzopyryliums have acidified hydrogens
that allow aldol-type condensations.1,21
232
12.2
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Benzopyrones (Chromones, Coumarins and Isocoumarins)
12.2.1 Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
12.2.1.1 Addition to Carbonyl Oxygen
Addition of a proton to carbonyl oxygen produces a hydroxy-benzopyrylium salt; chromones undergo this
protonation more easily than the coumarins, for example passage of hydrogen chloride through a mixture
of chromone and coumarin in ether solution leads to the precipitation of only chromone hydrochloride
(i.e. 4-hydroxy-1-benzopyrylium chloride).22 O-Alkylation requires the more powerful alkylating agents;1,23
O-silylation of benzopyrones is easy (12.1.3.3).
12.2.1.2 C-Substitution
C-Substitution of coumarins and chromones has been observed in both rings: in strongly acidic media, in
which presumably it is a hydroxy-benzopyrylium cation that is attacked, substitution takes place at C-6,
for example nitration.24 This can be contrasted with the dimethylaminomethylation of chromone,25 iodination of flavones26 or the chloromethylation of coumarin27 where hetero-ring substitution takes place,
presumably via the non-protonated (non-complexed) heterocycle (CAUTION: CH2O/HCl also produces
some ClCH2OCH2Cl, a carcinogen).
Reaction of coumarin or chromone with bromine results in simple addition to the heterocyclic ring double
bond, subsequent elimination of hydrogen bromide giving 3-bromocoumarin28 or 3-bromochromone.29
Copper(II) halides with alumina in refluxing chlorobenzene is an alternative method for 3-halogenation of
coumarins.30 Bromine in the presence of an excess of aluminium chloride (the ‘swamping catalyst’ effect)
converts coumarin into 6-bromocoumarin;31 chromone can be efficiently brominated at C-6 using dibromoisocyanuric acid.32
12.2.2 Reactions with Oxidising Agents
Non-phenolic coumarins are relatively stable to oxidative conditions.33 Various oxidative methods were
used extensively in structure determinations of natural flavones.
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
233
Flavones and isoflavones (3-aryl-chromones) are quantitatively converted into 2,3-epoxides by exposure
to dimethyl dioxirane; flavone oxides are quantitatively converted by acid into 3-hydroxy-flavones, which
are naturally occurring.34
12.2.3 Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
12.2.3.1 Hydroxide
Coumarins are quantitatively hydrolysed to give yellow solutions of the salts of the corresponding ciscinnamic acids (coumarinic acids), which cannot be isolated, since acidification brings about immediate
re-lactonisation; prolonged alkali treatment leads to isomerisation and the formation of the trans-acid
(coumaric acid) salt.
Cold sodium hydroxide comparably reversibly converts chromones into the salts of the corresponding
ring-opened phenols, via initial attack at C-2, more vigorous alkaline treatment leading to reverse-Claisen
degradation of the 1,3-dicarbonyl side-chain.
12.2.3.2 Ammonia, Amines and Hydrazines
Ammonia and amines do not convert coumarins into 2-quinolones, nor chromones into 4-quinolones, but
isocoumarins do produce isoquinolones.35 Ring-opened products from chromones and secondary amines
can be obtained where the nucleophile has attacked at C-2.
The interaction of 3-iodochromone with five-membered azoles, such as imidazole, leads to substitution
at the 2-position, presumably via an addition/elimination sequence, as indicated.36
234
Heterocyclic Chemistry
3-Formyl chromones37,38 react with arylhydrazines to produce 4-acyl-pyrazoles.39
12.2.3.3 Carbon Nucleophiles
Grignard reagents react with chromones at the carbonyl carbon; the resulting chromenols can be converted
by acid into the corresponding 4-substituted 1-benzopyrylium salts.26
Coumarins and isocoumarins16 react with Grignard reagents, often giving mixtures of products resulting
from ring opening of the initial carbonyl adduct; the reaction of coumarin with methylmagnesium iodide
illustrates this.40
By conversion into a benzopyrylium salt with a leaving group, nucleophiles can be introduced at the
chromone 4-position: treatment with acetic anhydride presumably forms a 4-acetoxy-benzopyrylium.41
In efficient reactions, coumarin can be made to react with electron-rich aromatics using phosphoryl
chloride, alone, or with zinc chloride.42
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
235
12.2.3.4 Organometallic Derivatives
Flavone can be lithiated at C-3.43
12.2.3.5 Reactions with Reducing Agents
Both coumarin and chromone are converted by diborane then alkaline hydrogen peroxide into 3-hydroxychroman.44 Catalytic reduction of coumarin or chromone saturates the C–C double bond.45 For both systems,
hydride reagents can of course react either at carbonyl carbon or at the conjugate position and mixtures
therefore tend to be produced. Zinc amalgam in acidic solution converts benzopyrones in 4-unsubstituted
benzopyrylium salts.46
12.2.3.6 Reactions with Dienophiles; Cycloadditions
Coumarins, but not apparently chromones, serve as dienophiles in Diels–Alder reactions, though under
relatively forcing conditions;47 in water such additions take place at 150 °C and under high pressure, at
70 °C.48
It can be taken as a measure of the low intrinsic aromaticity associated with fused pyrone rings,
that 3-acyl-chromones undergo hetero-Diels–Alder additions with enol ethers,49 and ketene acetals,50 3formylchromone reacting the most readily.
Chromone-3-esters, on the other hand, serve as dienophiles under Lewis acid catalysis.51
236
Heterocyclic Chemistry
2-Benzopyran-3-ones, generated by cyclising dehydration of an ortho-formyl-arylacetic acids take part
in intramolecular Diels–Alder additions, as shown below.52
Decomposition of aryl-diazoketones, which have an alkene tethered via an ortho-ester, generates a
4-oxido-isochromylium salt for intramolecular cycloaddition to the alkene.53
12.2.3.7 Photochemical Reactions
Coumarin has been studied extensively in this context; in the absence of a sensitiser, it gives a syn headto-head dimer; in the presence of benzophenone as sensitiser, the anti isomer is formed;54 the syn head-totail dimer is obtained by irradiation in acetic acid.55 Cyclobutane-containing products are obtained in modest
yields by sensitiser-promoted cycloadditions of coumarins or 3-acyl-oxycoumarins, with alkenes, ketene
diethyl acetal or cyclopentene.56
12.2.3.8 Alkyl-coumarins and Alkyl-chromones
Methyl groups at C-2, but not at C-3, of chromones undergo condensations with aldehydes, because only
the former can be deprotonated to give conjugated enolates.57
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
237
The 4-position of coumarins is the only one at which alkyl substituents have enhanced acidity in their
hydrogens,58 and this is considerably less than that of the methyl groups of 2-methyl-chromones.59
12.3
Synthesis of Benzopyryliums, Chromones, Coumarins and Isocoumarins
There are three important ways of putting together 1-benzopyryliums, coumarins and chromones; all begin
with phenols. The isomeric 2-benzopyrylium and isocoumarin nuclei require the construction of an orthocarboxy- or ortho-formyl-arylacetaldehyde (homophthalaldehyde).
Subject to the restrictions set out below, phenols react with 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds to produce 1benzopyryliums or coumarins, depending on the oxidation level of the 1,3-dicarbonyl component.
ortho-Hydroxy-benzaldehydes react with carbonyl compounds having an α-methylene, to give 1benzopyryliums or coumarins, depending on the nature of the aliphatic unit.
ortho-Hydroxyaryl alkyl ketones react with esters to give chromones.
12.3.1 Ring Synthesis of 1-Benzopyryliums1b
12.3.1.1 From Phenols and 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds
The simplest reaction, that between a diketone and a phenol, works best with resorcinol, for the second
hydroxyl facilitates the cyclising electrophilic attack. This synthesis can give mixtures with unsymmetrical
diketones, and it is therefore well suited to the synthesis of 1-benzopyryliums with identical groups at C-2
and C-4,60 however diketones in which the two carbonyl groups are appreciably different in reactivity can
also produce high yields of single products.61
238
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Acetylenic ketones, synthons for 1,3-keto-aldehydes, also take part regioselectively in condensations,62
as do chalcones (a chalcone has the form ArCH=CHC(O)Ar), though of course an oxidant must be incorporated in this latter case.63 Hexafluorophosphoric acid is recommended for the condensation of phloroglucinols and alkynyl-ketones.64
For hetero-ring-unsubstituted targets, the bis-acetal of malondialdehyde can be employed: in this variant
a heterocyclic acetal-ether is first obtained, from which two mole equivalents of ethanol must then be
eliminated.65
12.3.1.2 From ortho-Hydroxy-araldehydes and ketones
Salicylaldehydes can be condensed, by base or acid catalysis, with ketones that have an α-methylene. When
base catalysis is used, the intermediate hydroxy-chalcones can be isolated,8 but overall yields are often
better when the whole sequence is carried out in one step, using acid.66 It is important to note that because
this route does not rely upon an electrophilic cyclisation onto the benzene ring, 1-benzopyryliums free from
benzene ring (activating) substituents can be produced.
12.3.2 Ring Synthesis of Coumarins
12.3.2.1 From Phenols and 1,3-Keto-Esters
The Pechmann Synthesis67
Phenols react with β-keto-esters, including cyclic keto-esters,68 to give coumarins under acid-catalysed
conditions – concentrated sulfuric acid,69 hydrogen fluoride,70 a cation exchange resin,71 indium(III) chloride72 and sulfamic acid73 (solvent free) are amongst those that have been used.
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
239
The Pechmann synthesis works best with the more nucleophilic aromatic compounds, such as resorcinols:
electrophilic attack on the benzene ring ortho to phenolic oxygen by the protonated ketone carbonyl is the
probable first step, though aryl-acetoacetates, prepared from a phenol and diketene, also undergo ring
closure to give coumarins.74 The greater electrophilicity of the ketonic carbonyl determines the orientation
of combination. The production of hetero-ring-unsubstituted coumarins can be achieved by condensing
with formylacetic acid, generated in situ by the decarbonylation of malic acid.
Coumarins can be obtained directly, in a one-pot procedure, from phenols and a propiolate, using
palladium or platinum catalysis.75,76
12.3.2.2 From ortho-Hydroxy-Araldehydes and Anhydrides or Esters
The simplest synthesis of coumarins is a special case of the Perkin condensation, i.e. the condensation of
an aromatic aldehyde with an anhydride. ortho-Hydroxy-trans-cinnamic acids cannot be intermediates since
they do not isomerise under the conditions of the reaction; nor can O-acetylsalicylaldehyde be the immediate precursor of the coumarin, since it is not cyclised by sodium acetate on its own.77
The general approach can be enlarged and conditions for condensation made milder by the use of furtheractivated esters, thus condensation with methyl nitroacetate produces 3-nitro-coumarins,78 condensations
with Wittig ylides79 allow ortho-hydroxyaryl ketones to be used80 and the use of diethyl malonate (or
malonic acid81) (a 3-ester can be removed by hydrolysis and decarboxylation82), malononitrile, ethyl trifluoroacetoacetate, or substituted acetonitriles in a Knoevenagel condensation, produces coumarins with a
3-ester,83 3-trifluoroacetyl,84 3-cyano, or 3-alkyl or -aryl substituent.85 Condensation with N-acetylglycine
generates 3-acetylamino-coumarins.86
240
Heterocyclic Chemistry
12.3.2.3 From ortho-Hydroxyaraldehydes and Bis(methylthio)methylidene-Ketones
In a route which certainly involves formation of the ester linkage as a first step, ortho-hydroxy-araldehydes
react with bis(methylthio)methylidene-ketones (easily generated from methyl ketones by reaction with base,
then carbon disulfide, then iodomethane), the ring closure taking place without further intervention.87
12.3.3 Ring Synthesis of Chromones
12.3.3.1 From ortho-Hydroxyacyl-Arenes with Esters
Most syntheses of chromones require the prior construction of a 1-(ortho-hydroxyaryl)-1,3-diketone, or
equivalent, and it is in the manner by which this intermediate is generated that the methods differ.
Claisen condensation between an ester and the methylene adjacent to the carbonyl of the acylarene
produces a 1-(ortho-hydroxyaryl)-1,3-diketone. The Claisen condensation can be conducted in the presence
of the acidic phenolic hydroxyl by the use of excess strong base;88 triethylamine as solvent and base can
also be utilised.89 Alternatively, the process is conducted in two steps: first, acylation of the phenolic
hydroxyl, and secondly, an intramolecular90 base-catalysed Claisen condensation, known as the Baker–
Venkataraman rearrangement: a synthesis of flavone itself is illustrative.91
The use of diazabicycloundecene (DBU) allows the whole sequence to be conducted without isolation
of intermediates, as shown in the example below.92
The production of a 2-unsubstituted chromone by this route requires the use of triethyl orthoformate.93
Reaction with dimethylformamide dimethyl acetal, followed by an electrophile, bromine in the example,
gives 3-substituted chromones.94
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
241
A variant of this route to 2-unsubstituted chromones employs oxalic acid half-ester half-acid chloride,
which gives a 2-ethoxycarbonyl-chromone, hydrolysis and decarboxylation of which achieves the required
result.95 Diethyl carbonate as the ester gives rise to 2,4-dioxygenated heterocycles, which exist as 4-hydroxycoumarins.96 The condensation of a salicylate with an ester, using three mole equivalents of base also leads
through to 4-hydroxy-coumarins, as illustrated below.97
2-Aminobenzopyrones result from the ring closure of 1-(ortho-hydroxyaryl)-1,3-ketoamides.98
The variants on this route are many: for example condensation of ortho-hydroxyacetophenone with the
Vilsmeier reagent produces 3-formylchromone (12.2.3.2).
Isoflavones (3-aryl-chromones) can also be prepared in this way: boron trifluoride-catalysed Friedel–
Crafts acylation of a reactive phenol with an aryl acetic acid is followed by reaction with dimethylformamide and phosphorus pentachloride.99
At a lower oxidation level, ortho-hydroxy-acyl-arenes undergo base-catalysed aldol condensations with
aromatic aldehydes to give chalcones,100 which can be cyclised to 2,3-dihydro-chromones via an intramolecular Michael process; the dihydro-chromones can in turn be dehydrogenated to produce chromones by
a variety of methods, for example by bromination then dehydrobromination or by oxidation with the trityl
cation, iodine, dimethyldioxirane or iodobenzene diacetate.101
Yet another variant uses ortho-fluorobenzoyl chloride in condensation with a 1,3-keto-ester;102 the
fluoride is displaced in an intramolecular sense by enolate oxygen, and the chromone obtained directly, as
shown below.
242
Heterocyclic Chemistry
12.3.3.2 From ortho-Hydroxyaryl Alkynyl Ketones
ortho-Hydroxyaryl alkynyl ketones are intermediates in palladium(0)-catalysed coupling of orthohydroxyaryl iodides with terminal alkynes in the presence of carbon monoxide, ring closing to chromones
in situ.103
The alkynyl-ketones required for the 6-endo-dig cyclisation process104 can be synthesised separately, and
cyclise under mild conditions, either base catalysed or using iodine chloride, producing in the last case
3-iodo-chromones. Enamino-ketones also intervene in a very flexible sequence, in which the cyclisation
precursor is produced by coupling an acetylene with an ortho-silyloxyaryl acid chloride; treatment of the
resulting alkynone with a secondary amine leads to the chromone.105
12.3.4 Ring Synthesis of 2-Benzopyryliums
The first synthesis106 of the 2-benzopyrylium cation provided the pattern for subsequent routes, in which it
is the aim to produce a homophthaldehyde, or diketo analogue, for acid-catalysed closure.
Most of the 2-benzopyrylium salts that have been synthesised subsequently are 1,3-disubstituted and
their precursors prepared by Friedel–Crafts acylation of activated benzyl ketones.6,107
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
243
12.3.5 Ring Synthesis of Isocoumarins
One approach to isocoumarins is comparable to that above for 2-benzopyryliums, but replacing the aromatic
aldehyde with an acid group.108
Benzoates carrying an ortho-acetylenic substituent, from Sonogashira couplings (4.2.5.1), can be ring
closed using mercuric acetate, which also allows the introduction of an iodine at C-4,109 or if that functionality is not required, simple acid-catalysed closure works well.110 The use of iodine chloride similarly gives
4-iodo isocoumarins.111
The most general route involves coupling an alkyne with ortho-iodobenzoic acid or with methyl orthoiodobenzoate.112 Both mono- (giving 3-substituted isocoumarins113) and disubstituted alkynes will serve,
allowing considerable flexibility for the construction of substituted isocoumarins.
12.3.6 Notable Examples of Benzopyrylium and Benzopyrone Syntheses
12.3.6.1 Pelargonidin Chloride
The first synthesis of pelargonidin chloride used methyl ethers as protecting groups for the phenolic hydroxyls during the Grignard addition step.114
244
Heterocyclic Chemistry
12.3.6.2 Apigenin
The scheme below shows two contrasting routes to apigenin. The modern use of excess of a very strong
base, and the reaction of the resulting ‘polyanion’ obviated the need for phenolic protection in one
synthesis.115
An elegant and flexible strategy for the assembly of a synthon for the ortho-hydroxyaryl-1,3-diketone
required for a chromone synthesis depends on the use of an isoxazole as surrogate for the 1,3-diketone
unit (25.7). An isoxazole was produced by the cycloaddition (25.12.1.2) of an aryl nitrile oxide to tri-nbutylstannylacetylene, the product coupled with 2,4,6-trihydroxyiodobenzene and then the N–O bond
hydrogenolytically cleaved.116
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 10, 11 and 12):
(a) At which position(s) do benzopyrylium ions react with nucleophiles, for example water?
(b) What is the typical structure of an anthocyanin flower pigment? What is the typical structure of a
flavone flower pigment?
(c) At which atom do coumarins and chromones protonate?
(d) At which positions do coumarins and chromones undergo electrophilic substitution?
(e) Describe a cycloaddition reaction in which: (i) a coumarin and (ii) a chromone take part.
(f) How could one construct a 1-benzopyrylium salt from a phenol?
(g) How can ortho-hydroxyaryl-aldehydes be used to prepare coumarins?
(h) How can ortho-hydroxyaryl-ketones be used to prepare chromones?
More advanced exercises:
1. When salicylaldehyde and 2,3-dimethyl-1-benzopyrylium chloride are heated together in acid, a condensation product C18H15O2+ Cl– is formed. Treatment of the salt with a weak base (pyridine) generates
a neutral compound, C18H14O2. Suggest structures for these two products.
2. When ethyl 2-methylchromone-3-carboxylate is treated with NaOH, then HCl, a product C11H8O4 is
produced that does not contain a carboxylic acid group, but does dissolve in dilute alkali: suggest a
structure and the means whereby it could be formed.
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
245
3. Deduce the structures of intermediate and final product in the sequence: salicylaldehyde/
MeOCH2CO2Na/Ac2O/heat → C10H8O3, this then with 1 mole equivalent of PhMgBr → C16H14O3 and
finally this with HCl → C16H13O2+Cl–.
4. Predict the structure of the major product from the interaction of resorcinol (1,3-dihydroxybenzene) and:
(i) PhCOCH2COMe in AcOH/HCl; (ii) methyl 2-oxocyclopentanecarboxylate/H2SO4.
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C. A. and Lamola, A. A., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1964, 86, 3103.
Krauch, C. H., Farid, S. and Schenk, G. O., Chem. Ber., 1966, 99, 625.
Hanifen, J. W. and Cohen, E., Tetrahedron Lett., 1966, 1419; Kobayashi, K., Suzuki, M. and Suginome, H., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1993,
2837.
Heilbron, I. M., Barnes, H. and Morton, R. A., J. Chem. Soc., 1923, 2559.
Archer, R. A., Blanchard, W. B., Day, W. A., Johnson, D. W. Lavagnino, E. R., Ryan, C. W. and Baldwin, J. E., J. Org. Chem., 1977, 42, 2277.
Mahal, H. S. and Venkataraman, K., J. Chem. Soc., 1933, 616.
Bülow, C. and Wagner, H., Chem. Ber., 1901, 34, 1189.
Bülow, C. and Wagner, H., Chem. Ber., 1901, 34, 1782; Sweeny, J. G. and Iacobucci, G. A., Tetrahedron, 1981, 37, 1481.
Johnson, A. W. and Melhuish, R. R., J. Chem. Soc., 1947, 346.
Robinson, R. and Walker, J., J. Chem. Soc., 1934, 1435.
Kueny-Stotz, M., Isorez, G., Chassaing, S. and Brouillard, R., Synlett, 2007, 1067.
Bigi, F., Casiraghi, G., Casnati, G. and Sartori, G., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1981, 18, 1325.
Pratt, D. D. and Robinson, R., J. Chem. Soc., 1923, 745.
‘The Pechmann reaction’, Sethna, S. and Phadke, R., Org. React., 1953, 7, 1.
Sen, H. K. and Basu, U., J. Ind. Chem. Soc., 1928, 5, 467.
Russell, A. and Frye, J. R., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. III, 1955, 281.
Dann, O. and Mylius, G., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1954, 587, 1.
John, E. V. O. and Israelstam, S. S., J. Org. Chem., 1961, 26, 240.
Bose, D. S., Rudradas, A. P. and Babu, M. H., Tetrahedron Lett., 2002, 43, 9195.
Singh, P. R., Singh, D. U. and Samant, S. D., Synlett, 2004, 1909.
Lacey, R. N., J. Chem. Soc., 1954, 854.
Trost, B. M. and Toste, F. D., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1996, 118, 6305.
Oyamada, J. and Kitamura, T., Tetrahedron, 2006, 62, 6918.
Crawford, M. and Shaw, J. A. M., J. Chem. Soc., 1953, 3435.
Dauzonne, D. and Royer, R., Synthesis, 1983, 836.
Harayama, T., Nakatsuka, K., Nishioka, H., Murakami, K., Hayashida, N. and Ishii, H., Chem. Pharm. Bull., 1994, 42, 2170.
Mali, R. S. and Yadav, V. J., Synthesis, 1977, 464.
Steck, W., Canad. J. Chem., 1971, 49, 2297.
Rouessac, F. and Leclerc, A., Synth. Commun., 1993, 23, 1147.
Horning, E. C., Horning, M. G. and Dimmig, D. A., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. III, 1955, 165.
Chizhov, D. L., Sosnovskikh, V. Ya., Pryadeina, M. V., Burgart, Y. V., Saloutin, V. I. and Charushin, V. N., Synlett, 2008, 281.
Brufola, G., Friguelli, F., Piermatti, O. and Pizzo, F., Heterocycles,, 1996, 43, 1257.
Kudale, A. A., Kendall, J., Warford, C. C., Wilkins, N. D. and Bodwell, G. J., Tetrahedron Lett., 2007, 48, 5077.
Rao, H. S. P. and Sivakumar, S., J. Org. Chem., 2006, 71, 8715.
Wiley, P. F., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1952, 74, 4329; Schmutz, J., Hirt, R. and Lauener, H., Helv. Chim. Acta, 1952, 35, 1168; Mozingo, R., Org. Synth.,
Coll. Vol. III, 1955, 387; Hirao, I., Yamaguchi, M. and Hamada, M., Synthesis, 1984, 1076; Banerji, H. and Goomer, N. C., ibid., 1980, 874.
Looker, J. H., McMechan, J. H. and Mader, J. W., J. Org. Chem., 1978, 43, 2344.
Baker, W., J. Chem. Soc., 1933, 1381; Schmid, H. and Banholzer, K., Helv. Chim. Acta, 1954, 37, 1706.
Wheeler, T. S., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. IV, 1963, 478.
Riva, C., De Toma, C., Donadel, L., Boi, C., Peunini, R., Motta, G. and Leonardi, A., Synthesis, 1997, 195.
Becket, G. J. P., Ellis, G. P. and Trindade, M. I. U., J. Chem. Res., 1978 (S) 47; (M) 0865.
Gammill, R. B., Synthesis, 1979, 901; Yokoe, I., Keiko Maruyama, K., Sugita, Y., Harashida, T. and Shirataki, Y., Chem. Pharm. Bull., 1994, 42,
1697.
Baker, W., Chadderton, J., Harborne, J. B. and Ollis, W. D., J. Chem. Soc., 1953, 1852.
Boyd, J. and Robertson, A., J. Chem. Soc., 1948, 174.
Davis, S. E., Church, A. C., Tummons, R. C. and Beam, C. F., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1997, 34, 1159.
Morris, J., Wishka, D. G. and Fang, Y., Synth. Commun., 1994, 24, 849.
Balasubramanian, S. and Nair, M. G., Synth. Commun., 2000, 30, 469.
Geissman, T. A. and Clinton, R. O., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1946, 68, 697.
Lorette, N. B., Gage, T. B. and Wender, S. H., J. Org. Chem., 1951, 16, 930; Schönberg, A. and Schutz, G., Chem. Ber., 1960, 93, 1466; Patonay,
T., Cavaleiro, J. A. S., Lévai, A. and Silva, A. M. S., Heterocycl. Commun., 1997, 3, 223; Bernini, R., Mincione, E., Sanetti, A., Bovicelli, P. and
Lupatteli, P., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 4651; Prakash, O. and Tanwer, M. P., J. Chem. Res (S), 1995, 143, (M), 1429; Litkei, G., Gulácsis, K.,
Antus, A. and Blaskó, G., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1995, 1711.
Coppola, G. M. and Dodsworth, R. W., Synthesis, 1981, 523; Cremins, P. J., Hayes, R. and Wallace, T. W., Tetrahedron, 1993, 49, 3211.
Torii, S., Okumoto, H., Xu, L. H., Sadakane, M., Shostakovsky, M. V., Ponomaryov, A. B. and Kalinin, V. N., Tetrahedron, 1993, 49, 6773.
Nakatani, K., Okamoto, A. and Saito, I., Tetrahedron, 1996, 52, 9427.
Bhat, A. S., Whetstone, J. L. and Brueggemeier, R. W., Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40, 2469.
Blount, B. K. and Robinson, R., J. Chem. Soc., 1933, 555.
Bringmann, G. and Jansen, J. R., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1985, 2116.
Benzopyryliums and Benzopyrones: Reactions and Synthesis
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
247
Schöpf, C. and Kühne, R., Chem. Ber., 1950, 83, 390.
Larock, R. C. and Harrison, L. W., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1984, 106, 4218.
Le Bras, G., Hamze, A., Messaoudi, S., Provot, O., Le Calvez, P.-B. and Brion, J.-D., Synthesis, 2008, 1607.
Yao, T. and Larock, R. C., J. Org. Chem., 2003, 68, 5936.
Liao, H.-Y. and Cheng, C.-H., J. Org. Chem., 1995, 60, 3711; Larock, R. C., Yum, E. K., Doty, M. J. and Sham, K. K. C., ibid., 3270.
Subramanian, V., Batchu, V. R., Barange, D. and Pal, M., J. Org. Chem., 2005, 70, 4778.
Willstätter, R., Zechmeister, L. and Kindler, W., Chem. Ber., 1924, 47, 1938.
Nagarathnam, D. and Cushman, M., J. Org. Chem. 1991, 56, 4884.
Gothelf, K., Thomsen, I. and Torssell, K. B. G., Acta Chem. Scand., 1992, 46, 494; Gothelf, K. V. and Torssell, K. B. G., ibid., 1994, 48, 165;
Ellemose, S., Kure, N. and Torssell, K. B. G., ibid., 1995, 49, 524.
13
Typical Reactivity of the Diazines:
Pyridazine, Pyrimidine and Pyrazine
The diazines – pyridazine, pyrimidine and pyrazine – contain two imine nitrogen atoms, so the lessons
learnt with regard to pyridine (Chapters 7 and 8) are, in these heterocycles, exaggerated. Two heteroatoms
withdraw electron density from the ring carbons even more than one in pyridine, so unsubstituted diazines
are even more resistant to electrophilic substitution than is pyridine. A corollary is that this same increased
electron deficiency at carbon makes the diazines more easily attacked by nucleophiles than pyridine. The
availability of nitrogen lone pair(s) is also reduced: each of the diazines is appreciably less basic than pyridine, reflecting the destabilising influence of the second nitrogen on the N-protocation. Nevertheless,
diazines will form salts and will react with alkyl halides and with peracids to give N-alkyl quaternary salts
and N-oxides, respectively. Generally speaking, such electrophilic additions take place at one nitrogen only,
because the presence of the positive charge in the products renders the second nitrogen extremely unreactive towards a second electrophilic addition.
Typical reactions of a diazine illustrated with pyrimidine
A very characteristic feature of the chemistry of diazines, which is associated with their strongly electronpoor nature, is that they add nucleophilic reagents easily. Without halide to be displaced, such adducts
require an oxidation to complete an overall substitution. However, halo-diazines, where the halide is α or
γ to a nitrogen, undergo very easy nucleophilic displacements, the intermediates being particularly well
stabilised. In line with their susceptibility to nucleophilic addition, diazines also undergo substitution by
nucleophilic radicals, in acid solution, with ease.
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John Joule and Keith Mills
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
All positions on each of the diazines, with the sole exception of the 5-position of a pyrimidine, are α
and/or γ to an imine ring nitrogen and, in considering nucleophilic addition/substitution, it must be remembered that there is also an additional nitrogen that is withdrawing electron density. As a consequence, all
the monohalo-diazines are more reactive than either 2- or 4-halo-pyridines. The 2- and 4-halo-pyrimidines
are particularly reactive because the anionic intermediates (shown below for attack on a 2-halo-pyrimidine)
derive direct mesomeric stabilisation from both nitrogen atoms.
Delocalisation of negative charge for nucleophilic substitution of a 2-halo-pyrimidine
Despite this particularly strong propensity for nucleophilic addition, C-lithiation of diazines can be
achieved by either metal–halogen exchange or, by deprotonation ortho to chloro- or alkoxyl substituents
(DoM), though very low temperatures must be utilised in order to avoid nucleophilic addition of the reagent.
Considerable use has been made in diazine chemistry of palladium(0)-catalysed coupling processes, with
the diazine as either a halide or as an organometallic derivative; one example chosen at random is shown
below (see 4.2 for a detailed discussion).
Further examples of the enhancement of those facets of pyridine chemistry associated with the imine
electron withdrawal include a general stability towards oxidative degradation and, on the other hand, a
tendency to undergo rather easy reduction of the ring.
Although there is always debate about quantitative measures of aromaticity, it is agreed that the diazines
are less resonance stabilised than pyridines – they are ‘less aromatic’. Thus, Diels–Alder additions are
known for all three systems, with the heterocycle acting as an azadiene; initial adducts lose a small molecule
– hydrogen cyanide in the pyrimidine example shown – to afford a final stable product.
A pyrimidine acting as an azadiene in a Diels–Alder cycloaddition
Typical Reactivity of the Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine and Pyrazine
251
N-Oxides, just as in the pyridine series, show a duality of effect – both electrophilic substitutions and
nucleophilic displacements are enhanced. Just as in pyridine N-oxide chemistry, a very useful transformation is the introduction of halide α to a nitrogen on reaction with reagents such as phosphorus oxychloride.
The importance of this transformation can be realised by noting that the unsubstituted heterocycle is converted, in the two steps, into a halo-diazine, with its potential for subsequent displacement reactions with
nucleophiles.
Conversion of pyrazine N-oxide into 2-chloropyrazine
The most studied diazine derivatives are the oxy- and amino-pyrimidines, since uracil, thymine and
cytosine are found as bases in DNA and RNA. Carbonyl tautomers are the preferred forms. It is the
enamide-like character of the double bonds in diazine diones that allows electrophilic substitution – uracil,
for example, can be brominated at C-5. One amino-substituent permits electrophilic ring substitution and
two amino, or one amino and one oxy, substituents, permit substitution with even weakly electrophilic
reactants.
Electrophilic substitution of activated pyrimidines is easy
Diazinones can be converted into halo-diazines
Diazinones, like pyridones, react with phosphorus halides with overall conversion into halides. Anions
produced by N-deprotonation of diazinones are ambident, with phenolate-like resonance contributors, but
they generally react with electrophilic alkylating agents at nitrogen, rather than oxygen, giving N-alkyl
diazinones.
252
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Diazine alkyl groups, with the exception of those at the 5-position of pyrimidine, can undergo condensation reactions that utilise a side-chain carbanion produced by removal of a proton. As in pyridine chemistry,
formation of these anions is made possible by delocalisation of the charge onto one (or more) of the ring
nitrogen atoms.
Stabilisation of side-chain carbanions
Each of the diazines can be constructed from an appropriate source of two nitrogens and a dicarbonyl
compound. In the case of pyridazines, the nitrogen source is, of course, hydrazine and this in combination
with 1,4-dicarbonyl compounds readily produces dihydro-pyridazines, which are very easily dehydrogenated to the aromatic heterocycle. Pyrimidines result from the interaction of a 1,3-dicarbonyl component
and an amidine (as shown) or a urea (giving 2-pyrimidones) or a guanidine (giving 2-amino-pyrimidines),
without the requirement for an oxidation step.
The two commonly used ring synthetic routes to pyridazines and pyrimidines
To access a pyrazine in this way one needs a 1,2-diamine and a 1,2-dicarbonyl compound, and a subsequent oxidation, but if both components are unsymmetrical, mixtures are formed. The dimerisation of
2-aminocarbonyl compounds also generates symmetrically substituted dihydro-pyrazines – perhaps the best
known examples of such dimerisations involve the natural amino acids and their esters, which dimerise to
give dihydropyrazine-2,5-diones – ‘diketopiperazines’.
Two ring synthetic routes to the pyrazine ring system
14
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and
Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
The three diazines, pyridazine,1 pyrimidine,2 and pyrazine3 are stable, colourless compounds that are soluble
in water. The three parent heterocycles, unlike pyridine, are expensive and not readily available and so are
seldom used as starting materials for the synthesis of their derivatives. There are only four ways in which
a benzene ring can be fused to a diazine: cinnoline, phthalazine, quinazoline and quinoxaline are the bicyclic
systems thus generated.
One striking aspect of the physical properties of the diazine trio is the high boiling point of pyridazine
(207 °C), 80–90 °C higher than that of pyrimidine (123 °C), pyrazine (118 °C), or indeed other azines,
including 1,3,5-triazine, all of which also boil in the range 114–124 °C. The high boiling point of pyridazine
is attributed to the polarisability of the N–N unit, which results in extensive dipolar association in the liquid.
The most important naturally occuring diazines are the pyrimidine bases uracil, thymine and cytosine,
which are constituents of the nucleic acids (see 32.4). The nucleic acid pyrimidines are often drawn horizontally transposed from the representations used in this chapter, i.e. with N-3 to the ‘north-west’, mainly
to draw attention to their structural similarity to the pyrimidine ring of the nucleic acid purines, which are
traditionally drawn with the pyrimidine ring on the left. There are relatively few naturally occurring pyrazines or pyridazines.
14.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
14.1.1 Addition at Nitrogen4
14.1.1.1 Protonation
The diazines, pyridazine (pKaH 2.3), pyrimidine (1.3), and pyrazine (0.65) are essentially mono-basic substances, and considerably weaker, as bases, than pyridine (5.2). This reduction in basicity is believed to be
largely a consequence of destabilisation of the mono-protonated cations due to a combination of inductive
and mesomeric withdrawal by the second nitrogen atom. Secondary effects, however, determine the order
of basicity for the three systems: repulsion between the lone pairs on the two adjacent nitrogen atoms in
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© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
254
Heterocyclic Chemistry
pyridazine means that protonation occurs more readily than if inductive effects, only, were operating. In
the case of pyrazine, mesomeric interaction between the protonated and neutral nitrogen atoms probably
destabilises the cation.
N,N′-Diprotonation is very much more difficult and has only been observed in very strongly acidic media.
Of the trio, pyridazine (pKaH(2) −7.1) is the most difficult from which to generate a dication, probably due
to the high energy associated with the juxtaposition of two immediately adjacent positively charged atoms,
but pyrimidine (pKaH(2) −6.3) and pyrazine (pKaH(2) −6.6) are only marginally easier to doubly protonate.
Substituents can affect basicity (and nucleophilicity) both inductively and mesomerically, but care is
needed in the interpretation of pKaH changes, for example it is important to be sure which of the two nitrogens of the substituted azine is protonated (see also 14.1.1.2).
14.1.1.2 Alkylation
The diazines react with alkyl halides to give mono-quaternary salts, though somewhat less readily than
comparable pyridines. Dialkylation cannot be achieved with simple alkyl halides, however the more reactive trialkyloxonium tetrafluoroborates do convert all three systems into di-quaternary salts.5
Pyridazine is the most reactive in alkylation reactions and this again has its origin in the lone-pair/lonepair interaction between the nitrogen atoms. This phenomenon is known as the ‘α effect’6 and is also
responsible, for example, for the relatively higher reactivity of hydrogen peroxide as a nucleophile, compared with water.
Unsymmetrically substituted diazines can give rise to two isomeric quaternary salts. Substituents
influence the orientation mainly by steric and inductive, rather than mesomeric effects. For example,
3-methylpyridazine alkylates mainly at N-1, even though N-2 is the more electron-rich site. Again, quaternisation of 3-methoxy-6-methylpyridazine takes place adjacent to the methyl substituent, at N-1, although
mesomeric release would have been expected to favour attack at N-2.7
14.1.1.3 Oxidation
All three systems react with peracids,8 giving N-oxides, but care must be taken with pyrimidines9 due to
the relative instability of the products under the acidic conditions. Pyrazines10 form N,N′-dioxides the most
easily, but pyridazine10 requires forcing conditions, and pyrimidines, apart from some examples in which
further activation is present, give poor yields.11
The regiochemistry of N-oxidation of substituted azines is governed by the same factors as alkylation
(14.1.1.2), for example 3-methylpyridazine gives the 1-oxide as main (3 : 1) product,12 but the pattern is
not a simple one, for 4-methylpyrimidine N-oxidises principally (3.5 : 1) at the nitrogen adjacent to the
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
255
methyl.13 The acidity of the medium can also influence the regiochemistry of oxidation, for example
3-cyanopyridazine reacts at N-1 with peracetic acid, but under strongly acidic conditions, in which the
heterocycle is mainly present as its N-1-protonic salt, oxidation, apparently involving attack on this salt,
occurs at N-2.14
14.1.2 Substitution at Carbon
Recalling the resistance of pyridines to electrophilic substitution, it is not surprising to find that introduction
of a second azomethine nitrogen, in any of the three possible orientations, greatly increases this resistance:
no nitration or sulfonation of a diazine or simple alkyl-diazine has been reported, though some halogenations are known. It is to be noted that C-5 in pyrimidine is the only position, in all three diazines, which
is not in an α- or γ-relationship to a ring nitrogen, and is therefore equivalent to a β-position in pyridine.
Diazines carrying electron-releasing (activating) substituents undergo electrophilic substitution much more
easily (14.9.2.1 and 14.10).
14.1.2.1 Halogenation
Chlorination of 2-methylpyrazine occurs under such mild conditions that it is almost certain that an
addition/elimination sequence is involved, rather than a classical aromatic electrophilic substitution.15
Halogenation of pyrimidines may well also involve such processes.16
14.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
The diazines are generally resistant to oxidative attack at ring carbons, though alkaline oxidising agents
can bring about degradation via intermediates produced by initial nucleophilic addition (14.3). Alkyl substituents17 and fused aromatic rings18 can be oxidised to carboxylic acid residues, leaving the heterocyclic
ring untouched. An oxygen can be introduced into pyrimidines at vacant C-2 and/or C-4 positions using
various bacteria.19 Dimethyldioxirane converts N,N-dialkylated uracils into 5,6-diols probably via
5,6-epoxides.20
14.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
The diazines are very susceptible to nucleophilic addition: pyrimidine, for example, is decomposed when
heated with aqueous alkali by a process that involves hydroxide addition as a first step. It is converted into
pyrazole by reaction with hot hydrazine.
256
Heterocyclic Chemistry
14.3.1 Nucleophilic Substitution with ‘Hydride’ Transfer
14.3.1.1 Alkylation and Arylation
The diazines readily add alkyl- and aryllithiums, and Grignard reagents, to give dihydro-adducts that
can be aromatised by oxidation with reagents such as potassium permanganate or 2,3-dichloro-5,6dicyano-1,4-benzoquinone (DDQ). In reactions with organolithiums, pyrimidines react at C-4,13 and
pyridazines at C-3, but Grignard reagents add to pyridazines at C-4.21
An important point is that in diazines carrying chlorine or methylthio substituents, attack does not take
place at the halogen- or methylthio-bearing carbon; halogen-22,23 and methylthio-containing24 products are
therefore obtained.
14.3.1.2 Amination
The Chichibabin reaction can be carried out under the usual conditions in a few cases,25 but is much less
general than for pyridines. This may be partly a consequence of the lower aromaticity of the diazines, for,
although the initial addition is quite easy, the subsequent loss of hydride (re-aromatisation) is difficult.
However, high yields of 4-aminopyridazine, 4-aminopyrimidine and 2-aminopyrazine can be obtained by
oxidation of the dihydro-adduct in situ with potassium permanganate.26
14.3.2 Nucleophilic Substitution with Displacement of Good Leaving Groups
All the halo-diazines, apart from 5-halo-pyrimidines, react readily with ‘soft’ nucleophiles, such as amines,
thiolates and malonate anions, with substitution of the halide. Even 5-bromopyrimidine can be brought into
reaction with nucleophiles using microwave heating.27 All cases are more reactive than 2-halo-pyridines:
the relative reactivities can be summarised:
Pyrrolo[2,3-b]pyrazines can be produced via successive nucleophilic displacements of the halogens
of 2,3-dichloropyrazine.28 This result should be contrasted with the tele-substitution products obtained
from this same substrate with a dithiane anion as the nucleophile.29
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
257
Nucleophilic displacement of halogen with ammonia30 and amines31 can be accelerated by carrying
out the displacements in acid solution, when the protonated heterocycle is more reactive than the neutral
heterocycle.23,32 Halogen can also be easily removed hydrogenolytically, for example treatment of 2,4dichloropyrimidine, readily available from uracil, with hydrogen, in the presence of palladium, or with
hydrogen iodide, gives pyrimidine itself.33
The difference in reactivity between 2- and 4-halo-pyrimidines is relatively small and a discussion of
the selectivity in nucleophilic displacement reactions of 2,4-dichloropyrimidine (an important synthetic
intermediate) is instructive.
Reaction with sodium methoxide in methanol is highly selective for the 4-chlorosubstitutent,34 whereas
lithium 2-(trimethylsilyl)ethoxide is equally selective, but for the 2-chloro substituent.35 The former is the
normal situation for nucleophilic displacements36 – 4-chloro > 2-chloro – the second case is the exception,
where strong co-ordination of lithium in a non-polar solvent to the more basic nitrogen, N-1, leads to
activation, and possibly also internal attack, at C-2. Under acidic conditions, an approximately 1 : 1 mixture
of the two methoxy products is formed. Here, hydrogen bonding to the proton on N-1 provides the mechanism for encouraging attack at C-2. Selectivity with other nucleophiles is dependent on the nature of the
nucleophile and on reaction conditions.
A more certain approach to selective 4- followed by 2-substitution involves the use of 4-chloro-2methylthiopyrimidine with the first nucleophile, then oxidation to the sulfone, followed by reaction at C-2
with the second nucleophile displacing methylsulfone (as methanesulfinate anion).37 The reaction of
2,4,6-trichloropyrimidine with the sodium salts of Boc-protected amines, generated with NaH in DMF,
gives much better 4(6):2 selectivity than reaction with the corresponding amines.38
The displacement of fluoride from 2-fluoropyrimidine by aliphatic amines is about 100 times as fast as
the displacements of the corresponding chloride or bromide, and reactions can be carried out at room
temperature. Aryl-amines are unreactive under these conditions, but do react in the presence of trifluoroacetic acid or boron trifluoride. These mild conditions allow the use of the fluoro-compound in solid phase
synthesis (using excess of the fluoropyrimidine to ensure complete conversion).39
Nucleophilic displacement reactions are also sensitive to the presence of other substituents in the ring,
either by electronic or steric effects and this sometimes leads to a reversal of the typical selectivity,40 as
can changes in the nucleophile, for example tri-n-butylstannyllithium attacks 2,4-dichloropyrimidine at
C-2.41
258
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Halo-pyrimidines with other electron-donating substituents in the ring tend to be much less
reactive to nucleophilic substitution: this can be overcome by the use of the very nucleophilic O,Ndimethylhydroxylamine, followed by hydrogenolysis to reveal the amine.42
A device that is also used in pyridine and purine chemistry is the initial replacement of halogen with a
tertiary amine; the resulting salt, now having a better leaving group, undergoes nucleophilic substitution
more easily.43
Alkylsulfonyl groups are also good leaving groups (as alkylsulfinate anion) in all of the diazines,44 generally better than chloro, sometimes considerably so, for example 3-methanesulfonylpyridazine reacts 90
times faster with methoxide than does 3-chloropyridazine. Sulfinates can be used to catalyse displacements
of chlorine via the intermediacy of the sulfone.45
Even methoxy groups can be displaced by carbanions.46
Monsubstitution of 3,6-diiodopyridazine is easy, further manipulation via various palladium-catalysed
couplings (see also 4.2) providing a good route to 3,6-differently-substituted pyridazines.47 4-Methoxybenzylamine, as a surrogate for ammonia via cleavage by subsequent acid hydrolysis, displaces both chlorines
in 3,6-dichloropyridazine at 165 °C.48
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
259
Stannanes can be prepared via nucleophilic displacements at low temperature.49
14.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Diazines50
14.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
All three diazines undergo H/D exchange at all ring positions with MeONa/MeOD at 164 °C;51 the transient
carbanions that allow the exchange are formed somewhat faster than for pyridines, and again this is probably due to the acidifying, additional inductive withdrawal provided by the second nitrogen.
The three parent diazines have been lithiated adjacent to nitrogen (for pyrimidine at C-4, not C-2) using
the non-nucleophilic lithium tetramethylpiperidide, 52 but the resulting heteroaryl-lithiums are very unstable,
readily forming dimeric compounds by self addition. In some cases, the use of a somewhat higher temperature allows equilibration to a thermodynamic anion.53
Moderate to good yields of trapped products can be obtained either by using very short lithiation times
(pyridazine and pyrazine) or by in situ trapping, where the electrophile is added before the metallating
agent.54 4-Lithiopyridazine can be prepared by transmetallation of the corresponding tri-n-butylstannane
using n-butyllithium.
Direct zincation of each of the diazines can be achieved using a zinc diamide/lithium amide mixture,
pyrazine and pyrimidine (at C-4) in THF at room temperature, pyridazine (at C-3) requiring reaction at
reflux.55 Pyridazine and pyrimidine can also be directly zincated using a phosphazene base (t-Bu-P4) with
zinc iodide.56
Lithiation of diazines with directing groups (methoxy, methylthio, chloro, fluoro, even iodo, and
various carboxamides) is straightforward57 and such derivatives are used widely. In contrast to the useful
260
Heterocyclic Chemistry
carboxamide directing group, thiocarboxamide is not an ortho-directing group; N-t-butylpyridazine-3thiocarboxamide lithiates at C-5 and N-t-butylpyrazine-2-thiocarboxamide lithiates at C-5.58 2,4Dimethoxypyrimidine and 2,4-bis(methylthio)pyrimidine, i.e. protected uracils, can be selectively
metallated: the former is 5-lithiated with LiTMPMgCl.LiCl and TMP2Mg.2LiCl brings about 6magnesiation of both protected uracils.59
Studies of the positional lithiation of pyridin-2-yl-substituted diazines are instructive: each was subjected
to excess lithium tetramethylpiperidide at −78 °C and then quenched with DCl; the structures indicate the
percentage of deuteration at each position.60
14.4.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
Lithio-diazines are also accessible via halogen exchange with alkyl-lithiums, but very low temperatures
must be used in order to avoid nucleophilic addition to the ring.61 The examples below show how 5bromopyrimidine can be lithiated at C-4, using LDA, or alternatively can be made to undergo exchange,
using n-butyllithium.62 Note, also, that in some cases, reactions are carried out by adding the electrophile
before lithiation, a practice which incidentally illustrates that metal–halogen exchange with n-butyllithium
is faster than the addition of n-butyllithium to a carbonyl compound.63
Lithio-pyrimidines, -pyrazines, and -pyridazines have been converted by exchange with zinc chloride
into the more stable zinc compounds64 for use in palladium-catalysed couplings. Diazine Grignard reagents,
which can be prepared and used at 0 °C, or even, in some cases, at room temperature, are available via
halogen exchange reactions using i-propylmagnesium chloride.65 Cerium compounds (which give better
results than lithio-pyrimidines in reactions with enolisable ketones) can be prepared from either bromo- or
lithio-pyrimidine.66
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
14.5
261
Reactions with Reducing Agents
Due to their lower aromaticity, the diazines are more easily reduced than pyridines. Pyrazine and pyridazine
can be reduced to hexahydro-derivatives with sodium in hot ethanol; under these conditions pyridazine has
a tendency for subsequent reductive cleavage of the N–N bond.
Partial reductions of quaternary salts to dihydro-compounds can be achieved with borohydride, but such
processes are much less well studied than in pyridinium salt chemistry (8.6).67 1,4-Dihydropyrazines have
been produced with either silicon68 or amide69 protection at the nitrogen atoms, and all the diazines can be
reduced to tetrahydro derivatives with carbamates on nitrogen, which aids in stabilisation and thus allows
isolation.70 2-Amino-pyrimidines are reduced to 3,4,5,6-tetrahydro derivatives with triethylsilane in trifluoroacetic acid at room temperature, the products thus retaining a guanidine unit.71
14.6
Reactions with Radicals
Nucleophilic radicals add readily to diazines under Minisci conditions.72 Additions to pyrimidine often
show little selectivity, C-2 versus C-4, but a selective Minisci reaction on 5-bromopyrimidine provided a
convenient synthesis of the 4-benzoyl-derivative on a large scale.73 Similar reactions on pyridazines shows
selectivity for C-4,74 even when C-3 is unsubstituted. Pyrazines75 can, of course, substitute in only one type
of position.
14.7
Electrocyclic Reactions
All the diazines, providing they also have electron-withdrawing substituents, undergo Inverse Electron
Demand Diels–Alder (IEDDA) additions with dienophiles. Intramolecular reactions occur the most readily;
these do not even require the presence of activating substituents. The immediate products of such process
usually lose nitrogen (pyridazine adducts) or hydrogen cyanide (adducts from pyrimidines and pyrazines)
to generate benzene and pyridine products,76 respectively, as illustrated below.77
262
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Pyrazine isomerises to pyrimidine, in the vapour phase, on exposure to UV light.78
14.8
Diazine N-Oxides79
Although pyridazine and pyrazine N-oxides can be readily prepared by oxidation of the parent heterocycles,
pyrimidine N-oxides are more difficult to obtain in this way, but they can conveniently be prepared by ring
synthesis.80
Pyridazine and pyrazine N-oxides behave like their pyridine counterparts in electrophilic substitution.81
Displacement of nitro β to the N-oxide function occurs about as readily as that of a γ-nitro group, but
certainly, displacements on N-oxides proceed faster82 than for the corresponding base.
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
263
Nucleophilic substitution by halide, cyanide, carbon nucleophiles, such as enamines, and acetate (by
reaction with acetic anhydride), with concomitant loss of the oxide function, occur smoothly in all three
systems,83 though the site of introduction of the nucleophile is not always that predicted by analogy with
pyridine chemistry (α to the N-oxide), as illustrated by two of the examples below.13
The N-oxide grouping can also serve as an activating substituent to allow regioselective lithiation84
or for the further acidification (14.11) of side-chain methyl groups for condensations with, for example,
aromatic aldehydes or amyl nitrite.85
14.9
Oxy-Diazines
By far the most important naturally occurring diazines are the pyrimidinones uracil, thymine and cytosine,
which, as the nucleosides uridine, thymidine and cytidine, are components of the nucleic acids, and as a
consequence, a great deal of synthetic chemistry86 has been directed towards these types of compound in
the medicinal context (33.6.3 and 33.7). (In this chapter, the designations ‘4-pyrimidinone’ and ‘pyrimidin4-one’, etc, are both used, both are found widely in the literature, rather than the strictly correct ‘4(1H)pyrimidinone’, etc.)
14.9.1
Structure of Oxy-Diazines
With the exception of 5-hydroxypyrimidine, which is analogous to 3-hydroxypyridine, all the monooxygenated diazines exist predominantly as carbonyl tautomers and are thus categorised as diazinones.
The dioxy-diazines present a more complicated picture, for, in some cases, where both oxygens are α
or γ to a nitrogen, and both might be expected to exist in carbonyl form, one actually takes up the hydroxy
form: a well-known example is ‘maleic hydrazide’. One can rationalise the preference easily in this case,
264
Heterocyclic Chemistry
as resulting from the removal of the unfavourable interaction between two adjacent, partially positive
nitrogen atoms in the dicarbonyl form. On the other hand, uracil exists as the dione and most of its reactions87 can be interpreted on this basis. Barbituric acid adopts a tricarbonyl tautomeric form.
14.9.2 Reactions of Oxy-Diazines
Note, for many synthetic transformations, it is convenient to utilise halo- or alkoxy-diazines, in lieu of the
(oxidation level) equivalent carbonyl compounds. Often this device facilitates solubility; a final hydrolysis
converts to the carbonyl form.
14.9.2.1 Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
The deactivating effect of two ring nitrogens cannot always be overcome by a single oxygen substituent:
3-pyridazinone can be neither nitrated nor halogenated, or again, of the singly oxygenated pyrimidines,
only 2-pyrimidinone can be nitrated;88 pyrazinones seem to be the most reactive towards electrophilic
substitution.
5-Hydroxypyrimidine, the only phenolic diazine, is unstable even to dilute acid and no electrophilic
substitutions have been reported.
Uracils undergo a range of electrophilic substitution reactions at carbon, such as halogenation,
phenylsulfenylation,89 mercuration,90 nitration,91 and hydroxy- and chloromethylation.92 (CAUTION:
chloromethylations using formaldehyde and HCl produce the carcinogenic di-(chloromethyl) ether as a
by-product.) Bromination of uracils has been shown to proceed via the bromohydrin adduct (for fluorination
see 31.1.1), and similarly of 2-pyrimidinone, via the bromohydrin-hydrate;93 iodine with tetrabutylammonium peroxydisulfate allows iodination.94 Isopropylidene uridine reacts with aromatic aldehydes in the
presence of DABCO to give the 5-(arylmethanol). Both the isopropylidene group and the free 5′-hydroxyl
are required for a successful reaction, leading to the conclusion that C-5 is activated by addition of the
5′-alkoxide to C-6.95
Uracil derivatives can be nitrated at C-5 under conditions that allow retention of a sugar residue at N-1.96
Nitration at N-3 can also be achieved: N-3-nitro-compounds react with amines via an ANRORC mechanism, with displacement of nitramide and incorporation of the amine as a substituted N-3, as shown below.97
This sequence has been utilised to prepare 15N-3-labelled pyrimidines (31.2.2). An analogous ANRORC
process takes 1-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)-uracils to 1-arylamino-uracils by reaction with arylamines at room
temperature.91
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
265
The presence of both an oxygen and an amino substituent (see also 14.10) can allow substitution with
carbon electrophiles.98,99
14.9.2.2 Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Diazinones are quite susceptible to nucleophilic attack, reaction taking place generally via Michael-type
adducts rather than by attack at a carbonyl group. Grignard reagents add to give dihydro compounds and
good leaving groups can be displaced.100
The reaction of cyanide with a protected 5-bromouridine101 is instructive: under mild conditions a cinesubstituted product is obtained via a Michael addition followed by β-elimination of bromide, but at higher
temperatures, conversion of the 6- into the 5-cyano-isomer is observed, i.e. the product of apparent, direct
displacement of bromide is obtained. The higher-temperature product arises via an isomerisation involving
another Michael addition, then elimination of the 6-cyano group.
In a related reaction with the anion of phenylacetonitrile, the initial addition is followed by an internal
alkylation, generating a cyclopropane-containing product.102
266
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Ipso-substitution of 5-halo-uracils by amines can also be carried out – iodine under copper catalysis,103
fluorine with ultraviolet irradiation104 and bromine simply by heating.105
The conversion of 1,3-dimethyluracil into a mixture of N,N′-dimethylurea and the disodium salt of
formylacetic acid begins with the addition of hydroxide at C-6.106 The propensity for uracils to add nucleophiles can be put to synthetic use by reaction with double nucleophiles, such as ureas or guanidines,
when a sequence of addition, ring opening and reclosure can achieve (at first sight) extraordinary
transformations.107
Products of 2- and 4-substitution of hydrogen are obtained by reaction of the sodium salt of imidazole
with the phenyl pyrimidin-5-yl carbinol mesylate, with none of the product of direct substitution. Similar
results are obtained with the sodium salts of pyrrole and indole, but other nucleophiles, such as amines,
give complex product mixtures.108
14.9.2.3 Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Other Reactions at Nitrogen
Like pyridones, oxy-diazines are readily deprotonated under mild conditions, to give ambident anions which
can be alkylated conveniently by phase-transfer methods, alkylation usually occurring at nitrogen.109
N-Arylations of uracils also proceed in this way with, for example, 1-fluoro-4-nitrobenzene.110 3Pyridazinones alkylate cleanly on N-2 under phase-transfer conditions,111 but the regiochemistry of uracil
alkylation is sometimes difficult to control (see also below). Uracils are sufficiently acidic to take part in
Mitsunobu reactions.112
Carbon substitution can also be effected in some cases via delocalised N-anions, as in the reaction of
6-methyluracil with formaldehyde,113 or with diazonium salts.114
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
267
O-Alkylation is also possible and is particularly important in ribosides, where it occurs intramolecularly
and can be used to control the stereochemistry of substitution in the sugar residue, as illustrated in the
following sequence for replacement of the 3′-hydroxyl with azide and with overall retention of
configuration.115
N-Alkylation of O-silylated derivatives,116 for example with glycosyltrifluoro-acetimidates,117 is an
important method for unambiguous N-alkylation,118 especially for ribosylation of uracils.119
Stereospecific ribosylation of uracils and other pyrimidine bases can be carried out by attachment to the
5-hydroxymethyl substituent of the sugar, followed by internal delivery to C-2.120
268
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Selective alkylation of uracil at N-1 can be achieved via alkylation of the 3-benzoyl-derivative, itself
obtained by selective hydrolysis of the dibenzoyl compound.121
14.9.2.4 C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Diazinones
C-Lithiation of uridine derivatives has been thoroughly studied as a means for the introduction of functional
groups at C-5 and C-6. Chelating groups at C-5′ (hydroxyl or methoxymethoxy) favour 6-metallation,122
as do equilibrating conditions, indicating that this is the most stable lithio derivative. Kinetic lithiation, at
C-5, can be achieved when weakly chelating silyloxy-groups are used as protecting groups for the sugar.123
It is remarkable that protection of the N-3–H group is not necessary and this is illustrated again in the
6-lithiation of uracil carrying an ethoxymethyl-substitutent on N-1.124
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
269
NH-Protection is also unnecessary for the side-chain metallation of 6-methylpyrimidin-2-one.125
Zinc derivatives of uracils can be prepared directly by reaction of the appropriate halide with zinc
dust. They react with a limited range of electrophiles, but are particularly useful for palladium-catalysed
couplings126 (see also 4.1).
Halogen–magnesium exchange can be achieved with 5- or 6-iodouracils, again without masking the Nhydrogen groups.127
14.9.2.5 Replacement of Oxygen
Oxy-diazines, with the oxygen α to nitrogen, can be converted into halo-30,128 and thio compounds129 using
the same reagents used for 2- and 4-pyridones, including N-bromosuccinimide with triphenylphosphine.130
The reactions of O-silylated pyrazinones with phosphorus(III) bromide or phosphorus(V) chloride are also
efficient.131
Diazinones can also be converted into amino-diazines, without the (classical) intermediacy of an isolated
halo derivative, by various processes including the use of 1,2,4-triazole, as illustrated below.132
270
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A direct replacement of the 4-oxygen of 1-substituted uracils by amines is possible by reaction in the
presence of BOP and DBU.133
5-Hydroxypyrimidine-2,4-diones react as 5-ketones and undergo Wittig condensation, the double
bond thus formed isomerising back into the more stable position in the ring.134 Barbituric acid and
C-5 derivatives can be converted into uracils by first forming a 6-mesylate and then catalytic
hydrogenolysis.135
14.9.2.6 Electrocyclic Reactions
Mesoionic pyrazinium-3-olates undergo cycloadditions136 similar to those known for pyridinium-3-olates
(8.7) and pyrylium-3-olates (Section 11.1.7).
Heterodienophiles have also been studied: singlet oxygen across the 2,5-positions of pyrazinones.137 The
immediate cycloadduct is isolable when acryloyl cyanide is used as the heterodiene component in reaction
with a pyrimidine-2,4-dione.138
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
271
The reaction of deoxyuridine with nitrile oxides gives products of apparent electrophilic substitution, but
these probably arise by ring opening of a cycloadduct.139
Extensive studies have been made of the versatile 3,5-dihalo-2(1H)-pyrazinones and their derivatives.140
A remarkable ring synthesis141 provides the dichloropyrazinones and these, and their derivatives, undergo
cycloadditions.142
Because of possible relevance to mutagenesis, considerable effort has been devoted to study of the photochemical transformations of oxypyrimidines; uracil, for example, takes part in a [2 + 2] cycloaddition
with itself,143 or with vinylene carbonate (1,3-dioxol-2-one).144 Uracils undergo radical additions;145 these
too are of possible relevance to mutagenesis mechanisms.
14.10 Amino-Diazines
Amino-diazines exist in the amino form. They are stronger bases than the corresponding unsubstituted
systems and always protonate on one of the ring nitrogen atoms; where two isomeric cations are possible,
the order of preference for protonation is of a ring nitrogen, which is γ > α > β to the amino group, as
can be seen in the two examples below. A corollary of this is that those amino-diazines that contain a
γ-amino-azine system are the strongest bases.
The alkali-promoted rearrangement of quaternary salts derived from 2-aminopyrimidine provides the
simplest example of the Dimroth rearrangement.146 The larger the substituent on the positively charged ring
nitrogen, the more rapidly the rearrangement proceeds, no doubt as a result of the consequent relief in strain
between the substituent and the adjacent amino group.
272
Heterocyclic Chemistry
All of the amino-diazines react with nitrous acid to give the corresponding diazinones,30 by way of highly
reactive diazonium salts; even 5-aminopyrimidine does not give a stable diazonium salt, though a low yield
of 2-chloropyrimidine can be obtained by diazotisation of 2-aminopyrimidine in concentrated hydrochloric
acid.147
One amino group is sufficient in most cases to allow easy electrophilic substitution, halogenation148 for
example, and two amino groups activate the ring to attack even by weaker electrophilic reagents – for
example by thiocyanogen.149 Diamino-pyrimidines will couple with diazonium salts,150 which provides a
means for the introduction of a third nitrogen substituent.
Amino-oxy-pyrimidines,151 and amino-dioxy-pyrimidines152 can be C-nitrosated, and such 5,6dinitrogen-substituted pyrimidines, after reduction to 5,6-diamino-pyrimidines, are important intermediates
for the synthesis of purines (an example is shown below; see also 27.11.1.1) and pteridines (14.14).
2-Amino-5-bromopyrimidine can be converted into a 5-boronic acid, without the need to mask the amino
group.153
14.11 Alkyl-Diazines
All alkyl-diazines, with the exception of 5-alkyl-pyrimidines, undergo condensations that involve deprotonation of the alkyl group,154 in the same way as α- and γ-picolines.155 The intermediate anions are stabilised
by mesomerism involving one, or in the case of 2- and 4-alkyl-pyrimidines, both nitrogens.
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
273
In pyrimidines, a 4-alkyl- is deprotonated more readily than a 2-alkyl-group;156 here again one sees the
greater stability associated with a γ-quinonoid resonating anion. Side-chain radical halogenation selects a
pyrimidine-5-methyl over a pyrimidine-4-methyl; the reverse selectivity can be achieved by halogenation
in acid solution – presumably an N-protonated, side-chain-deprotonated species, i.e. the enamine tautomer,
is involved.157
14.12
Quaternary Diazinium Salts
The already high susceptibility of the diazines to nucleophilic addition is greatly increased by quaternisation. Addition of organometallic reagents to N-acyl quaternary salts has been achieved in some cases, but
is much more restricted than is the case with pyridines (8.12.2). Thus, allylstannanes158 and -silanes159 and
silyl enol ethers have been added to diazine salts (hydride also traps such salts (14.5)). Pyridazines give
good yields of mono-adducts with attack mainly α to the acylated nitrogen, but the regioselectivity of silyl
ether addition160 is, in some cases, sensitive to substituents. Pyrazine gives mainly double addition products161 and pyrimidine produces only the double adduct. Reissert adducts (cf. 9.13) have been described
for pyridazine and pyrimidine.162
14.13
Synthesis of Diazines
Routes for the ring synthesis of the isomeric diazines are, as one would expect, quite different one from
the other, and must therefore be dealt with separately.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
14.13.1 Pyridazines
14.13.1.1 From a 1,4-Dicarbonyl Compound and a Hydrazine
A common method for the synthesis of pyridazines involves a 1,4-dicarbonyl compound reacting with
hydrazine; unless the four-carbon component is unsaturated, a final oxidative step is needed to give an
aromatic pyridazine.
The most useful procedure utilises a 1,4-keto-ester giving a dihydro-pyridazinone, which can be easily
dehydrogenated to the fully aromatic heterocycle, often by C-bromination then dehydrobromination;163
alternatively, simple air oxidation can often suffice.164 6-Aryl-pyridazin-3-ones have been produced by this
route in a number of ways: using an α-amino nitrile as a masked ketone in the four-carbon component,165
or by reaction of an acetophenone with glyoxylic acid and then hydrazine.166 Friedel–Crafts acylation
using succinic anhydride is an alternative route to 1,4-keto-acids, reaction with hydrazine giving 6-arylpyridazinones.167 Alkylation of an enamine with a phenacyl bromide produces 1-aryl-1,4-diketones, allowing synthesis of 3-aryl-pyridazines.168
Maleic anhydride and hydrazine give the hydroxy-pyridazinone (‘maleic hydrazide’) directly,169 the
additional unsaturation in the 1,4-dicarbonyl component meaning that an oxidative step is not required;
conversion of 3-hydroxypyridazin-6-one into 3,6-dichloropyridazine makes this useful intermediate very
easily available. Mucohalo acids (18.1.1.4), synthons for 4-carboxy-aldehydes, are an oxidation level down
and produce 1-aryl-pyridazin-3-ones on reaction with arylhydrazines.170
The use of saturated 1,4-diketones can suffer from the disadvantage that they can react with hydrazine
in two ways, giving mixtures of the desired dihydro-pyridazine and an N-amino-pyrrole; this complication
does not arise when unsaturated 1,4-diketones are employed.171 There is also no structural ambiguity when
aryl-hydrazines are reacted with pent-4-ynoic acid catalysed by zinc chloride, producing 2-aryl-3,4-dihydro6-methyl-pyridazin-3-ones.172 Synthons for unsaturated 1,4-diketones are available as cyclic acetals from
furans (18.1.4), and react with hydrazines to give the fully aromatic pyridazines directly.173
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
275
14.13.1.2 By Cycloaddition of a 1,2,4,5-Tetrazine with an Alkyne
Cycloaddition of a 1,2,4,5-tetrazine with an alkyne (or its equivalent), with elimination of nitrogen gives
pyridazines.
This process works best when the tetrazine has electron-withdrawing substituents, but 1,2,4,5-tetrazine
itself will react with a range of simple alkynes, enamines and enol ethers, under quite moderate conditions.174 A wide range of substituents can be incorporated via the acetylene, including nitro and trimethylsilyl, affording the means to access other substituted pyridazines.175 The preparation of a boronic ester is
another example.176
14.13.2 Pyrimidines
14.13.2.1 From a 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compound and an N–C–N Fragment
The most general pyrimidine ring synthesis involves the combination of a 1,3-dicarbonyl component with
an N–C–N fragment such as a urea, an amidine or a guanidine.
The choice of N–C–N component – amidine,177 guanidine,178 or a urea179 (thiourea180) – governs the
substitution at C-2 in the product heterocycle. Although not formally ‘N–C–N’ components, formamide,181
or an orthoester, plus ammonia182 can serve instead of urea in this type of approach. The dicarbonyl
276
Heterocyclic Chemistry
component can be generated in situ, for example formylacetic acid (by decarbonylation of malic acid), or
a synthon used (1,1,3,3-tetramethoxypropane for malondialdehyde). When a nitrile serves as a carbonyl
equivalent, the resulting heterocycle now carries an amino-substituent.183 The use of 2-bromo-1,1,3,3tetramethoxypropane provides a route to 5-bromopyrimidine,184 methanetricarboxaldehyde reacts with
amidines to give 5-formyl-pyrimidines,185 and 2-aminomalondialdehyde leads to 5-amino-pyrimidines.186
The examples below illustrate some of these.187
Other synthons for 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds that have been successfully applied include β-chloro-α,βunsaturated ketones and aldehydes,188 β-dimethylamino-α,β-unsaturated ketones (easily obtained from
ketones by reaction with DMFDMA),189 β-alkoxy-enones190 and vinyl-amidinium salts.191 Alkynyl-ketones
react with S-alkyl-isothioureas, giving 2-alkylthio-pyrimidines192 and propiolic acid reacts with urea to give
uracil directly in about 50% yield.193 1,3-Keto-esters with formamidine produce 4-pyrimidinones194 and
C-substituted formamidines with ethyl cyanoacetate give 2-substituted-6-amino-4-pyrimidinones.195
In analogy, pyrimidines fused to other rings, for example as in quinazolines, can be made from orthoaminonitriles196 and in general, from β-enamino esters.197
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
277
Barbituric acid and barbiturates can be synthesised by reacting a malonate with a urea,198 or a bis primary
amide of a substituted malonic acid with diethyl carbonate.199
14.13.2.2 By Cycloadditions
Cycloaddition of a 1,3,5-triazine with an alkyne (or its equivalent) gives pyrimidines after loss of hydrogen
cyanide.
The formation of pyrimidines200 via aza-Diels–Alder reactions is similar to the preparation of pyridazines
from tetrazines (cf. 14.13.1.2).
14.13.2.3 From 3-Ethoxyacryloyl Isocyanate and Primary Amines
Primary amines add to the isocyanate group in a 3-alkoxyacryloyl isocyanate; ring closure then gives
pyrimidines via intramolecular displacement of the alkoxy-group.
278
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Uracils can be prepared via reaction of primary amines with 3-ethoxyacryloyl isocyanate;201 this method
is particularly suitable for complex amines and has found much use in recent years in the synthesis of, for
example, carbocyclic nucleoside analogues as potential anti-viral agents.202 The immediate product of
amine/isocyanate interaction can be cyclised under either acidic or basic203 conditions; the method can also
be applied to thiouracil synthesis by the use of the corresponding isothiocyanate.
Though different bonds are made, it is useful to include here the enaminothioimidate shown below for
the synthesis of pyrimidin-2-ones and -thiones, by reaction with isocyanates and isothiocyanates, respectively, proceeding via a cycloaddition between the azadiene and the imine unit of the –N=C=S, then loss
of dimethylamine to aromatise.204
14.13.2.4 From an Aldehyde, a 1,3-Dicarbonyl-Compound and a Urea
The Biginelli Synthesis205
This very old synthesis206 of 1,4-dihydropyrimidin-2-ones, which is analogous to the Hantzsch pyridine
synthesis (8.14.1.2), is much used, particularly for library synthesis, and many variants of the reaction
conditions have been described; most often the condensation is acid or Lewis-acid catalysed. The products
are important in their own right, but can also be dehydrogenated to give pyrimidin-2-ones.207 If guanidine
is used instead of the urea component, 2-amino-1,4-dihydropyrimidines result.208
14.13.2.5 From Ketones
Condensation of ketones with two mole equivalents of a nitrile in the presence of trifluoromethanesulfonic
acid anhydride is a useful method for the production of a limited range of pyrimidines, where the substituents at C-2 and C-4 are identical.209, 210
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
279
Methyl ketones give 4-monosubstituted-pyrimidines when reacted with formamide at high temperature.211 Although the yields, apart from aryl-methyl-ketones, are not large, the method is extremely simple.
Aryl higher-alkyl ketones also react in this way, giving 4-aryl-5-alkyl-pyrimidines.
14.13.3 Pyrazines
Pyrazine is not easily made in the laboratory. Commercially, the high temperature cyclodehydrogenation
of precursors such as N-hydroxyethylethane-1,2-diamine is used.
14.13.3.1 From the Self-Condensation of a 2-Amino-Ketone
Symmetrical pyrazines result from the spontaneous self condensation of two mole equivalents of a 2-aminoketone, or 2-amino-aldehyde, followed by an oxidation.
2-Amino-carbonyl compounds, which are stable only as their salts, are usually prepared in situ by the
reduction of 2-diazo-, -oximino- or -azido-ketones. The dihydropyrazines produced by this strategy are
very easily aromatised, for example by air oxidation, and often distillation alone is sufficient to bring about
disproportionation.212
α-Amino esters are more stable than α-amino-ketones but nonetheless easily self-condense to give
heterocycles, known as 2,5-diketopiperazines. These compounds are resistant to oxidation, but can
be used to prepare aromatic pyrazines after first converting them into dichloro- or dialkoxydihydropyrazines.213
14.13.3.2 From 1,2-Dicarbonyl Compounds and 1,2-Diamines
1,2-Dicarbonyl compounds undergo double condensation with 1,2-diamines; an oxidation is then required.
280
Heterocyclic Chemistry
This method is well suited to the formation of symmetrical pyrazines,214 but if both diketone and diamine
are unsymmetrical, two isomeric pyrazines are formed. The dihydro-pyrazines can be dehydrogenated and
they will also react with aldehydes and ketones, with introduction of another alkyl group at the same time
as achieving the aromatic oxidation level.215
Other dinitrogen components that also carry unsaturation are α-amino acid amides,216 from which
pyrazinones can be formed; a special example is aminomalonamide and a pyrazinone synthesis using this
unit is shown below.217
The direct synthesis of aromatic pyrazines using a 1,2-dicarbonyl compound requires a 1,2-diaminoalkene, but very few simple examples of such compounds are known; diaminomaleonitrile218 is stable and
serves in this context.
An ingenious modification of the general method uses 5,6-diaminouracil as a masked unsaturated 1,2diamine: the products can be hydrolysed with cleavage of the pyrimidinone ring finally arriving at 2-aminopyrazine-3-acids as products.219
14.13.3.3 From 1,2-Diketone Mono-Oximes
Alkyl-pyrazines can be produced by an ingenious sequence involving an electrocyclic ring closure of a
1-hydroxy-1,4-diazatriene, aromatisation being completed by loss of the oxygen from the original oxime
hydroxyl group.220
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
14.13.4 Notable Syntheses of Diazines
14.13.4.1 4,6-Diamino-5-thioformamido-2-methylpyrimidine
4,6-Diamino-5-thioformamido-2-methylpyrimidine can be converted into 2-methyladenine.
14.13.4.2 Carbocyclic bromovinyldeoxyuridine
Carbocyclic bromovinyldeoxyuridine (CarbaBVDU) is an anti-viral agent.221
281
282
Heterocyclic Chemistry
14.13.4.3 Coelenterazine
Coelenterazine, a bioluminescent compound from a jellyfish, with potential for use in bioassays, has been
synthesised in an overall 25% yield from chloropyrazine.222
14.14
Pteridines
Pyrazino[2,3-d]pyrimidines are known as ‘pteridines’,223 because the first examples of the ring system,
as natural products, were found in pigments, like xanthopterin (yellow), in the wings of butterflies
(Lepidoptera). The pteridine ring system has subsequently been found in coenzymes that use tetrahydrofolic
acid (derived from the vitamin folic acid), and in the cofactor of the oxomolybdoenzymes224 and comparable
tungsten enzymes.
The synthesis of the pteridine ring system has been approached by two obvious routes: one is the fusion
of the pyrazine ring onto a pre-formed 4,5-diamino-pyrimidine, and the second, the elaboration of the
pyrimidine ring on a pre-formed pyrazine. The first of these, the Isay synthesis, suffers from the disadvantage that condensation of the heterocyclic 1,2-diamine with an unsymmetrical 1,2-dicarbonyl compound
The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
283
usually leads to a mixture of 6- or 7-substituted isomers.225 It was to avoid this difficulty that the alternative
strategy, the Taylor synthesis, now widely used, starting with a pyrazine, was developed.226 This approach
has the further advantage that because the pyrazine ring is pre-synthesised, using 2-cyanoglycinamide,227
it eventually produces, regioselectively, 6-substituted pteridines – substitution at the 6-position is the
common pattern in natural pteridines.
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 13 and 14):
(a) Why is it difficult to form diprotonic salts from diazines?
(b) How do uridine, thymidine and cytidine differ?
(c) Are the diazines more or less reactive towards C-electrophilic substitution than pyridine?
(d) What factor assists and what factor mediates against nucleophilic displacement of hydrogen in diazines?
(e) Which is the only chlorodiazine that does not undergo easy nucleophilic displacement, and why?
(f) What precaution is usually necessary in order to lithiate a diazine?
(g) Write out one example each where a pyridazine, a pyrimidine and a pyrazine undergo a cycloaddition,
acting as a diene or an azadiene.
(h) How could one convert an oxy-diazine, where the oxygen is α to a nitrogen: (i) into a corresponding
chloro-diazine, (ii) efficiently into a corresponding N-methyl-diazinone, (iii) into a corresponding
amino-diazine, but without involving a chloro-diazine.
(i) What is the product from hydrazine and a 1,4-keto-ester? How could it be converted into a
pyridazinone?
(j) Given pentane-2,4-dione, how could one prepare: (i) 4,6-dimethylpyrimidine, (ii) 4,6-dimethyl-2pyrimidone (iii) 2-amino-4,6-dimethylpyrimidine?
(k) What substitution pattern is the easiest to achieve in the ring synthesis of pyrazines?
More advanced exercises:
1. What compounds are produced at each stage in the following sequences: (i) pyridazin-3-one reacted
with POCl3 (→C4H3N2Cl) and this with NaOMe (→ C5H6N2O); (ii) chloropyrazine with BuNH2/120 °C
(→ C8H13N3).
2. What are the structures of the compounds formed: (i) C6H9IN2S from 3-methylthiopyridazine and
C6H8ClIN2 from 3-chloro-6-methylpyridazine, each with MeI; (ii) C5H2Cl2N2O from treatment of
2,6-dichloropyrazine with LiTMP then HCO2Et; (iii) C14H12N2O2 from 2,6-dimethoxypyrazine with
LiTMP, then I2 then PhC≡CH/Pd(0).
3. Decide the structures of the compounds produced by the following sequences: (i) C6H9N3 from 2aminopyrimidine first with NaNO2/c. HCl/–15 °C and then the product with Me2NH; (ii) C18H14N2 from
3-methyl-6-phenylpyridazine with PhCH=O/Ac2O/heat.
284
Heterocyclic Chemistry
4. Write sequences and structures for intermediates and final products in the following ring syntheses:
(i) chlorobenzene with succinic anhydride/AlCl3 (→ C10H9ClO3), then this with N2H4 (→ C10H9ClN2O)
and finally this with Br2/AcOH (→ C10H7ClN2O); (ii) 2,5-dimethylfuran reacted with Br2 in MeOH
(→ C8H14O3), then this firstly with aqueous acid and then hydrazine (→ C6H8N2).
5. What would be the pyrimidine products from the following combinations: (i) 1,1-dimethoxybutan-3-one
with guanidinium hydrogen carbonate (→ C5H7N3); (ii) ethyl cyanoacetate with guanidine/NaOEt
(→ C4H6N4O); (iii) ethyl cyanoacetate with urea/EtONa (→ C4H5N3O2); (iv) (EtO)2CHCH2CH(OEt)2/
HCl/urea (→ C4H4N2O),
6. Decide the structures of the final products and the intermediates (in part (i)) from the following combinations of reactants: (i) MeOCH2COMe with EtO2CH/Na (→ C5H8O3), then this with thiourea
(→ C6H8N2OS), then this with H2/Ni (→ C6H8N2O); (ii) PhCOCH2CO2Et with EtC(=NH)NH2
(→ C12H12N2O); (iii) PhCOCHO with MeCH(NH2)CONH2 (→ C11H10N2O).
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The Diazines: Pyridazine, Pyrimidine, and Pyrazine: Reactions and Synthesis
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15
Typical Reactivity of Pyrroles,
Furans and Thiophenes
In this chapter are gathered the most important generalisations that can be made, and the general lessons
that can be learned about the reactivity, and relative reactivities, one with the other, of the prototypical
five-membered aromatic heterocycles: pyrroles, furans and thiophenes.
Typical reactions of pyrroles, furans and thiophenes
The chemistry of pyrrole and thiophene is dominated by a readiness to undergo electrophilic substitution,
preferentially at an α-position but, with only slightly less alacrity, also at a β-position, should the α positions be blocked. It is worth re-emphasising the stark contrast between the five- and six-membered heterocycles – the five-membered systems considered in this chapter react much more readily with electrophiles
than does benzene, but the azines react much less readily (cf. Chapters 7–9 and 13, 14).
An example of easy α-electrophilic substitution of pyrrole with a weak electrophile
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
290
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Positional selectivity in these five-membered systems, and their high reactivity to electrophilic attack,
are well explained by a consideration of the Wheland intermediates (and by implication, the transition states
that lead to them) for electrophilic substitution. Intermediate cations from both α- and β-attack are stabilised
(shown for attack on pyrrole). The delocalisation, involving donation of electron density from the heteroatom, is greater in the intermediate from α-attack, as illustrated by the number of low-energy resonance
contributors. Note that the C–C double bond in the intermediate for β-attack is not and cannot become
involved in delocalisation of the charge.
Intermediates for electrophilic substitution of pyrrole
There is a simple parallelism between the reaction of a pyrrole with an electrophile and the comparable
reaction of an aniline, and indeed the reactivity of pyrrole towards electrophiles is in the same range as
that of aniline.
Electrophilic attack on electron-rich pyrrole compared with attack on electron-rich aniline
The five-membered heterocycles do not react with electrophiles at the heteroatom; perhaps this surprises
the heterocyclic newcomer, most obviously with respect to pyrrole, for here, it might have been anticipated,
the nitrogen lone pair would be easily donated to an incoming electrophile, as it would be in reactions of
its saturated counterpart, pyrrolidine. The difference is that in pyrrole, electrophilic addition at the nitrogen
would lead to a substantial loss of resonance stabilisation – the molecule would be converted into a cyclic
butadiene, with an attached nitrogen carrying a positive charge localised on that nitrogen atom. The analogy
with aniline falls down for, of course, anilines do react easily with simple electrophiles (e.g. protons) at
nitrogen. The key difference is that, although some stabilisation in terms of overlap between the aniline
nitrogen lone pair and benzenoid π-system is lost, the majority of the stabilisation energy, associated with
the six-electron benzenoid π-system, is retained when aniline nitrogen donates its lone pair of electrons to
a proton (electrophile).
Typical Reactivity of Pyrroles, Furans and Thiophenes 291
Of the trio – pyrrole, furan and thiophene – the first is by far the most susceptible to electrophilic attack:
this susceptibility is linked to the greater electron-releasing ability of neutral trivalent nitrogen, and the
concomitant greater stability of a positive charge on tetravalent nitrogen. This finds its simplest expression
in the relative basicities of saturated amines, ethers and sulfides, respectively, which are seen to parallel
nicely the relative order of reactivity of pyrrole, furan and thiophene towards electrophilic attack at carbon,
but involving major assistance by donation from the heteroatom, i.e. the development of positive charge
on the heteroatom.
In qualitative terms, the much greater reactivity of pyrrole is illustrated by its rapid reaction with weak
electrophiles like the benzenediazonium cation and nitrous acid, neither of which reacts with furan or
thiophene. It is relevant to note that N,N-dimethylaniline reacts rapidly with these reactants, whereas anisole
does not.
Substituents ranged on five-membered rings have directing effects comparable to those that they exert
on a benzene (or pyridine) ring. Alkyl groups, for example, direct ortho and para, and nitro groups direct
meta although, strictly, the terms ortho/meta/para cannot be applied to the five-membered situation. The
very strong tendency for α-electrophilic substitution is, however, the dominating influence in most instances,
and products resulting from attack following guidance from the substituent are generally minor products
in mixtures where the dominant substitution is at an available α-position. The influence of substituents is
felt least in furans.
Effect of substitutents on regioselectivity of electrophilic substitution in five-membered heterocycles
A significant aspect of the chemistry of furans is the occurrence of 2,5-additions initiated by electrophilic
attack: a Wheland intermediate is formed normally, but then adds a nucleophile, when a sufficiently reactive one is present, instead of then losing a proton. Conditions can, however, usually be chosen to allow
the formation of a ‘normal’ α-substitution product. The occurrence of such processes in the case of furan
is generally considered to be associated with its lower aromatic resonance stabilisation energy – there is
less to regain by loss of a proton and the consequent return to an aromatic furan.
Formation of adducts from furans
292
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The lower aromaticity of furans also manifests itself in a much greater tendency to undergo cycloadditions, as a 4-π, diene component in Diels–Alder reactions. That is to say, furans are much more like dienes,
and less like six-electron aromatic systems, than are pyrroles and thiophenes. However, the last two systems
can be made to undergo cycloadditions by carrying out high-pressure reactions or, in the case of pyrroles,
by ‘reducing the aromaticity’ by the device of inserting an electron-withdrawing group onto the nitrogen.
In direct contrast with electron-deficient heterocycles like pyridines and the diazines, the five-membered
systems do not undergo nucleophilic substitutions, except in situations (especially in furan and thiophene
chemistry) where halide is situated ortho or para to a nitro group. In the manipulation of the five-membered
heterocycles, extensive use has been made of the various palladium(0)-catalysed couplings regimes, as
illustrated with one example (see 4.2 for a detailed discussion).
Deprotonations are extremely important: furan and thiophene are C-deprotonated by strong bases, such
as n-butyllithium or lithium diisopropylamide, at their α-positions, because here the heteroatom can exert
its greatest acidifying influence by inductive withdrawal of electron density, to give anions that can then
be made to react with the whole range of electrophiles, affording α-substituted furans and thiophenes. This
methodology compliments the use of electrophilic substitutions to introduce groups, also regioselectively
α, but has the advantage that even weak electrophiles, such as aldehydes and ketones, can be utilised. The
employment of metallated N-substituted (blocked) pyrroles is an equally valid strategy for producing αsubstituted pyrroles. Pyrroles that have an N-hydrogen are deprotonated at the nitrogen, and the pyrryl
anion thus generated is nucleophilic at the heteroatom, providing a means for the introduction of groups
on nitrogen.
The potential for interaction of the heteroatom (electron donation) with positive charge on a side-chain,
especially at an α-position, has a number of effects: amongst the most important is the enhanced reactivity
of side-chain derivatives carrying leaving groups. Similarly, carbonyl groups attached to five-membered
heterocycles have somewhat reduced reactivity, as implied by the resonance contributor shown.
Side-chain reactivity
Generally speaking, the five-membered heterocycles are far less stable to oxidative conditions than
benzenes or pyridines, with thiophenes bearing the closest similarity – in many ways thiophenes, of the
trio, are the most like carboaromatic compounds. Hydrogenation of thiophenes, particularly over nickel as
catalyst, leads to saturation and removal of the heteroatom. Some controlled chemical reductions of pyrroles
and furans are known, which give dihydro-products.
The ring synthesis of five-membered heterocycles has been extensively investigated, and many and subtle
methods have been devised. Each of these three heterocyclic systems can be prepared from 1,4-dicarbonylcompounds, for furans by acid-catalysed cyclising dehydration, and for pyrroles and thiophenes by interaction with ammonia or a primary amine, or a source of sulfur, respectively.
Typical Reactivity of Pyrroles, Furans and Thiophenes 293
Ring synthesis of five-membered heterocycles from 1,4-dicarbonyl compounds
As illustrations of the variety of methods available, the three processes below show: (i) the addition of
isonitrile anions to α,β-unsaturated nitro-compounds, with loss of nitrous acid to bring about aromatisation,
(ii) the interaction of thioglycolates with 1,3-dicarbonyl-compounds, for the synthesis of thiophene 2-esters,
and (iii) the cycloaddition/cycloreversion preparation of furans from oxazoles.
Three of the many ring synthetic routes to five-membered heterocycles
16
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
Pyrrole1 and the simple alkyl-pyrroles are colourless liquids, with relatively weak odours rather like that
of aniline, which, also like the anilines, darken by autoxidation. Pyrrole itself is readily available commercially, and is manufactured by alumina-catalysed gas-phase interaction of furan and ammonia. Pyrrole
was first isolated from coal tar in 1834 and then in 1857 from the pyrolysate of bone, the chemistry
of which is similar to an early laboratory method for the preparation of pyrrole – the pyrolysis of the
ammonium salt of the sugar acid, mucic acid. The word pyrrole is derived from the Greek for red, which
refers to the bright red colour which pyrrole imparts to a pinewood shaving moistened with concentrated
hydrochloric acid.
The early impetus for the study of pyrroles came from degradative work relating to the structures of
two pigments central to life processes, the blood respiratory pigment haem, and chlorophyll, the green
photosynthetic pigment of plants (32.3).2 Chlorophyll and haem are synthesised in the living cell from
porphobilinogen, the only aromatic pyrrole to play a role – a vitally important role – in fundamental
metabolism.3,4
16.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents5
Whereas pyrroles are resistant to nucleophilic addition and substitution, they are very susceptible to attack
by electrophilic reagents and undergo easy C-substitution. Pyrrole itself, N- and C-monoalkyl- and to a
lesser extent C,C′-dialkyl-pyrroles, are polymerised by strong acids, so that many of the electrophilic
reagents useful in benzene chemistry cannot be used. However, the presence of an electron-withdrawing
substituent, such as an ester, prevents polymerisation and allows the use of the strongly acidic, nitrating
and sulfonating agents.
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
296
Heterocyclic Chemistry
16.1.1 Substitution at Carbon
16.1.1.1 Protonation
In solution, reversible proton addition occurs at all positions, being by far the fastest at the nitrogen, and
about twice as fast at C-2 as at C-3.6 In the gas phase, mild acids like C4H9+ and NH4+ protonate pyrrole
only on carbon and with a larger proton affinity at C-2 than at C-3.7 Thermodynamically, the stablest cation
is the 2H-pyrrolium ion, formed by protonation at C-2 and observed pKaH values for pyrroles are for these
2-protonated species. The weak N-basicity of pyrroles is the consequence of the absence of mesomeric
delocalisation of charge in the 1H-pyrrolium cation.
The pKaH values of a wide range of pyrroles have been determined:8 pyrrole itself is an extremely weak
base with a pKaH value of −3.8; this, as a 0.1 molar solution in 1N acid, corresponds to only one protonated
molecule to about 5000 unprotonated. However, basicity increases very rapidly with increasing alkyl substitution, so that 2,3,4,5-tetramethylpyrrole, with a pKaH of +3.7, is almost completely protonated on carbon
as a 0.1 molar solution in 1N acid (this can be compared with aniline, which has a pKaH of +4.6). Thus
alkyl groups have a striking stabilising effect on cations – isolable, crystalline salts can be obtained from
pyrroles carrying t-butyl groups.9
Reactions of Protonated Pyrroles
The 2H- and 3H-pyrrolium cations are essentially iminium ions and as such are electrophilic: they play the
key role in polymerisation (see 16.1.8) and reduction (16.7) of pyrroles in acid. In the reaction of pyrroles
with hydroxylamine hydrochloride, which produces ring-opened 1,4-dioximes, it is probably the more
reactive 3H-pyrrolium cation that is the starter.10 Primary amines, RNH2, can be protected, by conversion
into 1-R-2,5-dimethylpyrroles (16.16.1.1), recovery of the amine being by way of this reaction with
hydroxylamine.11,12
16.1.1.2 Nitration
Nitrating mixtures suitable for benzenoid compounds cause complete decomposition of pyrrole, but reaction
occurs smoothly with acetyl nitrate at low temperature, giving mainly 2-nitropyrrole. This nitrating agent
is formed by mixing fuming nitric acid with acetic anhydride to form acetyl nitrate and acetic acid, thus
removing the strong mineral acid. In the nitration of pyrrole with this reagent, it has been shown that C-2
is 1.3 × 105 and C-3 is 3 × 104 times more reactive than benzene.13 A combination of PPh3, AgNO3 and
Br2 also produces a comparable mixture of nitro-pyrroles.14
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
297
N-Substitution of pyrroles gives rise to increased proportions of β-nitration, even an N-methyl producing
a β:α ratio of 1:3, and the much larger t-butyl actually reverses the relative positional reactivities, with a
β:α ratio of 4:1.15 The intrinsic α-reactivity can be effectively completely blocked with a very large substituent such as a triisopropylsilyl (TIPS) group, especially useful since it can be subsequently easily
removed.16
16.1.1.3 Sulfonation and Reactions with Other Sulfur Electrophiles
For sulfonation, a mild reagent of low acidity must be used: the pyridine–sulfur trioxide compound
smoothly converts pyrrole into a sulfonate initially believed to be the 2-isomer,17 but subsequently shown
to be pyrrole-3-sulfonic acid.18 It seems likely that this isomer results from reversibility of the sulfonation,
and the eventual formation of the more stable acid. Chlorosulfonation of 1-phenylsulfonylpyrrole is clean
and an efficient route to pyrrole 3-sulfonic-acid derivatives.19
Sulfenylation of pyrrole20 and thiocyanation of pyrrole21 or of 1-phenylsulfonylpyrrole22 also provide
means for the electrophilic introduction of sulfur groups, at lower oxidation levels, and in contrast to the
sulfonations, at the pyrrole α-position.
Acid catalyses rearrangement of sulfur substituents from the α-position to give β-substituted pyrroles23
(see also 16.1.1.5 and 16.12), perhaps initiated by protonation at the sulfur-bearing α-carbon.
298
Heterocyclic Chemistry
16.1.1.4 Halogenation
Pyrrole reacts with halogens so readily that unless controlled conditions are used, tetrahalo-pyrroles are the
only isolable products, and these are stable.24 Attempts to mono-halogenate simple alkyl-pyrroles fail,
probably because of side-chain halogenation and the generation of extremely reactive pyrryl-alkyl halides
(16.11).
Although unstable compounds, 2-bromo- and 2-chloropyrrole (also using SO2Cl2) can be prepared by
direct halogenation of pyrrole with the N-halo-succinimides;25 2-bromopyrrole can be conveniently
prepared using 1,3-dibromo-4,4-dimethylhydantoin and can be stabilised by conversion into its N-tbutoxycarbonyl derivative.26 Formation of N-tosyl derivatives27 is also recommended for stabilising
2-bromopyrrole.
N-Triisopropylsilylpyrrole monobrominates and monoiodinates cleanly and nearly exclusively at C-3,
and with two mole equivalents of N-bromosuccinimide it dibrominates, at C-3 and C-417,28 N-Tosylpyrrole
3,4-dibrominates with bromine in hot acetic acid,29 whereas N-Boc-pyrrole gives the 2,5-dibromo derivative
using NBS at 0 °C.30 Selective replacement of trimethylsilyl groups of N-blocked 3,4-bis(trimethylsilyl)pyrroles with iodine requires the halogen with CF3CO2Ag at −78 °C.31
16.1.1.5 Acylation
Direct acetylation of pyrrole with acetic anhydride at 200 °C leads to 2-acetylpyrrole as main product,
together with some 3-acetylpyrrole, but no N-acetylpyrrole.32 N-Acetylpyrrole can be obtained in high
yield by heating pyrrole with N-acetylimidazole.33 Alkyl substitution facilitates C-acylation, so that 2,3,4trimethylpyrrole yields the 5-acetyl-derivative, even on refluxing in acetic acid. The more reactive trifluoroacetic anhydride and trichloroacetyl chloride react with pyrrole efficiently, even at room temperature, to
give 2-substituted products, alcoholysis or hydrolysis of which provides a clean route to pyrrole-2-esters
or -acids.34 Nitration of 2-(chloroacetyl)pyrrole occurs at C-4 and this regioselectivity applies also to acylation35 of pyrroles with electron-withdrawing groups at C-2.
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
299
N-Acyl benzotriazoles very effectively acylate pyrrole at C-2 using TiCl4 catalysis; TIPS-pyrrole is acylated with this reagent at C-3.36
Vilsmeier37,38 acylation of pyrroles, formylation with dimethylformamide/phosphoryl chloride in
particular, is a generally applicable process.39 The actual electrophilic species is an N,N-dialkylchloromethyleneiminium cation (the chloride is available commercially as a solid).40 Here again, the presence of a large pyrrole-N-substituent perturbs the intrinsic α-selectivity, formylation of N-tritylpyrrole
favouring the β-position by 2.8 : 1 and trifluoroacetylation of this pyrrole giving only the 3-ketone;41 the
use of bulky N-silyl substituents allows β-acylation with the possibility of subsequent removal of the Nsubstituent.42 The final intermediate in a Vilsmeier reaction is an iminium salt requiring hydrolysis to
produce the isolated product aldehyde. When a secondary lactam is used, hydrolysis does not take place
and a cyclic imine is obtained.43
The Vilsmeier reaction
Acylation of 1-phenylsulfonylpyrrole, with its deactivating N-substituent, requires more forcing conditions in the form of a Lewis acid as catalyst, the regioselectivity of attack depending both on the choice of
catalyst and on the particular acylating agent, as illustrated.44 However, no Lewis acid is required if the
mixed anhydride of the required acid and trifluoroacetic acid are employed to acylate N-tosyl-pyrroles, this
proceeding exclusively at the 2-position.45
300
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Regioselection in Friedel–Crafts acylations, depending on the Lewis acid employed, also applies to pyrroles with electron-withdrawing/stabilising groups, like esters, on carbon.46 Lewis-acid catalysed acylation
of 3-acyl-pyrroles, easily obtained by hydrolysis of 1-phenylsulfonyl-3-acyl-pyrroles, proceeds smoothly
to give 2,4-diacyl-pyrroles, substitution meta to the acyl group and also at the remaining pyrrole αposition;47 Vilsmeier formylation of methyl pyrrolyl-2-carboxylate takes place at C-5, the α-selectivity
being dominant in this case.48
16.1.1.6 Alkylation
Mono-C-alkylation of pyrroles cannot be achieved by direct reaction with simple alkyl halides, either alone
or with a Lewis-acid catalyst, for example pyrrole does not react with methyl iodide below 100 °C; above
about 150 °C, a series of reactions occurs leading to a complex mixture made up mostly of polymeric
material together with some poly-methylated pyrroles. The more reactive allyl bromide reacts with pyrrole
at room temperature, but mixtures of mono- to tetra-allyl-pyrroles together with oligomers and polymers
are obtained.
Providing an appropriate acidic catalyst is chosen – one that will not cause polymerisation of pyrrole
– reaction with alkenes carrying an electron-withdrawing group can be achieved. Examples include nitroalkenes using sulfamic acid49 and conjugated ketones using InCl3.50 The use of the triflate salt of an optically
active amine as catalyst induces alkylations using R1CH=CHCOR2 with high enantioselectivity.51
Alkylations with conjugated enones carrying a leaving group at the β-position proceed smoothly, producing mono-alkenylated pyrroles.52
16.1.1.7 Condensation with Aldehydes and Ketones
Condensations of pyrroles with aldehydes and ketones occur easily by acid catalysis, but the resulting
pyrrolyl-carbinols cannot usually be isolated, for under the reaction conditions proton-catalysed loss of
water produces 2-alkylidene-pyrrolium cations that are themselves reactive electrophiles. Thus, in the case
of pyrrole itself, reaction with aliphatic aldehydes in acid inevitably leads to resins, probably linear polymers. Reductive trapping of these cationic intermediates, producing alkylated pyrroles, can be synthetically
useful, however all free positions react; acyl and alkoxycarbonyl-substituents are unaffected.53
Syntheses of dipyrromethanes have usually involved pyrroles with electron-withdrawing substituents
and only one free α-position, the dipyrromethane resulting from attack by the electrophilic 2-alkylidenepyrrolium intermediate on a second mole equivalent of the pyrrole.54
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
301
By careful choice of conditions, the simplest dipyrromethane, bis(pyrrol-2-yl)methane, can be obtained
directly from pyrrole with aqueous formalin in acetic acid;55 reaction in the presence of potassium carbonate
allows 2,5-bis-hydroxymethylpyrrole to be isolated.56 This diol reacts with pyrrole in dilute acid to give
tripyrrane and from this, reaction with 2,5-bis(hydroxymethyl)pyrrole gives porphyrinogen, which can be
oxidised with chloranil (2,3,5,6-tetrachloro-p-benzoquinone) to porphine, the simplest porphyrin.
Acetone, reacting in a comparable manner, gives a cyclic tetramer directly and in high yield, perhaps
because the geminal methyl groups tend to force the pyrrole rings into a coplanar conformation, greatly
increasing the chances of cyclisation of the linear tetrapyrrolic precursor.57
Condensations with aromatic aldehydes carrying appropriate electron-releasing substituents produce
cations that are sufficiently stabilised by mesomerism to be isolated. Such cations are coloured: the reaction
with p-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde is the basis for the classical Ehrlich test, deep red/violet colours
being produced by pyrroles (and also by furans and indoles) that have a free nuclear position. Under appropriate conditions one can combine four mole equivalents of pyrrole and four of an aldehyde to produce a
302
Heterocyclic Chemistry
tetrasubstituted porphyrinogen in one pot,58 but, usually, immediate oxidation is employed to proceed to
the meso-tetra-substituted porphyrin.59
Analogous condensations, but with a pyrrole aldehyde lead to mesomeric dipyrromethene cations, which
play an important part in porphyrin synthesis. Thus, using formyldipyrromethane as the aldehyde and a
second mole as the pyrrole component, with air as oxidant, porphine is formed directly, as its magnesium
derivative, possibly via a dipyrromethene cationic intermediate.60
16.1.1.8 Condensation with Imines and Iminium Ions
The imine and iminium functional groupings are, of course, the nitrogen equivalents of carbonyl and Oprotonated carbonyl groups, and their reactivity is analogous. The Mannich reaction of pyrrole produces
dialkylaminomethyl derivatives, the iminium electrophile being generated in situ from formaldehyde,
dialkylamine and acetic acid.61 There are only a few examples of the reactions of imines themselves with
pyrroles; the condensation of 1-pyrroline with pyrrole as reactant and solvent is one such example.62 NTosyl-imines react with pyrrole with Cu(OTf)2 as catalyst.63
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
303
The mineral-acid-catalysed polymerisation of pyrrole involves a series of Mannich reactions, but under
controlled conditions, pyrrole can be converted into an isolable trimer, which is probably an intermediate
in the polymerisation. The key to understanding the formation of the observed trimer is that the less stable,
therefore more reactive, β-protonated pyrrolium cation is the electrophile that initiates the sequence, attacking a second mole equivalent of the heterocycle. The ‘dimer ’, an enamine, is too reactive to be isolable,
however ‘pyrrole trimer ’, relatively protected as its salt, reacts further only slowly.64
16.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents65
Simple pyrroles are generally easily attacked by strong oxidising agents, frequently with complete breakdown. When the ring does survive, maleimide derivatives are the commonest products, even when there
was originally a 2- or 5-alkyl substituent. This kind of oxidative degradation played an important part in
early porphyrin structure determination, in which chromium trioxide in aqueous sulfuric acid or fuming
nitric acid were usually used as oxidising agents. Hydrogen peroxide is a more selective reagent and can
convert pyrrole itself into a tautomeric mixture of pyrrolin-2-ones in good yield (16.15.1.2).
Pyrroles which have a ketone or ester substituent are more resistant to ring degradation and high-yielding
side-chain oxidation can be achieved using cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate, with selectivity for an
α-alkyl.66
Pyrrole can be 2,2′-dimerised with the hypervalent iodine(III) reagent phenyliodine bis(trifluoroacetate)
via what may be an SET process.67
16.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Pyrrole and its derivatives do not react with nucleophilic reagents by addition or by substitution, except in
the same type of situation that allows nucleophilic substitution in benzene chemistry, i.e. where the leaving
group is ortho or para to an electron-withdrawing group: the two examples below are illustrative.68
304
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A key step in a synthesis of ketorolac, an analgesic and anti-inflammatory agent, involves an intramolecular nucleophilic displacement of a methanesulfonyl group activated by a 5-ketone.69
16.4
Reactions with Bases
16.4.1 Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Pyrryl Anions
Pyrrole N-hydrogen is much more acidic (pKa 17.5) than that of a comparable saturated amine, say pyrrolidine (pKa ∼ 44), or aniline (pKa 30.7), and of the same order as that of 2,4-dinitroaniline. Any very
strong base will effect complete conversion of an N-unsubstituted pyrrole into the corresponding pyrryl
anion, perhaps the most convenient being commercial n-butyllithium solution. The pyrryl anion is nucleophilic at nitrogen (however, see 16.4.2) and thus provides the means for the introduction of groups onto
pyrrole nitrogen, for example using alkyl halides. Typical reactions of the pyrryl anion are exemplified
below by the preparation of 1-triisopropylsilylpyrrole. However, reactions at nitrogen can proceed via
smaller, equilibrium concentrations of pyrryl anion, as in the formation of 1-chloropyrrole (in solution) by
treatment with sodium hypochlorite70 or a preparation of 1-t-butoxycarbonylpyrrole shown below.71
16.4.2 Lithium, Sodium, Potassium and Magnesium Derivatives
N-Salts of pyrroles can react with electrophiles to give either N- or C-substituted pyrroles: generally speaking, the more ionic the metal–nitrogen bond and/or the better the solvating power of the solvent, the greater
is the percentage of attack at nitrogen.72 Based on these principles, several methods are available for efficient
N-alkylation of pyrroles, including the use of potassium hydroxide in dimethylsulfoxide,73 or in benzene
with 18-crown-6,74 phase-transfer methodology,75 K2CO3 in an ionic liquid76 or of course by reaction of the
pyrryl anion generated using n-butyllithium. N-Amination, for example, using chloramine (NH2Cl) can be
achieved efficiently, either by quantitative conversion into the anion using sodium hydride,77 or using
phase-transfer conditions.78 N-Arylation of pyrroles requires palladium catalysis (4.2).
Pyrryl Grignard reagents, obtained by treating an N-unsubstituted pyrrole with a Grignard reagent, tend
to react at carbon with alkylating and acylating agents, but sometimes give mixtures of 2- and 3-substituted
products with the former predominating,79 via neutral, non-aromatic intermediates. Clean α-substitution
can be achieved for example with bromoacetates80 as exemplified below, or using 2-acylthio-pyridines as
acylating agents.81
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
16.5
305
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Pyrroles
16.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
The C-lithiation of pyrroles requires the absence of the acidic N-hydrogen, i.e. the presence of an Nsubstituent, either alkyl82 or, if required, a removable group83 like phenylsulfonyl,84 carboxylate,85 trimethylsilylethoxymethyl,86 t-butylaminocarbonyl,87 diethoxymethyl88 or t-butoxycarbonyl. Even in the absence
of chelation assistance to lithiation, which is certainly an additional feature in each of the latter examples,
metallation proceeds at the α-position. N-Methylpyrrole, rather amazingly, can be converted into a dilithioderivative, either 2,4- or 2,5-dilithio-1-methylpyrrole depending on the exact conditions.89 Lithiation of
1-t-butoxycarbonyl-3-n-hexylpyrrole occurs at C-5, avoiding both steric and electronic discouragement to
the alternative C-2 deprotonation.90
Reactions of the species produced by the α-lithiation of N-substituted-pyrroles are widely used for the
introduction of groups, either by reaction with electrophiles or by coupling processes based on palladium
chemistry (4.2). Some examples where removable N-blocking groups have been used in the synthesis of
2-substituted pyrroles, via lithiation, are shown below.86,91
16.5.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
Metal–halogen exchange on N-protected-pyrroles can provide access to either 2- or 3-lithio-pyrroles. Thus,
for example, 2-bromo-1-t-butoxycarbonylpyrrole and its 2,5-dibromo-counterpart give monolithiated
reagents and from the latter, even a dilithiated species can be generated.30
306
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Metal–halogen exchange using 3-halo-N-triisopropylsilyl-pyrroles92 allows the introduction of groups to
the pyrrole β-position and can complement direct electrophilic substitution of N-triisopropylsilylpyrrole,
which is β-selective (see 16.1.2 and 16.1.4). Sequential mono-lithiations of 1-tosyl-3,4-dibromopyrrole
allows selective functionalisation.29
16.6
Reactions with Radicals
Pyrrole itself tends to give tars under radical conditions. A 2-toluensulfonyl-substituent can be displaced
by radicals. Electrophilic radical substitution of 1-phenylsulfonylpyrrole93 occurs at an α-position; the
formation of a pyrrol-2-ylacetic acid is typical.94 3-Substituted pyrroles are attacked by radicals at C-2.95
Pyrroles can be dimerised, regiospecifically, via a radical cation produced from the pyrrole by reaction
with phenyliodine(III) bis(trifluoroacetate).96
16.7
Reactions with Reducing Agents
Simple pyrroles are not reduced by hydride reducing agents or diborane, but are reduced in acidic media,
in which the species under attack is the protonated pyrrole. The products are 2,5-dihydropyrroles, accompanied by some of the pyrrolidine as by-product.97 Reduction98 of pyrroles to pyrrolidines can be effected
catalytically over a range of catalysts, is especially easy if the nitrogen carries an electron-withdrawing
group, and is not complicated by carbon–heteroatom hydrogenolysis and ring opening, as is the case for
furans. Reduction of 2-acyl-pyrroles to pyrrolidine alcohols, over 5% Rh/Al2O3, proceeds with high stereoselectivity, with the control probably arising from the alcohol produced by initial reduction of the carbonyl
group.
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
307
Birch reduction of pyrrole carboxylic esters and tertiary amides gives dihydro-derivatives; the presence
of an electron-withdrawing group on the nitrogen serves both to remove the acidic N-hydrogen and also
to reduce the electron density on the ring. Quenching the immediate reduced species – an enolate – with
an alkyl halide produces alkylated dihydropyrroles.99
16.8
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
Simple pyrroles do not react as 4π components in Diels–Alder cycloadditions: exposure of pyrrole to
benzyne, for example, leads only to 2-phenylpyrrole, in low yield.100 However N-substitution, particularly
with an electron-withdrawing group, does allow such reactions to occur,101 for example adducts with arynes
are obtained using 1-trimethylsilylpyrrole.102 Whereas pyrrole itself reacts with dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate only by α-substitution, even at 15 kbar,103 N-acetyl- and N-alkoxycarbonyl-pyrroles give cycloadducts,104 addition being much accelerated by high pressure or by aluminium chloride catalysis.105 The most
popular N-substituted pyrrole in this context has been N-Boc-pyrrole,106 with benzyne (from diazotization
of anthranilic acid) for example, a 60% yield of the cycloadduct is obtained.107
A process that has proved valuable in synthesis is the addition of singlet oxygen to N-alkyl- and especially
N-acyl-pyrroles108 producing 2,3-dioxa-7-aza-bicyclo[2.2.1]heptanes, which react with nucleophiles, such
as silyl enol ethers, mediated by tin(II) chloride, generating 2-substituted-pyrroles that can be used, as the
example shows, for the synthesis of indoles via intramolecular electrophilic attack by the carbonyl group
at the pyrrole β-position.
Intermolecular examples of pyrroles serving as 2π components in cycloadditions are rare but examples
include N-tosyl-2- and -3-nitropyrrole109 and N-tosyl-2,4-diacyl-pyrroles,110 however in an intramolecular
sense tricyclic 6-azaindoles are produced where the 4π component is a 1,2,4-triazine (29.2.1).111
308
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Vinyl-pyrroles will take part in Diels–Alder processes as 4π components,112 providing the aromaticity
of the ring has been reduced by the presence of a phenylsulfonyl group on the pyrrole nitrogen, the presumed initial product easily isomerising in the reaction conditions to reform an aromatic pyrrole.113
16.9
Reactions with Carbenes and Carbenoids
The reaction of pyrrole with dichlorocarbene proceeds in part via a dichlorocyclopropane intermediate, ring
expansion of which leads to 3-chloropyridine.114,115 N-Methylpyrrole with ethoxycarbonylcarbene gives
only substitution products.116
Isolable cyclopropane-containing adducts can be obtained from N-Boc-pyrrole,117 and ozonolysis of the
mono adduct is a means for the synthesis of heavily functionalised cyclopropanes.118
Rhodium-catalysed addition of a vinyl carbene produces a cyclopropanated intermediate that undergoes
a Cope rearrangement, neatly producing an 8-azabicyclo[3.2.1]octadiene – the ring skeleton of cocaine.119
16.10
Photochemical Reactions120
The photo-catalysed rearrangement of 2- to 3-cyanopyrrole is considered to involve a 1,3-shift in an initially
formed bicyclic aziridine.121
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
16.11
309
Pyrryl-C-X Compounds
Pyrroles of this type, where X is halogen, alcohol, alkoxy or amine, and especially protonated alcohol or
alkoxy, or quaternised amine, easily lose X, generating reactive electrophilic species. Thus ketones can be
reduced to alkane, via the loss of oxygen from the initially formed alcohol (cf. 16.12), and quaternary
ammonium salts, typified by 2-dimethylaminomethylpyrrole metho-salts, react with nucleophiles by loss
of trimethylamine in an elimination/addition sequence of considerable synthetic utility.122
16.12
Pyrrole Aldehydes and Ketones
These are stable compounds which do not polymerise or autoxidise. For the most part, pyrrole-aldehydes
and -ketones are typical aryl-ketones, though less reactive – such ketones can be viewed as vinylogous
amides. They can be reduced to alkyl-pyrroles by the Wolff–Kishner method, or by sodium borohydride
via elimination from the initial alcoholic product (cf. 16.11).123 Treatment of acyl-1-phenylsulfonylpyrroles with t-butylamine-borane also effects conversion to the corresponding alkyl derivatives.124
β- and α-Acyl-pyrroles can be equilibrated, one with the other, using acid; for N-alkyl-C-acyl-pyrroles,
the equilibrium lies completely on the side of the β-isomer.125
16.13
Pyrrole Carboxylic Acids
The main feature within this group is the ease with which loss of the carboxyl group occurs. Simply
heating126 pyrrole acids causes loss of carbon dioxide in what is essentially ipso-displacement of carbon
dioxide by proton.127 This facility is of considerable relevance to pyrrole synthesis since several of the
ring-forming routes (e.g. see 16.16.1.2 and 16.16.1.6) produce pyrrole esters, in which the ester function
may not be required ultimately.
310
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Ipso displacement of carboxyl groups by electrophiles, such as halogens,128 or under nitrating conditions,
or with aryl-diazonium cations, occurs more readily than substitution of hydrogen.
16.14
Pyrrole Carboxylic Acid Esters
The electrophilic substitution of these stable compounds has been much studied; the meta-directing effect
of a 2-ester overcomes the normally dominant pyrrole tendency for α-substitution.129
An ester group can also activate a side-chain alkyl for halogenation, and such pyrrolyl-alkyl halides have
been used extensively in synthesis.130 Cerium(IV) triflate in methanol can be used for the analogous introduction of methoxide onto an alkyl side-chain.131 The rates of alkaline hydrolysis of α- and β-esters are
markedly different, the former being faster than the latter.132
16.15
Oxy- and Amino-Pyrroles
16.15.1 2-Oxy-Pyrroles
2-Oxypyrroles exist in the hydroxyl form, if at all, only as a minor component of the tautomeric mixture
that favours 3-pyrrolin-2-one over 4-pyrrolin-2-one by 9:1.133
After N-protection, silylation produces 2-silyloxy-pyrroles, which react with aldehydes to give
5-substituted 3-pyrrolin-2-ones.134
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
311
16.15.2 3-Oxy-Pyrroles
3-Oxy-pyrroles exist largely in the carbonyl form, unless flanked by an ester group at C-2 that favours the
hydroxyl-tautomer by intramolecular hydrogen bonding.135
16.15.3 Amino-Pyrroles
Amino-pyrroles have been very little studied because they are relatively unstable and difficult to prepare.136
Simple 2-amino-pyrroles can be prepared, but must be stored in acidic solution.137 An alternative is to
reduce nitro-pyrroles over Pd/C in the presence of anhydrides, which produces amides of the otherwise
unstable amino-pyrroles.138 Another trapping procedure employs a 1,4-dione and thus engenders another
pyrrole ring (cf. 16.16.1.1).139
16.16
Synthesis of Pyrroles5,140
16.16.1 Ring Synthesis
16.16.1.1 From 1,4-Dicarbonyl Compounds and Ammonia or Primary Amines141
1,4-Dicarbonyl compounds react with ammonia or primary amines to give pyrroles.
Paal–Knorr Synthesis142
Pyrroles are formed by the reaction of ammonia or a primary amine with a 1,4-dicarbonyl compound143
(see also 17.12.1.1 and 18.13.1.1). Successive nucleophilic additions of the amine nitrogen to each of the
two carbonyl carbon atoms and the loss of two mole equivalents of water represent the net course of the
synthesis; a reasonable sequence144 for this is shown below, using the synthesis of 2,5-dimethylpyrrole145
as an example.
312
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Several variations have been shown to improve the efficiency: microwave irradiation makes the process
very rapid146 and the use of iodine on a clay support147 are just two of these. An alternative to the use of
ammonia for the synthesis of N-unsubstituted-pyrroles employs hexamethyldisilazide with alumina,148 or a
solution of ammonia can be generated in situ conveniently, using the reaction of magnesium nitride, Mg3N2,
with methanol.149
The best synthon for unstable succindialdehyde, for the ring synthesis of C-unsubstituted pyrroles, is
2,5-dimethoxytetrahydrofuran (18.1.1.4),150 or 1,4-dichloro-1,4-dimethoxybutane obtainable from it.151
2,5-Dimethoxytetrahydrofuran will react with aliphatic and aromatic amines,12,152 amino esters, arylsulfonamides,153 trimethylsilylethoxycarbonylhydrazine154 or primary amides to give the corresponding
N-substituted-C-unsubstituted-pyrroles.155
16.16.1.2 From a-Aminocarbonyl-Compounds and Activated Ketones
α-Amino-ketones react with carbonyl compounds that have an α-methylene grouping, preferably further
activated, for example by ester, as in the illustration.
Knorr Synthesis
This widely used general approach to pyrroles utilizes two components: one, the α-aminocarbonyl
component, supplies the nitrogen and C-2 and C-3, and the second component supplies the remaining
two carbons and must possess a methylene group α to a carbonyl. The Knorr synthesis works well
only if the methylene group of the second component is further acidified (e.g. as in acetoacetic ester, i.e.
it is a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound, or equivalent) to enable the desired condensation leading to pyrrole to
compete effectively with the self-condensation of the α-aminocarbonyl component. The synthesis of
4-methylpyrrole-3-carboxylic acid and therefrom, 3-methylpyrrole, illustrates the process.
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
313
Since free α-aminocarbonyl compounds self-condense very readily producing dihydropyrazines
(14.13.3.1), they have traditionally been prepared and used in the form of their salts, to be liberated for the
condensation reaction by the base present in the reaction mixture. Alternatively, carbonyl-protected amines,
such as aminoacetal (H2NCH2CH(OEt)2), have been used. In one such case, the enol ether of a 1,3-ketoaldehyde was the synthon for the activated carbonyl component.156
A way of avoiding the difficulty of handling α-aminocarbonyl-compounds is to prepare them in the
presence of the second component, with which they are to react. Zinc–acetic acid or sodium dithionite157
can be used to reduce oximino-groups to amino, while leaving ketone and ester groups untouched. In the
classical synthesis, which gives this route its name, the α-aminocarbonyl component is simply an amino
derivative of the other carbonyl component, and it is even possible to generate the oximino precursor of
the amine in situ.158
It is believed that in the mechanism, shown for Knorr ’s pyrrole, an N–C-2 bond is the first formed, which
implies that the nitrogen becomes attached to the more electrophilic of the two carbonyl groups of the other
component. Similarly, the C-3–C-4 bond is made to the more electrophilic carbonyl group of the original
α-aminocarbonyl-component, where there is a choice.
Alternatives for the assembly of the α-aminocarbonyl-component in protected form include the reaction
of a 2-bromo-ketone with sodium diformamide producing an α-formamido-ketone,159 and the reaction of
a Weinreb amide of an N-Cbz α-amino acid with a Grignard reagent, the release of the N-protection in the
presence of the second component, produces the pyrrole.160
314
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A final example in this category involves the enamines produced by addition of an α-amino acid ester
to dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate leading to 3-hydroxypyrroles by Claisen-type ring closure.161
16.16.1.3 From Tosylmethyl Isocyanide and a,b-Unsaturated Esters or Ketones and from IsocyanoAcetates and a,b-Unsaturated Nitro-Compounds
Tosylmethyl isocyanide anion reacts with α,β-unsaturated esters, ketones or sulfones with loss of toluenesulfinate. Isocyano-acetates react with α,β-unsaturated nitro-compounds with loss of nitrous acid.
The van Leusen Synthesis
The stabilised anion of tosylmethyl isocyanide162 (TosMIC) (or of benzotriazol-1-ylmethyl isocyanide –
BetMIC163) adds in Michael fashion to unsaturated ketones and esters, with subsequent closure onto
isocyanide carbon, generating the ring. Proton transfer, then elimination of toluenesulfinate generates a
3H-pyrrole that tautomerises to an aromatic pyrrole that is unsubstituted at both α-positions.164 Addition
of the TosMIC anion to unsaturated nitro-compounds gives rise to 2,5-unsubstituted-3-nitropyrroles.165
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
315
The Barton–Zard Synthesis166
In this approach, conjugate addition of the anion from an isocyano-acetate to an α,β-unsaturated nitrocompound with eventual loss of nitrous acid, produces 5-unsubstituted pyrrole-2-esters.167 The example168
below shows a mechanistic sequence that can be seen to parallel that in the van Leusen synthesis. The most
useful route to the α,β-unsaturated nitro-compound involves the base-catalysed condensation of an aldehyde with a nitroalkane giving an α-hydroxy-nitroalkane; it can alternatively be generated in situ, in the
presence of the isonitrile, using diazabicycloundecane (DBU) as base on the O-acetate of the α-hydroxynitroalkane169 (for an example see 16.16.2.1). The process works even when the unsaturated nitro unit is a
component of a polycyclic aromatic compound.170
Extrapolations and improvements to this approach continue to enlarge its usefulness – α,β-unsaturated
sulfones react with isocyano-acetates and isocyano-nitriles to give pyrroles.171 Potassium carbonate can be
used as the base,172 vinyl arenes and hetarenes react at the side-chain double bond to give 3-aryl(hetaryl)pyrroles,173 and acetylenic-esters produce pyrrole-2,4-dicarboxylates, methyl t-butyl ether as solvent to
avoid peroxides.174
16.16.1.4 From Azines (RCH2CH=N)2
The Piloty–Robinson Synthesis
Improvements in the long-known Piloty–Robinson synthesis make it a useful approach, not only for symmetrically 3,4-disubstituted pyrroles, but also for more complex systems. In its simplest form, an aldehyde
azine (RCH2CH=NN=CHCH2R) reacts with an acid chloride to generate an N-acyl-pyrrole carrying identical groups R at the 3- and 4-positions; microwave heating facilitates the process, which involves, as its key
step, a 3,3-sigmatropic rearrangement.175 The use of N,N′-di-Boc-hydrazine and two successive coppercatalysed couplings to different iodo-alkenes produces unsymmetrical hydrazine bis-enamines, leading to
unsymmmetrically substituted N-Boc-pyrroles.176
316
Heterocyclic Chemistry
16.16.1.5 From Oximes and Alkynes
The Trofimov Synthesis177
This approach, though less well known than it perhaps deserves, involves simply heating a ketoxime and
acetylene in the presence of an alkali metal hydroxide, generally in DMSO. The pyrrole products are
2,3-unsubstituted. The process is simple, though it does require handling acetylene at high temperature.
Conditions are available to produce either the pyrrole or, directly, an N-vinyl-pyrrole, complete with a
protecting group on nitrogen. The scheme suggests a probable mechanism.
16.16.1.6 From Precursors with Four Carbons and a Nitrogen; From C4N Units
There are a number of routes to pyrroles in which a precursor is assembled that has the four carbons and
the nitrogen destined to be those of the final pyrrole, and requiring only the making of one final bond and
rearrangement of double bonds into the aromatic configuration. The nature of that bond-making ring-closing
step differs from one example to another.
For example, condensation of a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound with ethyl glycinate, using triethylamine as
base, produces an enamino-ketone, which can then be ring closed, the step in this case being an aldol
condensation. 178
Another example is the 5-endo-dig closure of 4-tosylamino-alkynes, which initially generates dihydropyrroles, the elimination of toluenesulfinate from which produces the aromatic system.179
γ-Chloro-enones react with primary amines to generate γ-amino-enones which, adsorbed on silica,
cyclise on microwave irradation.180
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
317
Copper-assisted cycloisomerisation of conjugated alkynyl-imines181 gives pyrroles, even when the imine
is actually the imine ‘double bond’ of a pyridine.
16.16.1.7 From Alkynes and Oxido-Oxazoliums182
Dipolar cycloaddition of alkynes to mesoionic oxido-oxazoliums, followed by expulsion of carbon dioxide,
yields pyrroles.
Dehydration of N-acylamino-acids generates azlactones; these are in equilibrium with mesoionic species,
which can be trapped by reaction with alkynes, final loss of carbon dioxide giving the aromatic pyrrole.
16.16.2 Some Notable Syntheses of Pyrroles
16.16.2.1 Octaethylporphyrin183
This synthesis of octaethylporphyrin, widely used as a model compound, uses a Barton–Zard sequence and
leads to a pyrrole-2-ester which is then hydrolysed and decarboxylated.
318
Heterocyclic Chemistry
16.16.2.2 Octaethylhemiporphycene184,185
All of the non-natural isomers (porphycenes) of the porphyrin ring system comprising permutations of four
pyrrole rings, four methines and having an 18 π-electron main conjugation pathway, have been synthesised.
The scheme below shows the use of a MacDonald condensation186 to assemble a tetrapyrrole and then the
use of the McMurray reaction to construct the macrocycle.187
16.16.2.3 Benzo[1,2-b:4,3-b′]dipyrroles
Several ingenious approaches188 have been described for the elaboration of the pyrrolo-indole unit (strictly
a benzo[1,2-b:4,3-b′]dipyrrole) three of which are present in the potent anti-tumour compound CC-1065;189
the approach shown here uses the van Leusen approach (16.16.1.3).190
Pyrroles: Reactions and Synthesis
319
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 15 and 16):
(a) Why does pyrrole not form salts by protonation on nitrogen?
(b) Starting from pyrrole, how would one prepare, cleanly, 2-bromo-pyrrole, 3-bromo-pyrrole, 2-formylpyrrole, 3-nitro-pyrrole? (More than one step necessary in some cases.)
(c) What would be the structures of the products from the following reactions: (i) pyrrole with CH2O/
pyrrolidine/AcOH; (ii) pyrrole with NaH/MeI; (iii) 1-tri-i-propylsilylpyrrole with LDA then
Me3CCH=O?
(d) How could one produce a 3-lithiated pyrrole?
(e) How could a pyrrole system be encouraged to react as a diene in Diels–Alder-type processes.
(f) How could pyrrole be converted into pyrrol-2-yl-CH2CN in two steps?
(g) By what mechanism are pyrrole carboxylic acids readily decarboxylated on heating?
(h) Which ring synthesis method and what reactants would be appropriate for the synthesis of a pyrrole,
unsubstituted on the ring carbons, but carrying CH(Me)(CO2Me) on nitrogen?
(i) With what reactant would ethyl acetoacetate (MeCOCH2CO2Et) need to be reacted to produce ethyl
2-methyl-4,5-diphenylpyrrole-3-carboxylate?
(j) With what reactant would TosMIC (TsCH2NC) need to be reacted to produce methyl
4-ethylpyrrol-3-carboxylate?
(k) With what reactants would 3-nitrohex-3-ene need to be treated to produce ethyl 3,4-diethylpyrrole2-carboxylate?
More advanced exercises:
1. Two isomeric mono-nitro derivatives, C5H6N2O2, are formed in a ratio of 6 : 1, by treating 2-methylpyrrole with Ac2O/HNO3. What are their structures and which would you predict to be the major product?
2. Write structures for the products of the following sequences: (i) pyrrole treated with Cl3CCOCl, then
the product with Br2, then this product with MeONa/MeOH → C6H6BrNO2, (ii) pyrrole treated with
DMF/POCl3, then with MeCOCl/AlCl3, then finally with aq. NaOH → C7H7NO2, (iii) 2-chloropyrrole
treated with DMF/POCl3, then aq. NaOH, then the product with LiAlH4 → C5H6ClN.
3. Write structures for the products formed by the reaction of pyrrole with POCl3 in combination with:
(i) N,N-dimethylbenzamide; (ii) pyrrole-2-carboxylic acid N,N-dimethylamide; (iii) 2-pyrrolidone →
C8H10N2, in each case followed by aq. NaOH.
4. Treatment of 2-methylpyrrole with HCl produces a dimer, not a trimer as does pyrrole itself. Suggest
a structure for the dimer, C10H14N2, and explain the non-formation of a trimer.
5. Treatment of 2,5-dimethylpyrrole with Zn/HCl gave a mixture of two isomeric products C6H11N:
suggest structures.
6. (i) Heating 1-methoxycarbonylpyrrole with diethyl acetylenedicarboxylate at 160 °C produced diethyl
1-methoxycarbonylpyrrole-3,4-dicarboxylate; suggest a mechanism and a key intermediate; (ii) deduce
the structure of the product, C11H12N2O2, resulting from successive treatment of 1-methoxycarbonylpyrrole with singlet oxygen then a mixture of 1-methylpyrrole and SnCl2.
7. Deduce structures for the products formed at each stage by treating pyrrole successively with: (i)
Me2NH/HCHO/AcOH, (ii) CH3I, (iii) piperidine in hot EtOH → C10H16N2.
8. From a precursor that does not contain a pyrrole ring, how might one synthesise: (i) 1-n-propylpyrrole;
(ii) 1-(thien-2-yl)pyrrole; (iii) 1-phenylsulfonylpyrrole?
9. Reaction of MeCOCH2CO2Et with HNO2, then a combination of Zn/AcOH and pentane-2,4-dione gave
a pyrrole, C11H15NO3. Deduce the structure of the pyrrole, write out a sequence for its formation, and
suggest a route whereby it could then be converted into 2,4-dimethyl-3-ethylpyrrole.
10. How might one prepare: (i) diethyl 4-methylpyrrole-2,3-dicarboxylate, (ii) ethyl 2,4,5trimethylpyrrole-3-carboxylate; (iii) ethyl 4-amino-2-methylpyrrole-3-carboxylate; (iv) ethyl 3,4,5trimethylpyrrole-2-carboxylate?
320
Heterocyclic Chemistry
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Anderson, P. S., Christy, M. E., Lundell, G. F. and Ponticello, G. S., Tetrahedron Lett., 1975, 2553.
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Bansal, R. C., McCulloch, A. W. and McInnes, A. G., Can. J. Chem., 1969, 47, 2391; ibid. 1970, 48, 1472.
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322
108
109
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111
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115
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118
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129
130
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133
134
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136
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138
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For one of several methods for the synthesis of 1,4-dicarbonyl compounds see: Wedler, C. and Schick, H., Synthesis, 1992, 543.
Amarnath, V., Anthony, D. C., Amarnath, K., Valentine, W. M., Wetteran, L. A. and Graham, D. G., J. Org. Chem., 1991, 56, 6924.
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Danks, T. N., Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40, 3957.
Banik, B. K., Samajdar, S. and Banik, I., J. Org.Chem., 2004, 69, 213.
Rousseau, B., Nydegger, E., Gossauer, A., Bennau-Skalmowski, B. and Vorbrüggen, H., Synthesis, 1996, 1336.
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Josey, A. D., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. V, 1973, 716; Jefford, C. W., Thornton, S. R. and Sienkiewicz, K., Tetrahedron Lett. 1994, 35, 3905; Fang, V.,
Leysend, D. and Ottenheijm, H. C. J., Synth. Commun., 1995, 25, 1857.
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164
165
166
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188
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Hoppe, D., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1974, 13, 789; van Leusen, A. M., Siderius, H., Hoogenboom, B. E. and van Leusen, D., Tetrahedron
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Mataka, S., Takahashi, K., Tsuda, Y. and Tashiro, M., Synthesis, 1982, 157; Walizei G. H. and Breitmaier, E., ibid., 1989, 337; Hombrecher H. K.
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17
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
The simple thiophenes1 are stable liquids that closely resemble the corresponding benzene compounds in
boiling points and even in smell. They occur in coal-tar distillates – the discovery of thiophene in
coal-tar benzene provides one of the classic anecdotes of organic chemistry. In the early days, colour
reactions were of great value in diagnosis: an important one for benzene involved the production of
a blue colour on heating with isatin (see 17.1.1.7) and concentrated sulfuric acid. In 1882, during a
lecture-demonstration by Viktor Meyer before an undergraduate audience, this test failed, no doubt
to the delight of everybody except the professor, and especially except the professor ’s lecture assistant. An
inquiry revealed that the lecture assistant had run out of commercial benzene and had provided a
sample of benzene that he had prepared by decarboxylation of pure benzoic acid. It was thus clear that
commercial benzene contained an impurity and that it was this, not benzene, that was responsible for the
colour reaction. In subsequent investigations, Meyer isolated the impurity via its sulfonic-acid derivative
and showed it to be the first representative of a then new ring system, which was named thiophene from
theion, the Greek word for sulfur, and another Greek word phaino which means shining, a root first
used in phenic acid (phenol) because of its occurrence in coal tar, a by-product of the manufacture of
‘illuminating gas’.
17.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
17.1.1 Substitution at Carbon
17.1.1.1 Protonation
Thiophene is stable to all but very strongly acidic conditions, so many reagent combinations that would
lead to acid-catalysed decomposition or polymerisation of furans and pyrroles can be applied successfully
to thiophenes.
Measurements of acid-catalysed exchange, or of protonolysis of other groups, for example silicon,2 or
mercury,3 show the rate of proton attack at C-2 to be about 1000 times faster than at C-3.4 The pKaH for
2,5-di-t-butylthiophene forming a salt by protonation at C-2, is −10.2.5
Reactions of Protonated Thiophenes
The action of hot phosphoric acid on thiophene leads to a trimer;6 its structure suggests that, in
contrast with pyrrole (16.1.1.8), the electrophile involved in the first C–C bonding step is the α-protonated
cation.
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
326
Heterocyclic Chemistry
17.1.1.2 Nitration
Nitration of thiophene needs to be conducted in the absence of nitrous acid, which can lead to an explosive
reaction;7 the use of acetyl nitrate8 or nitronium tetrafluoroborate9 is satisfactory. The major 2-nitro-product
is accompanied by approximately 10% of the 3-isomer.10 Further nitration of either 2- or 3-nitrothiophenes11
also leads to mixtures: equal amounts of 2,4- and 2,5-dinitrothiophenes from the 2-isomer, and mainly
2,4-dinitrothiophene from 3-nitrothiophene.12 Similar, predictable isomer mixtures are produced in other
nitrations of substituted thiophenes, for example 2-methylthiophene gives rise to 2-methyl-5- and 2-methyl3-nitrothiophenes,13 and 3-methylthiophene gives 4-methyl-2-nitro- and 3-methyl-2-nitrothiophenes,14 in
each case in ratios of 4 : 1.
17.1.1.3 Sulfonation
As discussed in the introduction, the production of thiophene-2-sulfonic acid by sulfuric acid sulfonation
of the heterocycle has been long known;15 use of the pyridine–sulfur-trioxide complex is probably the best
method.16 2-Chlorosulfonation17 and 2-thiocyanation18 are similarly efficient.
17.1.1.4 Halogenation
Halogenation of thiophene occurs very readily at room temperature and is rapid even at −30 °C in the dark;
tetrasubstitution occurs easily.19 The rate of halogenation of thiophene at 25 °C is about 108 times that of
benzene.20 2-Bromo-, 2-chloro-21 and 2-iodothiophenes22 and 2,5-dibromo- and 2,5-dichlorothiophenes23
can be produced cleanly under various controlled conditions. Controlled bromination of 3-bromothiophene
produces 2,3-dibromothiophene.24
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
327
2,3,5-Tribromination of thiophene goes smoothly in 48% hydrobromic acid solution.25 Since it has long
been known that treatment of polyhalogeno-thiophenes with zinc and acid brings about selective removal
of α-halogen, this compound can be used to access 3-bromothiophene26 just as 3,4-dibromothiophene can
be obtained by reduction of the tetrabromide.27 One interpretation of the selective reductive removal is that
it involves, first, electron transfer to the bromine, then transient ‘anions’, thus halogen can be selectively
removed from that position where such an anion is best stabilised – normally an α-position (17.4.1).
Monoiodination of 2-substituted thiophenes, whether the substituent is activating or deactivating, proceeds efficiently at the remaining α-position using iodine with iodobenzene diacetate.28 3-Alkyl-thiophenes
can be monobrominated or monoiodinated at C-2 using N-bromosuccinimide,29 or iodine with mercury(II)
oxide,30 respectively.
17.1.1.5 Acylation
The Friedel–Crafts acylation of thiophenes is a much-used reaction and generally gives good yields under
controlled conditions, despite the fact that aluminium chloride reacts with thiophene to generate tars; this
problem can be avoided by using tin tetrachloride and adding the catalyst to a mixture of the thiophene
and the acylating agent.31 Acylation with anhydrides, catalysed by phosphoric acid32 is an efficient method.
Reaction with acetyl p-toluenesulfonate, in the absence of any catalyst produces 2-acetylthiophene in high
yield.33 Vilmseier formylation of thiophene leads efficiently to 2-formylthiophene,34 comparable substitution of 3-phenylthiophene gives 2-formyl-3-phenylthiophene,35 the regioselectivity echoed in the Vilsmeier
2-formylation of 3-methylthiophene using N-formylpyrrolidine36 (2-formyl-4-methylthiophene can be produced by lithiation (17.4.1) then reaction with dimethylformamide37).
In acylations, almost exclusive α-substitution is observed, but where both α-positions are substituted,
β-substitution occurs easily. This is nicely illustrated by the two ketones produced in the classic sequence
shown below.38,39
17.1.1.6 Alkylation
Alkylation occurs readily, but is rarely of preparative use, an exception being the efficient 2,5-bis-t-butylation of thiophene.40
328
Heterocyclic Chemistry
17.1.1.7 Condensation with Aldehydes and Ketones
Acid-catalysed reaction of thiophene with aldehydes and ketones is not a viable route to hydroxyalkylthiophenes, for these are unstable under the reaction conditions. Chloromethylation can, however, be
achieved,41 and with the use of zinc chloride, even thiophenes carrying electron-withdrawing groups
react42 (CAUTION. Bis(chloromethyl) ether, a carcinogen, is formed as a by-product). Care is needed
in choosing conditions; there is a tendency for formation of either di-2-thienyl-methanes43 or
2,5-bis(chloromethyl)-thiophenes.44
A reaction of special historical interest, mentioned in the introduction to this chapter, is the condensation
of thiophene with isatin in concentrated sulfuric acid, to give the deep blue indophenine45 as a mixture of
geometrical isomers.46
Hydroxyalkylation at the 5-position of 2-formylthiophene results from exposure of the thiophene aldehyde and a second aldehyde, to samarium(II) iodide; in the example shown below, the other aldehyde is
1-methylpyrrole-2-carboxaldehyde.47
17.1.1.8 Condensation with Imines and Iminium Ions
Aminomethylation of thiophene48 was reported long before the more common Mannich reaction –
dimethylaminomethylation – which, although it can be achieved under routine conditions with methoxythiophenes,49 requires the use of Me2N+=CH2 Cl− (‘Eschenmoser ’s salt’ is the iodide) for thiophene and
alkyl thiophenes.50
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
329
Another device for bringing thiophenes into reaction with Mannich intermediates is to utilise thiophene
boronic acids – the Petasis reaction; primary aromatic amines can also be used as the amine
component.51
17.1.1.9 Mercuration
Mercuration of thiophenes occurs with great ease; mercuric acetate is more reactive than the chloride;52
tetrasubstitution and easy replacement of the metal with halogen can also be achieved
straightforwardly.53
17.1.2 Addition at Sulfur
In reactions not possible with the second-row-element-containing pyrrole and furan, thiophene sulfur can
add electrophilic species. Thiophenium salts54 though not formed efficiently from thiophene itself, are
produced in high yields with polyalkyl-substituted thiophenes.55 The sulfur in such salts is probably tetrahedral,56 i.e. the sulfur is sp3 hybridised (CAUTION: Methyl fluorosulfonate is highly toxic).
Even thiophene itself will react with carbenes, at sulfur, to produce isolable thiophenium ylides, and in
these, the sulfur is definitely tetrahedral.57 The rearrangement58 of thiophenium bis(ethoxycarbonyl)
methylide to the 2-substituted thiophene provides a rationalisation for the reaction of thiophene with ethyl
diazoacetate,59 which produces what appears to be the product of carbene addition to the 2,3-double bond;
perhaps this proceeds via initial attack at sulfur followed by S → C-2 rearrangement, then collapse to the
cyclopropane. Acid catalyses conversion of the cyclopropanated compound into a thiophene-3-acetic
ester.60 2,5-Dichlorothiophenium bis(methoxycarbonyl)methylide has been used as an efficient source of
the carbene: simply heating it in an alkene results in the transfer of (MeO2C)2C to the alkene.61
Uncontrolled S-oxidation of a thiophene leads to S,S-dioxides; that from thiophene itself has been isolated, but above −40 °C it dimerises giving eventual products depending on concentration,62 but with
substituted thiophenes the dioxides can be isolated. Peracids63 or dimethyldioxirane64 can be used, but do
not succeed if there are electron-withdrawing substituents. A solution of fluorine in water (hypofluorous
330
Heterocyclic Chemistry
acid) will, however, achieve the objective, even with thiophenes carrying electron-withdrawing groups.65
The S,S-dioxides are no longer aromatic thiophenes and react as dienes in Diels–Alder reactions; generally,
sulfur dioxide is extruded from the initial adduct, leading to further reaction66 – eventual aromatisation in
the example shown.67 Thiophene S,S-dioxides that also carry two strong electron-withdrawing groups
behave as dienophiles.68
17.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
Apart from the S-oxidations discussed above, the thiophene ring system, unless carrying electron-releasing
substituents, is relatively stable to oxidants; side-chains can be oxidised to carboxylic acid groups, though
not usually in synthetically useful yields.
17.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Nitro substituents activate the displacement of leaving groups like halide, as in benzene chemistry, and
extensive use of this has been made in thiophene work. Such nucleophilic displacements proceed at least
102 times faster than for benzenoid counterparts, and this may be accounted for by participation of the
sulfur in the delocalisation of charge in the Meisenheimer intermediate.69 Nitrogroups also permit the
operation of VNS processes (3.3.3), as illustrated below.70
Activation provided by the sulfur may also account for the extremely easy displacement of iodine from
the thiophene 2-position, using alkyl- or aryl-thiols as nucleophiles.71
Copper and copper(I) salts have been used extensively in thiophene chemistry to catalyse displacement
of bromine and iodine, but not chlorine, in simpler halo-thiophenes.72,73
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
17.4
331
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Thiophenes
17.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
Monolithiation of thiophene takes place at C-2; two mole equivalents of lithiating agent easily produces
2,5-dilithiothiophene.74 2-Lithiated thiophene can be put to many uses, for example with N-tosylaziridine
to introduce a 2-tosylaminoethyl side-chain.75
Lithiation at a thiophene β-position, in the presence of a free α-position, can be achieved with the assistance of an ortho-directing substituent at C-2.76 Thiophene-2-carboxylic acid lithiates at C-3, via ortho
assistance, using n-butyllithium,77 but at C-5 using lithium diispropylamide.78 3-(Hydroxyalkyl)thiophenes,
again with ortho assistance, are lithiated at C-2.79 The lithiation of 2-chloro-5-methoxythiophene at C-4
and C-3, in a ratio of 2 : 1, is instructive,80 as is the deprotonation of 2- and 3-bromothiophenes at 5- and
2-positions, respectively, with lithium diisopropylamide.81 The conversion of 3-isopropylthiophene into the
2-aldehyde by Vilsmeier formylation, but into the 5-aldehyde via lithiation, presents a nice contrast.82
Lithiation of 3-hexyloxythiophene can be carried out with thermodynamic control at C-2 using nbutyllithium and with kinetic control using lithium diisopropylamide at C-5.83
The formation of arynes has often been achieved by base-induced dehydrohalogenation, but for the
formation of 3,4-didehydrothiophene, a fluoride-induced process can be used, following ipso electrophilic
displacement of one of the silicons from 3,4-bis(trimethylsilyl)thiophene to generate the appropriate
precursor.84
Direct magnesiation of thiophenes at C-2 can be achieved with lithium tri-n-butylmagnesate (Bu3MgLi),
at room temperature.85
17.4.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
2-Bromo- and 2-iodothiophenes readily form thienyl Grignard reagents,86 though 3-iodothiophene requires
the use of Rieke magnesium.87 Bromine and iodine at either α- or β-positions undergo exchange with
alkyllithiums giving lithiated thiophenes. The reaction of 2,3-dibromothiophene with n-butyllithium produces 3-bromothien-2-yllithium.88 3-Lithiothiophene is unstable with respect to the 2-isomer at temperatures > –25 °C in ether solution, but is regiostable in hexane,89 however it can be utilised straightforwardly
at low temperature. The corresponding 3-zinc and 3-magnesium derivatives retain regio-integrity, even at
room temperature.90
332
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The use of thienyl Grignard reagents and lithiated thiophenes has been extensive and can be illustrated
by citing formation of oxy-thiophenes, either by reaction of the former with t-butyl perbenzoate leading to
thiophenone,91 or the latter directly with bis(trimethylsilyl) peroxide,92 the synthesis of thiophene carboxylic
acids by reaction of the organometallic with carbon dioxide,93 the synthesis of ketones by reaction with a
nitrile,94 or alcohols by reaction with aldehydes.87 Syntheses of thiophene-3-boronic acid95 and of 2-96
and -3-stannanes,97 and longer sequences leading to thieno[3,2-b]thiophene,98,99 dithieno[3,2-b:2′,3′-d]
thiophene,100 (another route to this tricycle utilises 3,4-dibromo-2,5-dilithiothiophene generated from the
tetrabromide101), and dithieno[2,3-b:3′,2′-d]thiophene102 all involve lithiated thiophenes. Some of these are
illustrated below.
There are two complications that can arise in the formation and the use of lithiated thiophenes: the
occurence of a ‘Base Catalysed Halogen Dance’,103 and the isomerisation or ring opening of 3-lithiated
thiophenes. As an example of the first of these, and one in which the phenomenon is put to good use,
consider the transformation of 2-bromothiophene into 3-bromothiophene by reaction with sodamide in
ammonia.104 The final result is governed, in a set of equilibrations, by the stability of the final anion: the
system settles to an anion in which the charge is both adjacent to halogen and at an α-position.
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
17.5
333
Reactions with Radicals
Aryl radicals generated by a variety of methods,105 the most effective of which are aprotic diazotisation106
and photolysis of iodo-arenes (particularly iodo-hetarenes107), attack to produce 2-aryl-thiophenes. However,
this has been superseded as a route to aryl-thiophenes by palladium-catalysed coupling. Radicals generated
in various ways have been utilised in elaborating thiophenes and in ring-closing reactions; examples are
shown below.108,109
17.6
Reactions with Reducing Agents
Catalytic reductions of the thiophene ring, or of substituents attached to it, are complicated by two factors:
poisoning of the catalyst, and the possibility of competing hydrogenolysis – reductive removal of sulfur,
particularly with Raney nickel – indeed the use of thiophenes as templates on which to elaborate a structure,
followed finally by desulfurisation, is an important synthetic strategy. This has been developed extensively
for thiophene acids, where the desulfurisation can be achieved very simply by adding Raney alloy to an
alkaline aqueous solution of the acid,110 and for long-chain hydrocarbons111 and large-ring ketones.112
Sodium/ammonia113 treatment also causes disruption of the ring in thiophene and simple thiophenes,
however thiophene-2-carboxylic acid and 2-acyl-thiophenes can be converted into the 2,5-dihydro derivatives using lithium in ammonia, followed by protonation or trapping with an alkyl halide.114 Side-chain
reductions can be carried out with metal hydrides, which do not affect the ring.
Simple saturation of the ring can be achieved using ‘ionic hydrogenation’,115 i.e. a combination of a
trialkylsilane and acid, usually trifluoroacetic; the reduction proceeds via a sequence of proton then
‘hydride’ additions116 and consequently requires electron-releasing substituents to facilitate the first step.
2,5-Dihydro-products accompany tetrahydrothiophenes from reductions with zinc and trifluoroacetic
acid.117
17.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)118
Unactivated thiophenes show little tendency to react as 4π components in a Diels–Alder sense; however,
maleic anhydride will react with thiophene to produce an adduct in high yield, under extreme conditions.119
Electrophilic alkynes will react with thiophenes under vigorous conditions,120 though the initial adduct
extrudes sulfur, and substituted benzenes are obtained as products.
334
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Thus, both α- and β-methoxy-substituted thiophenes react with dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate in
xylene to give modest yields of phthalates resulting from sulfur extrusion from initial adducts; in acetic
acid as solvent, only substitution products are obtained.121
The strong tendency for thiophene S,S-dioxides (17.1.2) to undergo cycloaddition processes is echoed
by thiophene S-oxides. Thus, when thiophenes are oxidised with meta-chloroperbenzoic acid and boron
trifluoride (without which S,S-dioxides are formed), in the presence of a dienophile, adducts from 2 + 4
addition can be isolated.122 Thiophenes that are 2,5- or 3,4-disubstituted with bulky groups can be converted
into isolable S-oxides,123 which undergo cycloadditions syn to the oxide, as exemplified below.124,125
17.8
Photochemical Reactions
The classic photochemical reaction involving thiophenes is the isomerisation of 2-aryl-thiophenes to 3-arylthiophenes;126 the aromatic substituent remains attached to the same carbon and the net effect involves
interchange of C-2 and C-3, with C-4 and C-5 remaining in the same relative positions; scrambling of
deuterium labelling is, however, observed, complicating interpretation of the detailed mechanism.
There are an appreciable number of examples in which photochemical ring closure of a 1-thienyl-2-aryl(or heteroaryl-) ethene, carried out in the presence of an oxidant (often oxygen) to trap/aromatise a cyclised
intermediate, leads to polycyclic products; an example127,128 is shown below.
17.9 Thiophene-C–X Compounds: Thenyl Derivatives
The unit – thiophene linked to a carbon – is termed thenyl, hence thenyl chloride is the product of chloromethylation (17.1.1.7); thenyl bromides are usually made by side-chain radical substitution,129 substitution
at an α-methyl being preferred over a β-methyl.130
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
335
Relatively straightforward benzene analogue reactivity is found with thenyl halides, alcohols (conveniently preparable by reducing aldehydes) and amines, from, for example, reduction of oximes. One exception is that 2-thenyl Grignard reagents usually react to give 3-substituted derivatives, presumably via a
non-aromatic intermediate.131
17.10 Thiophene Aldehydes and Ketones, and Carboxylic Acids and Esters
Here, the parallels with benzenoid counterparts continue, for these compounds have no special properties
– their reactivities are those typical of benzenoid aldehydes, ketones, acids and esters. For example, in
contrast to the easy decarboxylation of α-acids observed for pyrrole and furan, thiophene-2-acids do not
easily lose carbon dioxide; nevertheless, high-temperature decarboxylations are of preparative value (see
also 17.12.1.2).132
Just as in benzene chemistry, Wolff–Kischner or Clemmensen reduction of ketones is a much-used route
to alkyl-thiophenes, hypochlorite oxidation of acetyl-thiophenes a good route to thiophene acids, Beckmann
rearrangement of thiophene oximes is a useful route to acylamino-thiophenes and hence amino-thiophenes,
and esters and acids are interconvertible without complications.
17.11
Oxy- and Amino-Thiophenes
17.11.1 Oxy-Thiophenes
These compounds are much more difficult to handle and much less accessible than phenols. Neither
2-hydroxythiophene nor its 4-thiolen-2-one tautomer are detectable, the compound existing as the conjugated enone isomer, 3-thiolen-2-one,133 which can be obtained directly by oxidation of thiophene.134
The presence of alkyl, or other groups, both stabilise the oxy compounds and the double bond to which
they are attached. In these more stable compounds alternative tautomers are found, thus 5-methyl-2hydroxythiophene exists as a mixture (actually separable by fractional distillation!) of the two enone
tautomers135 and ethyl 5-hydroxythiophene-2-carboxylate is in the hydroxy-form to the extent of 85%.133
3-Hydroxy-thiophenes are even more unstable than 2-hydroxy-thiophenes; 3-hydroxy-2methylthiophene exists as a mixture of hydroxyl and carbonyl tautomeric forms, with the former
predominating.136 The parent can be prepared by gas-phase pyrolysis of a Meldrum’s acid precursor; it
exists as a 2.9 : 1 mixture of keto and hydroxy tautomers and gradually dimerises.137
336
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The acidities of the thiolenones are comparable with those of phenols, with pKas of about 10. Oxythiophene anions can react at oxygen or carbon and products from reaction of electrophiles at both centres
can be obtained.138 Silylation generates 2-silyloxy derivatives which react at C-5 with aldehydes, in the
presence of boron trifluoride.139
17.11.2 Amino-Thiophenes
Here again, these thiophene derivatives are much less stable than their benzenoid counterparts, unless the
ring is provided with other substitution.140 The unsubstituted amino-thiophenes (thiophenamines) can be
obtained by reduction of the nitro-thiophenes,141 but in such a way as to isolate them as salts – usually
hexachlorostannates – or via Beckmann rearrangements142 or Hofmann degradation,143 as acyl-derivatives,
which are stable. 3,4-Dinitration of 2,5-dibromothiophene, then reduction, produces 3,4-diaminothiophene.144 Many substituted amines have been prepared by nucleophilic displacement of halogen in nitrohalo-thiophenes. In so far as it can be studied, in simple cases, and certainly in substituted amino-thiophenes
the amino form is the only detectable tautomer.145
17.12
Synthesis of Thiophenes146
Thiophene is manufactured by the gas-phase interaction of C4 hydrocarbons and elemental sulfur at
600 °C. Using n-butane, the sulfur first effects dehydrogenation and then interacts with the unsaturated
hydrocarbon by addition, further dehydrogenation generating the aromatic system.
17.12.1 Ring Synthesis
17.12.1.1 From 1,4-Dicarbonyl Compounds and a Source of Sulfide
The reaction of a 1,4-dicarbonyl compound (cf. 16.16.1.1 and 18.13.1.1) with a source of sulfide, traditionally phosphorus sulfides, latterly Lawesson’s reagent (LR),147 or bis(trimethylsilyl)sulfide,148 gives
thiophenes, presumably, but not necessarily, via the bis(thioketone).
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
337
When the process is applied to 1,4-dicarboxylic acids, a reduction must occur at some stage, for thiophenes, and not 2- or 5-oxygenated thiophenes result.149
Much use has been made of conjugated diynes, which are also at the oxidation level of 1,4-dicarbonylcompounds, which react smoothly with hydrosulfide or sulfide, under mild conditions, to give 3,4unsubstituted thiophenes. Unsymmetrical 2,5-disubstituted thiophenes can be produced in this way too.150
Since nearly all naturally occurring thiophenes are found in plant genera, and co-occur with polyynes, this
laboratory ring synthesis may be mechanistically related to their biosynthesis.
Finally in this category, the efficient synthesis of 3,4-dimethoxythiophene from 2,3-dimethoxy-1,3butadiene on reaction with sulfur dichloride is notable; it was easily transformed into ‘EDOT’ (31.6.6.1).151
Here the sulfur source is electrophilic in character.
17.12.1.2 From Thiodiacetates and 1,2-Dicarbonyl Compounds
1,2-Dicarbonyl compounds condense with thio-diacetates (or thiobis(methyleneketones)) to give thiophene2,5-diacids (-diketones).
The Hinsberg Synthesis
Two consecutive aldol condensations between a 1,2-dicarbonyl compound and diethyl thiodiacetates
give thiophenes. The immediate product is an ester-acid, produced152 by a Stobbe-type mechanism, but the
338
Heterocyclic Chemistry
reactions are often worked up via hydrolysis to afford a diacid as the isolated product. The use of diethyl
oxalate as the 1,2-dicarbonyl-component leads to 3,4-dihydroxy-thiophenes.153
17.12.1.3 From Thioglycolates and 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds
Thioglycolates react with 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds (or equivalents) to give thiophene-2-carboxylic
acid esters.
In most of the examples of this approach, thioglycolates, as donors of an S–C unit, have been reacted
with 1,3-keto-aldehydes, to give intermediates that can be ring closed to give thiophenes, as exemplified
below.154
Alkynyl-ketones react with thioglycolates to generate comparable intermediates by conjugate addition
to the triple bond.155
Vinamidinium salts used as 2-substituted malondialdehyde synthons, produce 3,5-unsubstituted
thiophenes.156
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
339
17.12.1.4 From α-Thio-Carbonyl Compounds
2-Keto-thiols add to alkenyl-phosphonium ions, affording ylides, which then ring close by Wittig reaction
and give 2,5-dihydrothiophenes, which can be dehydrogenated.157 Thiophene-2-esters can be comparably
produced, without the need for dehydrogenation, by reaction of the 2-keto-thiol with methyl
3-methoxyacrylate.158
Microwave irradiation in the presence of triethylamine was used for the synthesis of 4,5-unsubstituted
2-amino-thiophenes using thioacetaldehyde dimer.159
17.12.1.5 From Thio-Diketones
A route160 in which the 3,4-bond is made by an intramolecular pinacol reaction is nicely illustrated161 by
the formation of a tricyclic thiophene with two cyclobutane fused rings. In this example, it was necessary
to force the double dehydration required for aromatisation, because of the strain in the system. Starting
materials for this route are easily obtained from sodium sulfide and two mole equivalents of a
2-bromo-ketone.
17.12.1.6 Using Carbon Disulfide
The addition of a carbanion to carbon disulfide with a subsequent S-alkylation provides a route to 2alkylthio-thiophenes.162 In the example below, the carbanion is the enolate of a cyclic 1,3-diketone.
When the enolate is that derived from malononitrile,163 3-amino-4-cyano-thiophenes are the result.164
340
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A truly delightful exploitation of this idea is a synthesis of thieno[2,3-b]thiophene, in which a diyne is
lithiated to give a lithio-allene, which reacts with carbon disulfide.165
17.12.1.7 From Thiazoles
The cycloaddition/cycloreversion sequence that ensues when thiazoles (the best in this context is 4phenylthiazole) are heated strongly with an alkyne, generates 2,5-unsubstituted thiophenes. Though the
conditions are vigorous, excellent yields can be obtained.84
17.12.1.8 From Thio-Nitroacetamides
The S-alkylation of thio-nitroacetamides with 2-bromo-ketones produces 2-amino-3-nitro-thiophenes. The
scheme below shows how the 3,4-bond making involves the intramolecular interaction of the introduced
ketone carbonyl with an enamine/thioenol β-carbon.166
17.12.1.9 From Sulfur, α-Methylene-Ketones and Malononitrile or Cyanoacetate
The Gewald Synthesis167
2-Amino-3-cyano-thiophenes or 2-amino-thiophene-3-esters result from this route, generally conducted as
a one-pot process, involving a ketone that has an α-methylene, ethyl cyanoacetate or malononitrile, sulfur,
and morpholine. Various improvements to the original procedure include using microwave irradiation on
solid support,168 or with potassium fluoride on alumina as the base,169 or solvent-free,170 and using morpholinium acetate in excess morpholine for aryl alkyl ketones.171
17.12.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses of Thiophene Compounds
17.12.2.1 Thieno[3,4-b]thiophene
Thieno[3,4-b]thiophene was prepared from 3,4-dibromothiophene utilising the two halogens in separate
steps: palladium-catalysed coupling and lithiation by transmetallation, followed by introduction of sulfur
and intramolecular addition to the alkyne.172
Thiophenes: Reactions and Synthesis
341
17.12.2.2 2,2′:5′,3″-Terthiophene and Tetrakis(2-thienyl)methane
This sequence, for the regioselective synthesis of 2,2′:5′,3″-terthiophene uses the reaction of a diyne with
sodium sulfide to make the central ring.173
The synthesis of tetrakis(2-thienyl)methane also depends on this synthesis method in its final stage.174
17.12.2.3 Thieno[2,3-f:5,4-f ′]bis[1]benzothiophene175
This synthesis of a molecule with alternating thiophene and benzene rings depends on bromine-to-lithium
exchange processes, the final ring closures involving intramolecular electrophilic attacks on the central
thiophene ring by pronotated aldehyde groups.
342
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 15 and 17):
(a) How could one prepare 2-bromo-, 3-bromo- and 3,4-dibromothiophenes?
(b) What would be the products of carying out Vilsmeier reactions with 2-methyl- and 3methylthiophenes?
(c) How could one convert 2,5-dimethylthiophene into: (i) its S-oxide and (ii) its S,S-dioxide?
(d) What routes could one use to convert thiophene into derivatives carrying at the 2-position: (i) CH(OH)tBu; (ii) (CH2)2OH; (iii) Ph?
(e) How could one prepare n-decane from thiophene?
(f) Draw the structures of the thiophenes that would be produced from the following reactant combinations:
(i) octane-3,6-dione and Lawesson’s reagent; (ii) dimethyl thiodiacetate [S(CH2CO2Me)2], cyclopentane-1,2-dione and base; (iii) pentane-2,4-dione, methyl thioglycolate [HSCH2CO2Me] and base.
More advanced exercises:
1. Deduce the structure of the compound, C4H3NO2S, produced from thiophene by the following sequence:
ClSO3H, then f. HNO3, then H2O/heat; the product is isomeric with that obtained by reacting thiophene
with acetyl nitrate.
2. Suggest structures for the major and minor isomeric products, C5H5NO3S, from 2-methoxythiophene
with HNO3/AcOH at −20 °C.
3. What compounds would be formed by the reaction of: (i) thiophene with propionic anhydride/H3PO4;
(ii) 3-t-butylthiophene with PhN(Me)CHO/POCl3, then aq. NaOH; (iii) thiophene with Tl(O2CCF3)3,
then aq. KI → C4H3IS.
4. Predict the principle site of deprotonation on treatment of 2- and 3-methoxythiophenes with n-BuLi.
5. Deduce structures for the compounds, C4HBr3S and C4H2Br2S, produced successively by treating
2,3,4,5-tetrabromothiophene with Mg then H2O and then the product again with Mg then H2O.
6. Deduce the structure of the compound, C9H6OS2, produced by the sequence: thiophene with BuLi, then
CO2 → C5H4O2S, then this with thiophene in the presence of P4O10.
7. Deduce the structure of the thiophenes: (i) C6H4N4S, produced by reacting (NC)2C=C(CN)2 with H2S;
(ii) C8H8O6S from diethyl oxalate, (EtO2CCH2)2S/NaOEt, aq. NaOH, then Me2SO4; (iii) C11H16S from
3-acetylcyclononanone with P4S10.
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138
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18
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
Furans1 are volatile, fairly stable compounds with pleasant odours. Furan itself is slightly soluble in water.
It is readily available, and its commercial importance is mainly due to its role as the precursor of the very
widely used solvent tetrahydrofuran (THF). Furan is produced by the gas-phase decarbonylation of furfural
(2-formylfuran, furan-2-carboxaldehyde), which in turn is prepared in very large quantities by the action
of acids on vegetable residues, mainly from the manufacture of porridge oats and cornflakes. Furfural was
first prepared in this way as far back as 1831 and its name is derived from furfur, which is the Latin word
for bran; in due course, in 1870, the word furan was coined from the same root. Hydrogenation of furfural
produces 2-methyltetrahydrofuran, commonly known as MeTHF, a solvent with significant advantages2
over THF, for example it is only partially miscible with water, making isolation of products easier; it does
not freeze until −136 °C, so it is suitable for reactions at very low temperature. 5-Hydroxymethylfurfural
(and hence 2,5-diformylfuran by oxidation or 2,5-dimethylfuran by reduction3) can be produced from
fructose4 or glucose5 by dehydration. 2,5-Dimethylfuran has potential as a bio-fuel – it has a higher energy
density than ethanol.6
18.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
Of the three five-membered systems with one heteroatom considered in this book, furan is the ‘least aromatic’ and as such has the greatest tendency to react in such a way as to give addition products – this is
true in the context of its interaction with the usual electrophilic substitution reagents, considered in this
section, as well as in Diels–Alder-type processes (see 18.7).
18.1.1 Substitution at Carbon
18.1.1.1 Protonation
Furan and the simple alkyl-furans are relatively stable to aqueous mineral acids, though furan is instantly
decomposed by concentrated sulfuric acid or by Lewis acids, such as aluminium chloride. Furan reacts
only slowly with hydrogen chloride, either as the concentrated aqueous acid or in a non-hydroxylic organic
solvent. Hot, dilute aqueous mineral acids cause hydrolytic ring opening.
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
348
Heterocyclic Chemistry
No pKaH value is available for O-protonation of furan, but it is probably much less basic at oxygen than
an aliphatic ether. Acid-catalysed deuteration occurs at an α-position;7 3/4-deuterio-furans are not obtained
because, although β-protonation probably occurs, the cation produced is more susceptible to water, leading
to hydrolytic ring opening. An estimate of pKaH −10.0 was made for the 2-protonation of 2,5-di-t-butylfuran,
which implies a value of about −13 for furan itself.8 An α-protonated cation, stable in solution, is produced
on treatment of 2,5-di-t-butylfuran with concentrated sulfuric acid.8,9
Reactions of Protonated Furans
The hydrolysis (or alcoholysis) of furans involves nucleophilic addition of water (or an alcohol) to an
initially formed cation, giving rise to open-chain 1,4-dicarbonyl-compounds or derivatives thereof. This is
in effect the reverse of one of the general methods for the construction of furan rings (18.13.1.1). Succindialdehyde cannot be obtained from furan itself, presumably because this dialdehyde is too reactive
under conditions for hydrolysis, but some alkyl-furans can be converted into 1,4-dicarbonyl products quite
efficiently, and this can be viewed as a good method for their synthesis, and of cyclopentenones derived
from them.10 Other routes from furans to 1,4-dicarbonyl compounds are the hydrolysis of 2,5-dialkoxytetrahydro-furans (18.1.1.4) and by various oxidative procedures (18.2).
18.1.1.2 Nitration
Sensitivity precludes the use of concentrated acid nitrating mixtures. Reaction of furan, or substituted
furans11 with acetyl nitrate produces non-aromatic adducts, in which progress to a substitution product has
been interrupted by nucleophilic addition of acetate to the cationic intermediate, usually12 at C-5.13 Aromatisation, by loss of acetic acid, to give the nitro-substitution product, will take place under solvolytic conditions, but is better effected by treatment with a weak base, like pyridine.14 Further nitration of 2-nitrofuran
gives 2,5-dinitrofuran as the main product.15
18.1.1.3 Sulfonation
Furan and its simple alkyl-derivatives are decomposed by the usual strong acid reagents, but the pyridine–
sulfur-trioxide complex can be used, disubstitution of furan occurring even at room temperature.16
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
349
18.1.1.4 Halogenation
Furan reacts vigorously with chlorine and bromine at room temperature to give polyhalogenated products,
but does not react at all with iodine.17 Controlled conditions – bromine in dimethylformamide at room
temperature – smoothly produce 2-bromo- or 2,5-dibromo-furans.18 The bromination probably proceeds via
a 2,5-dibromo-2,5-dihydro-adduct, indeed such species have been observed at low temperature using 1H
NMR spectroscopy.19
If the bromination is conducted in an alcohol, trapping of the intermediate by C-5 addition of the alcohol,
then alcoholysis of C-2-bromide, produces 2,5-dialkoxy-2,5-dihydrofurans, as mixtures of cis- and transisomers;20 hydrogenation of these species affords 2,5-dialkoxy-tetrahydrofurans, extremely useful as
1,4-dicarbonyl synthons – the unsubstituted example is equivalent to succindialdehyde.21 The 2,5-dialkoxy2,5-dihydrofurans are also useful for the synthesis of 2-substituted furans, for example with benzenethiol
or phenylsulfinic acid, 2-sulfur-substituted furans are formed22 and with enol ethers, 2-(2,2-dialkoxyethyl)furans are formed.23 Acid-catalysed hydrolysis produces butenolides24 (see also 18.12.1).
The intrinsically high reactivity of the furan nucleus is further exemplified by the reaction of furfural
with excess halogen to produce ‘mucohalic acids’; incidentally, mucobromic acid reacts with formamide
to provide a useful synthesis of 5-bromopyrimidine.25 On the other hand, with control, methyl furoate can
be cleanly converted into its 5-monobromo or 4,5-dibromo derivatives; hydrolysis and decarboxylation of
the latter then affording 2,3-dibromofuran;26 bromination of 3-furoic acid produces 5-bromofuran-3carboxylic acid.27
18.1.1.5 Acylation
Carboxylic acid anhydrides or halides normally require the presence of a Lewis acid (often boron trifluoride)
for Friedel–Crafts acylation of furans, though trifluoroacetic anhydride will react alone. Aluminiumchloride-catalysed acetylation of furan proceeds 7 × 104 times faster at the α-position than at the βposition.28 3-Alkyl-furans substitute mainly at C-2;29 2,5-dialkyl-furans can be acylated at a β-position, but
generally with more difficulty. 3-Bromofuran is efficiently acetylated at C-2 using aluminium chloride
catalysis.30
350
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Vilsmeier formylation of furans is a good route to α-formyl-furans,31 though the ready availability of
furfural as a starting material, and methods involving lithiated furans (18.4), are important. Formylation of
substituted furans follows the rule that the strong tendency for α-substitution overrides other factors, thus
both 2-methylfuran32 and methyl furan-3-carboxylate33 give the 5-aldehyde; 3-methylfuran gives mainly
the 2-aldehyde.34
18.1.1.6 Alkylation and Alkenylation
Traditional Friedel–Crafts alkylation is not generally practicable in the furan series, partly because of
catalyst-induced polymerisation and partly because of polyalkylation. Instances of preparatively useful
reactions include: production of 2,5-di-t-butylfuran35 from furan or furoic acid36 and the isopropylation of
methyl furoate with double substitution, at the 3- and 4-positions.34
Intramolecular alkenylation at a furan α- or β-position by an alkyne occurs, with the formation of bicyclic
derivatives, when promoted by mercury(II) acetate (or Hg(OAc)(OTf), generated in situ from mercuric
acetate and scandium triflate).37 In the case of closure onto a β-position, a spirocyclic intermediate from
preferred attack at the α-position, may be involved, as shown.
18.1.1.7 Condensation with Aldehydes and Ketones
This occurs by acid catalysis, but generally the immediate product, a furfuryl alcohol, reacts further;
2-(2,2,2-trichloro-1-hydroxy)ethylfuran can, however, be isolated.38 Macrocycles known as tetraoxaquaterenes can be obtained by condensations39,40 with dialkyl ketones or cyclohexanone via sequences, giving
products exactly comparable to those described for pyrrole (16.1.1.7).
18.1.1.8 Condensation with Imines and Iminium Ions
Mono-alkyl-furans undergo Mannich substitution under normal conditions,41 but furan itself requires
a preformed iminium salt for 2-substitution.42 N-Tosyl-imines, generated in situ from N-sulfinyl-ptoluenesulfonamide and aldehydes, bring about tosylaminoalkylation at C-2.43 The use of furan boronic
acids allows Mannich substitutions at both α- and β-positions, with primary or secondary amine
components.44
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
351
18.1.1.9 Mercuration
Mercuration takes place very readily with replacement of hydrogen, or carbon dioxide from an acid.45
18.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
The bromine/methanol (18.1.1.4) oxidation of furans to give 2,5-dialkoxy-2,5-dihydrofurans and the cycloaddition of singlet oxygen (18.7) are discussed elsewhere in this chapter. 2,5-Dialkoxy-2,5-dihydrofurans
can also be obtained by electrochemical oxidation in alcohol solvents20,46 or conveniently by oxidation with
magnesium monoperoxyphthalate in methanol.47 Reaction of furan with lead(IV) carboxylates produces
2,5-diacyloxy-2,5-dihydrofurans in useful yields.48
In related chemistry, ring-opened, Δ-2-unsaturated 1,4-diones can be obtained in E- or Z-form using
reagents such as bromine in aqueous acetone or meta-chloroperbenzoic acid;49 an example is given below.36
Even but-2-en-1,4-dial (malealdehyde) itself can be produced by oxidation with dimethyldioxirane.50
The urea/hydrogen peroxide adduct, with catalytic methyltrioxorhenium(VII), oxidises a range of furans
to cis-ene-diones;51 magnesium monoperoxyphthalate can also be used for this purpose.52 The combination,
cumyl hydroperoxide with molybdenum hexacarbonyl, can be used to access either E- or Z-isomers.53
Oxidation of furans to produce 5-hydroxy-butenolides can be achieved smoothly with buffered sodium
chlorite54 (see also 18.12.1).
The oxidation of furyl-2-carbinols can produce 6-hydroxy-2H-pyran-3(6H)-ones (the Achmatowicz
rearrangement), which have several synthetic uses,55 the most important in the heterocyclic context being
for the formation therefrom of pyrylium-3-olate species (11.1.7). The oxidation can be conducted with
meta-chloroperbenzoic acid,56,57 vanadium(III) acetylacetonate with t-butyl peroxide,58 or with singlet
oxygen59 (18.7).
Comparable oxidation of 2-tosyaminomethyl-furans leads to 6-hydroxy-1-tosyl-1,6-dihydro-2H-pyridin3-ones.60
352
18.3
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Simple furans do not react with nucleophiles by addition or by substitution. Nitro substituents activate
the displacement of halogen, as in benzene chemistry, and VNS methodology (3.3.3) can also be applied
to nitro-furans.61
18.4
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Furans
18.4.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
Metallation with alkyllithiums proceeds selectively at an α-position, indeed lithiation of furan is one of
the earliest examples62 of the now familiar practice of aromatic ring-metallation. The lithiation can be
achieved in refluxing ether or indeed at low temperature.63 More forcing conditions can bring about 2,5dilithiation of furan.64 Magnesiation at an α-position can also be achieved at room temperature, with lithium
tri-n-butylmagnesate.65 The preference for α-deprotonation is nicely illustrated by the demonstration that
3-lithiofuran, produced from 3-bromofuran by metal–halogen exchange at −78 °C, equilibrates to the more
stable 2-lithiofuran if the temperature rises to > –40 °C,66 however 3-lithiofuran can be utilised; for example
it reacts with bis(trimethylsilyl)peroxide to provide the trimethylsilyl ether of 3-hydroxyfuran.67 2Lithiofuran has been reacted with many electrophiles, for example the 2-boronic acid,68 2-tri-nbutylstannylfuran,69 2-bromofuran70 and 2-iodofuran71 (also from the 2-magnesate65) can be prepared
efficiently in this way.
Lithium diisopropylamide can effect C-2-deprotonation of 3-halo-furans.72 With furoic acid and two
equivalents of lithium diisopropylamide, selective formation of the 5-lithio lithium 2-carboxylate takes
place,73 whereas n-butyllithium, via ortho-assistance, produces the 3-lithio lithium 2-carboxylate.74
Ortho-direction of metallation to C-3 by 2-bis(dimethylamino)phosphate,75 2-oxazoline,76 or 2diethylaminocarbonyl77 groups, and to C-2 by 3-hydroxymethyl78 or 3-t-butoxycarbonylamino79 also occur.
5-Lithiation of furans with non-directing groups at C-2 provides a route to 2,5-disubstituted furans, but
appropriate choice of lithiating conditions can outweigh ortho-directing effects, as illustrated.80
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
353
A synthetically useful regioselective 5-lithiation of 3-formylfuran81 can be achieved by first adding
lithium morpholide to the aldehyde and then lithiation at C-5, resulting in 2-substituted 4-formyl-furans,
following loss of the amine during work-up.82
18.4.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
Metallation at C-3 can be achieved via metal–halogen exchange.83 The greater stability of a carbanion at
an α-position shows up again in a mono-exchange of 2,3-dibromofuran with selective replacement of the
α-bromine.34,84
Oxidation of a 2-boronate ester is a means for the synthesis of butenolides (18.12.1).85 Furan-3-boronic
acid and 3-tri-n-butylstannylfuran can be made by reaction of the lithiated species with tri-iso-propyl
borate68 and tri-n-butylchlorostannane69 respectively.
18.5
Reactions with Radicals
Reactions of furans with radical species as synthetically useful processes have been little developed;
arylation86 and alkylation87 are selective for α-positions. Exposed to dibenzoyl peroxide, furan produces a
stereoisomeric mixture of 1,4-addition products.
18.6
Reactions with Reducing Agents
The best way to reduce a furan to a tetrahydrofuran is using Raney nickel catalysis, though ring opening,
via hydrogenolysis of C–O bonds can be a complication. Most furans are not reduced simply by metal/
ammonia combinations, however furoic acids88 and furoic acid tertiary amides89 give dihydro derivatives.
18.7
Electrocyclic Reactions (Ground State)
The 4 + 2 cycloaddition of furan to reactive dienophiles such as maleic anhydride90 was one of the earliest
described examples of the Diels–Alder reaction;91 the isolated product is the exo-isomer,92 though this is
the thermodynamic product, the endo-isomer being the kinetic product and the cycloaddition being easily
reversible.93
354
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Furan also undergoes cycloadditions with allenes,94 with benzyne95 and with simpler dienophiles, like
acrylonitrile and acrylate; various Lewis acidic catalysts can assist96 in some cases, zinc iodide97 is one
such, hafnium tetrachloride another,98 and improved endo : exo ratios are obtained in an ionic liquid as
reaction solvent.99 Maleate and fumarate esters react if the addition is conducted under high pressure.100
This device can also be used to increase markedly the reactivity of 2-methoxyfuran and 2-acetoxyfuran
towards dienophiles.101 At higher reaction temperatures alkynes102 and even electron-rich alkenes103 will
add to furan. 3- or 5-Halo-furans react faster in these cycloadditions.104
Although, as one would anticipate for the electron-rich component of a normal Diels–Alder pairing,
2-formylfuran is a poor diene; its dimethylhydrazone is a good one, though only ring-opened benzenoid
products, derived subsequently from the adducts, are isolated.105
Examples of the exploitation of furan Diels–Alder cycloadditions for the construction of complex
systems are many;106 one delightful example is shown below. The residual dienophilic double bond of the
Diels–Alder adduct between one of the two furan rings and dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate then enters
into cycloaddition with the second furan ring.107
The dipolar cycloaddition of 2-oxyallyl cations108 is also a process that has been exploited for the synthesis of substituted furans and polycyclic materials,109 for example it can be made the means for the
introduction of acylmethyl groups at the furan 2-position.110
Many examples of furans participating in intramolecular Diels–Alder additions have been described;111
the example below illustrates the mildness of conditions required in favourable cases.112 Even unactivated
alkenes will cycloadd to furans, in an intramolecular sense.113
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
355
Furans also undergo cycloaddition with singlet oxygen.114 This has been the basis for several routes to
highly oxygenated compounds, for example in syntheses of 5-hydroxy-2(5H)-furanones115 (4-hydroxybut2-enolides, see 18.12.1), a structural unit which occurs in several natural products. Addition to a 3substituted furan in the presence of a hindered base116 or addition117 to 2-trialkylsilyl-4-substituted furans118
leads through, as shown, to 4-substituted 5-hydroxy-2(5H)-furanones. 5-Substituted furfurals also give
5-hydroxy-2(5H)-furanones with loss of the aldehyde carbon.119 A particularly neat example is the reaction
of 2-furoic acid which is converted in quantitative yield, via decarboxylation, into malaldehydic acid (the
cyclic hemiacetal of Z-4-oxobut-2-enoic acid).120 Addition of singlet oxygen to 2-methoxy-5-alkyl-furans
followed by acid-catalysed Z to E isomerisation produces γ-keto-enoates.121
The few examples in which vinyl-furans take part as 4π components122 in intramolecular cycloadditions
include that shown below.123 In simpler, intermolecular cases yields are generally poor and the extra-annular
mode must compete with the more usual intra-annular mode; the inclusion of a bulky group at an α-position
assists this differentiation.124
Decarboxylative Claisen rearrangement of furfuryl alcohol esters can be used to introduce 3substitutents; comparable rearrangements take place with 2-thienyl and 2-pyrrolyl esters.125
The 4,5-double bond of 2-methoxyfuran will participate as a dienophile.126
356
Heterocyclic Chemistry
18.8
Reactions with Carbenes and Carbenoids
Dirhodium tetracetate127 or copper complexed by trispyrazolylborate ligands128 bring about the carbenoid
addition of :CHCO2Et from ethyl diazoacetate to furans. Generally, mixtures of cyclopropane and ring
opened dienones/als are produced.
18.9
Photochemical Reactions
The cycloaddition of diaryl ketones and some aldehydes across the furan 2,3-double bond proceeds regioselectively to afford oxetano-dihydrofurans, proton-catalysed cleavage of the acetal linkage in which
produces 3-substituted furans.129
18.10
Furyl-C–X Compounds; Side-Chain Properties
The nucleophilic displacement of halide from furfuryl halides often produces mixtures of products resulting
from straightforward displacement on the one hand, and displacement with nucleophilic addition to C-5 on
the other;130 the second mode proceeds through a non-aromatic intermediate, which then isomerises to
aromatic product.
18.11
Furan Carboxylic Acids and Esters and Aldehydes
Save for their easy decarboxylation, furan acids (and their esters) are unexceptional. Carbon dioxide is
easily lost131 from either α- or β-acids and presumably involves ring-protonated intermediates and a decarboxylation analogous to that of β-keto-acids, at least in those examples where copper is not utilised.
Nitration of 3-furoic acid takes place normally, and at C-5;132 α-acids sometimes undergo ipsosubstitution with decarboxylation,133 for example 2-furoic acid gives the 5-nitro-2-furoic acid, accompanied
by some 2,5-dinitrofuran.134
The reaction of furfural with anilines has been known since 1850; a controlled process is now available
for its reaction with amines, catalysed by lanthanum or scandium triflate, forming trans-4,5diamino-2-pentenones.135
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
357
Isomaltol, which can be made from α-d-lactose, also takes part in an ANRORC sequence leading to
4-pyridones.136
18.12
Oxy- and Amino-Furans
18.12.1 Oxy-Furans
2-Hydroxy-furans exist, if at all, at undetectably low concentrations in tautomeric equilibria involving
2(5H)-furanone137 and 2(3H)-furanone forms, for example the angelica lactones can be equilibrated via
treatment with an organic base, the more stable being the β-isomer; the chemistry of 2-oxy-furans, then,
is that of unsaturated lactones. Less is known of 3-hydroxy-furans save again that the carbonyl tautomeric
form (3(2H)-furanone) predominates.
Many natural products138 and natural aroma components139 contain 2-furanone units and considerable
synthetic work has thereby been engendered.140 In the context of these natural products, the name ‘butenolide’ is generally employed and compounds are therefore numbered as derivatives of 4-hydroxybutenoic
acid and not as a furan, for example a tetronic acid is a 3-hydroxybut-2-enolide. Butenolides can be converted into furans by partial reduction of the lactone, then dehydration.141
Strategies that have been developed for butenolide construction include the use of 2trimethylsilyloxyfuran,142 which reacts with electrophiles at furan C-5,143 and, complimentarily, furans
carrying a 2-oxy-tin (or 2-oxy-boron) substituent, which, via chelation control, react with electrophiles at
C-3.144 2,5-Dimethoxy-2,5-dihydrofuran can generate 2-trimethylsilyloxyfuran in situ.145
358
Heterocyclic Chemistry
2-t-Butoxyfuran, available from the reaction of 2-lithiofuran with t-butyl perbenzoate,146 can be lithiated
at C-5, reaction with a carbonyl component, then hydrolysis with dehydration, furnishing alkylidenebutenolides.147
2-Trimethylsilyl-furans are converted into the butenolide by oxidation with peracid.148
2-Methoxy- and 2-acetoxy-furans are available from 2,5-dimethoxy- and 2,5-diacetoxy-2,5-dihydrofurans (18.1.1.4) via acid-catalysed elimination.149 They undergo Diels–Alder cycloadditions; the adducts
can be further transformed into benzenoid compounds by acid-catalysed opening. 3,4-Dihydroxyfuran is
undetectable in tautomeric equilibria between mono-enol and dicarbonyl forms; the dimethyl ether behaves
as a normal furan, undergoing easy α-electrophilic substitution, mono- or dilithiation at the α-position(s),150
and Diels–Alder cycloadditions.151 2,5-Bis(trimethylsilyloxy)furan is synthesised from succinic anhydride;
it too undergoes Diels–Alder additions readily.152 Both furan-2- and -3-thiols can be obtained by reaction
of lithiated furans with sulfur; in each case the predominant tautomer is the thiol form.153
18.12.2 Amino-Furans154
So little has been described of the chemistry of amino-furans that general comment on their reactivity is
difficult to make; it seems likely that simple amino-furans are too unstable to be isolable,155 though 2acylamino-furans have been described, for example Boc-masked 2-aminofuran is obtained via a
Schmidt degradation of the carbonyl azide in t-butanol.156 Heavily substituted amino-furans, in particular
those with electron-withdrawing substituents on the ring or on the nitrogen are known.157 For example
methyl 2-aminofuran-5-carboxylate is relatively stable; it undergoes Diels–Alder cycloadditions in the
usual manner (cf. 18.7).158
18.13
Synthesis of Furans
Furfural and thence furan, by vapour-phase decarbonylation, are available in bulk and represent the starting
points for many furan syntheses. The aldehyde is manufactured159 from xylose, obtained in turn from pentosans, which are polysaccharides extracted from many plants, e.g. corn cobs and rice husks. Acid catalyses
the overall loss of three mole equivalents of water in very good yield. The precise order of events in the
multi-step process is not known for certain, however a reasonable sequence160 is shown below.
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
359
More controlled processes can be carried out using milder catalysts such as indium(III) chloride when
enantiopure furan alcohols can be obtained.161
18.13.1 Ring Syntheses
Many routes to furans have been described, but the majority are variants on the first general method – the
dehydrating ring closure of a 1,4-dicarbonyl substrate.
18.13.1.1 From 1,4-Dicarbonyl Compounds
1,4-Dicarbonyl compounds can be dehydrated, with acids, to form furans (cf. 16.16.1.1 and 17.12.1.1).
The Paal–Knorr Synthesis
The most widely used approach to furans is the cyclising dehydration of 1,4-dicarbonyl compounds, which
provide all of the carbon atoms and the oxygen necessary for the nucleus. Usually, non-aqueous acidic
conditions162 are employed to encourage the loss of water. The process involves addition of the enol oxygen
of one carbonyl group to the other carbonyl group, then elimination of water.163
Access to a 1,4-dicarbonyl substrate can be realised in many diverse ways.164 As just one example, the
1,4-dialdehyde (as a mono-acetal) necessary for a synthesis of diethyl furan-3,4-dicarboxylate was obtained
via two Claisen condensations with ethyl formate, starting from diethyl succinate.165 Isomerisation of
alk-2-yne 1,4-diols gives 1,4-diketones which proceed in one pot to the 2,5-disubstituted furan, using a
360
Heterocyclic Chemistry
ruthenium catalyst with Xantphos and acid.166 In another one-pot sequence either 2-butene-1,4-diones or
2-butyne-1,4-diones give furans after being first reduced to the saturated 1,4-dione by the formic acid with
palladium-on-carbon reaction medium.167
Ring closure of 4-keto-butanamides with trifluoroacetic anhydride or trifluoromethansulfonic anhydride
produce (protected) 2-amino-furans (cf. 18.13.2).168
18.13.1.2 From α-Halo-Carbonyl and 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds
α-Halo-carbonyl compounds react with 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds in the presence of a base (not ammonia)
to give furans.
The Feist–Benary Synthesis
This classical synthesis rests on an initial aldol condensation at the carbonyl carbon of a 2-halo-carbonylcomponent; ring closure is achieved via intramolecular displacement of halide by enolate oxygen; intermediates supporting this mechanistic sequence have been isolated in some cases.169
It is important to distinguish this synthesis from the alkylation of a 1,3-dicarbonyl enolate with a 2-haloketone, with displacement of halide, producing a 1,4-dicarbonyl unit for subsequent ring closure;170 presumably the difference lies in the greater reactivity of the carbonyl group (aldehyde in the example) in the
Feist–Benary sequence.
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
361
18.13.1.3 From C4O Compounds
There is a range of furan syntheses that have one aspect in common – the precursor of the aromatic furan
has: (i) four carbons, (ii) an oxygen at a terminus and (iii) two degrees of unsaturation located somewhere
in the five-atom sequence. Treatment (often acid) of the precursor generates the furan, by a sequence of
isomerisations, a ring closure and an elimination (often of water).
The simplest example here is the oxidation of cis-but-2-ene-1,4-diol, which gives furan via the hydroxyaldehyde – the two degrees of unsaturation being the carbonyl and carbon–carbon double bonds.171
More elaborate 4-hydroxy-enals and -enones have been generated in a variety of ways, for example via
alkynes172 or often via epoxides,173 it being sometimes unnecessary to isolate the hydroxy-enone,174 or via
Hörner–Wadsworth–Emmons condensation of β-ketophosphonates with α-acetoxyketones.175 Acetal,176
thioenolether177 or terminal alkyne178 can be employed as surrogate for the carbonyl group. 1,2,3-Trienyl4-ols cyclise to give furans.179 Some of these are exemplified below.
4-Pentynones can be closed to furans using potassium t-butoxide,180 benzyl trimethylammonium methoxide181 or mercury(II) triflate,182 and 3-pentynones produce furans with zinc chloride,183 or with, for example,
N-bromosuccinimide, give 3-halo-furans.184 The base-catalysed 2-alkylation of 1,3-dicarbonyl-compounds
with propargyl halides, is followed in situ by 5-exo-dig ring closure.185 Sundry other isomerisations have
utilised gold to catalyse ring closure to furans.186
Allenyl-ketones pre-synthesised,187 or produced in situ from palladium(0)- or copper(I)-catalysed isomerisation of conjugated188,189 or non-conjugated190 alkynyl-ketones, can be cyclised to furans. The ring
closure can be effected with palladium190 or gold191 catalysis. Acylation of silylallenes leads to a furan
directly.192
362
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Reaction of aldehydes with methyl 3-nitropropanoate in a Henry reaction, leads through to butenolides.193
A 3(2H)-furanone can be neatly produced by the intramolecular displacement of bromide from a
1-bromo-2,4-dione.194
In what is formally a 5-endo-dig cyclisation, alk-3-yne-1,2-diols close under the influence of iodine to
produce 3-iodo-furans.195
18.13.1.4 Miscellaneous Methods
Considerable ingenuity has been exercised in the development of routes to furans and many are available.
This section includes a selection of such one-off routes.
Acyloins react with ‘acetylene-transfer ’ reagents,196 in one of the few furan syntheses that begins with
formation of the ether unit; the cyclising step is a Wittig reaction.
3-Aminofuran-2-carboxylates are formed from the interaction of ethyl glyoxylate with 2-cyano-ketones
under Mitsunobu conditions to produce a vinyl ether, which is then ring closed with base.197
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
363
The useful 3,4-bis(tri-n-butylstannyl)-198 and 3,4-bis(trimethylsilyl)-furans199 are available via cycloaddition/cycloreversion steps using 4-phenyloxazole (cf. 17.12.1.7).
18.13.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses of Furans
18.13.2.1 Tris(furanyl)-18-Crown-6
Tris(furanyl)-18-crown-6 was prepared utilising the reactivity of furfuryl alcohols and chlorides.200
18.13.2.2 Furaneol
Furaneol is a natural flavour principle, isolated from pineapple and strawberry, and used in the food and
beverage industries.201
18.13.2.3 Ranitidine
Ranitidine is one of the most commercially successful medicines ever developed; it is used for the treatment
of stomach ulcers and has been synthesised from furfuryl alcohol.
364
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 15 and 18):
(a) Describe three distinctly different reactions of furans that confirm the relatively smaller aromatic resonance stabilisation of furan compared with thiophene and pyrrole (reactions which lead to non-aromatic
products).
(b) At what position does furan undergo lithiation? How could one prepare the alternative lithioisomer?
(c) With what type of dienophile do furans react most readily?
(d) What types of product can be obtained from the interaction of furans with singlet oxygen (1O2)?
(e) Do 2-hydroxy-furans exist?
(f) What is the most common method for the ring synthesis of furans? Write a mechanistic sequence for
the ring-closing process.
(g) How could one synthesise 3,4-bis(tri-n-butylstannyl)furan?
More advanced exercises:
1. Hydrolysis of 2-methoxyfuran with aqueous acid produces 4-hydroxybut-2-enoic acid lactone and
MeO2C(CH2)2CH=O; write sequences involving protonation and reaction with water to rationalise
formation of each of these.
2. Suggest structures for the products: (i) C11H8O2 produced by treating 2-phenylfuran with the combination DMF/POCl3 then aqueous base; (ii) C9H10O4 from ethyl furoate/Ac2O/SnCl4; (iii) C5H2N2O3 from
3-cyanofuran with Ac2O/HNO3; (iv) C14H11Cl3O6 from methyl furoate, CCl3CHO/H2SO4.
3. Electrochemical oxidation of 5-methylfurfuryl alcohol in methanol solvent afforded C8H14O4, hydrogenation of which produced C8H16O4, acid treatment of this gave a cyclic 1,2-dione, C6H8O2. What are
the structures of these compounds?
4. Trace the course of the following synthesis by writing structures for all intermediates: ethyl 2methylfuran-3-carboxylate with LiAlH4, then SOCl2, then LiAlH4 → C6H8O, treatment of which with
Br2/MeOH, then H2O/60 °C, then aq. NaBH4 gave C6H12O2.
5. Write structures for the products of reacting 2-lithiofuran with: (i) cyclohexanone, (ii) Br(CH2)7Cl.
6. Suggest structures for the (main) product from the following combinations: (i) 3-methylfuran/DMF/
POCl3 then aq. NaOH; (ii) 2,3-dibromofuran/n-BuLi then H2O; (iii) 3-bromofuran/LDA, then
CH2O → C5H5BrO2; (iv) furfural with EtOH/H+ → C9H14O3, then this with BuLi followed by B(OBu)3
and aqueous acid → C5H5BO4; (v) 3-bromofuran/BuLi/–78 °C, then Bu3SnCl → C16H30OSn and this
with MeCOCl/PdCl2 → C6H6O2.
7. Write structures for the products of reaction of: (i) furfuryl alcohol with H2C=C=CHCN → C9H9NO2;
(ii) 2,5-dimethylfuran with CH2=CHCOMe/15 kbar; (iii) furan with 2-chlorocyclopentanone/Et3N/
LiClO4 → C9H10O2.
8. (i) How could one prepare 2-trimethylsilyloxyfuran? (ii) What product, C6H5NO2, would be formed
from this with ICH2CN/AgOCOCF3?
9. What is the product, C11H10O3, formed from the following sequence: 2-t-BuO-furan/n-BuLi, then
PhCH=O, then TsOH?
10. Decide the structures of the furans produced by the ring syntheses summarised as follows:
(i) CH2=CHCH2MgBr/EtCH=O then m-CPBA, then CrO3/pyridine then BF3; (ii) CH2=C(Me)CH2MgCl/
HC(OEt)3, then m-CPBA, then aq. H+; (iii) (MeO)2CHCH2COMe/ClCH2CO2Me/NaOMe then
heat.
11. For the synthesis of tetronic acid summarised as follows, suggest structures for the intermediates:
methylamine was added to dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate (DMAD) → C7H11NO4, selective reduction
with LiAlH4 then giving C6H11NO3, which with acid cyclised → C5H7NO2, aqueous acidic hydrolysis
of which produced tetronic acid.
Furans: Reactions and Synthesis
365
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Yoshii, E., Koizumi, T., Kitatsuji, E., Kawazoe, T. and Kaneko, T., Heterocycles, 1976, 4, 1663; ‘Furan-, pyrrole-, and thiophene-based siloxydienes
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D’Aleilio, G. F., Williams, C. J. and Wilson, C. L., J. Org. Chem., 1960, 25, 1028; Sherman, E. and Dunlop, A. P., ibid., 1309.
Iten, P. X., Hofmann, A. A. and Eugster, C. H., Helv. Chim. Acta, 1978, 61, 430.
Iten, P. X., Hofmann, A. A. and Eugster, C. H., Helv. Chim. Acta, 1979, 62, 2202.
Brownbridge, P. and Chan, T.-H., Tetrahedron Lett., 1980, 21, 3423.
Niwa, E., Aoki, H., Tanake, H., Munakata, K. and Namiki, M., Chem. Ber., 1966, 99, 3215; Cederlund, B., Lantz, R., Hörnfeldt, A.-B., Thorstad,
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Lythgoe, D. J., McClenaghan, I. and Ramsden, C. A., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1993, 30, 113.
Padwa, A., Brodney, M. A. and Lynch, S. M., Org. Synth., 2002, 78, 202.
‘Synthesis of amino derivatives of five-membered heterocycles by Thorpe-Ziegler cyclisation’, Granik, V. G., Kadushkin, A. V. and Liebscher, J.,
Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1998, 72, 79.
Padwa, A., Dimitroff, M., Waterson, A. G. and Wu, T., J. Org. Chem., 1997, 62, 4088.
Adams, R. and Voorhees, V., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. I, 1932, 280.
Bonner, W. A. and Roth, M. R., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1959, 81, 5454; Moye, C. J. and Krzeminski, Z. A., Austr. J. Chem., 1963, 16, 258; Feather,
M. S., Harris, D. W. and Nichols, S. B., J. Org. Chem., 1972, 37, 1606.
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161
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185
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190
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Babu, B. S. and Balasubramanian, K. K., J. Org. Chem., 2000, 65, 4198.
Nowlin, G., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1950, 72, 5754; Traylelis, V. J., Hergennother, W. L., Hanson, H. T. and Valicenti, J. A., J. Org. Chem., 1964, 29,
123; Scott, L. T. and Naples, J. O., Synthesis, 1973, 209.
Amarnath, V. and Amarnath, K., J. Org. Chem., 1995, 60, 301.
Hegedus, L. S. and Perry, R. J., J. Org. Chem., 1985, 50, 4955; Mackay, D., Neeland, E. G. and Taylor, N. J., ibid., 1986, 51, 2351.
Kornfeld, E. C. and Jones, R. G., J. Org. Chem., 1954, 19, 1671.
Pridmore, S. J., Slatford, P. A. and Williams, J. M. J., Tetrahedron Lett., 2007, 48, 5111.
Rao, H. S. P. and Jothilingam, S., J. Org. Chem., 2003, 68, 5392.
Padwa, A., Rashatasakhon, P. and Rose, M., J. Org. Chem., 2003, 68, 5139.
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Cornforth, J. W., J. Chem. Soc., 1958, 1310; Burness, D. M., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. IV, 1963, 649; Kotake, H., Inomata, K., Kinoshita, H., Aoyama,
S. and Sakamoto, Y., Heterocycles, 1978, 10, 105.
Garst, M. E. and Spencer, T. A., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1973, 95, 250.
Miller, D., J. Chem. Soc., C, 1969, 12; Schreurs, P. H. M., de Jong, A. J. and Brandsma, L., Recl. Trav. Chim. Pays-Bas, 1976, 95, 75.
Marshall, J. E. and DuBay, W. J., J. Org. Chem., 1991, 56, 1685.
Arcadi, A. and Rossi, E., Tetrahedron, 1998, 54, 15253.
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Imagawa, H., Kurisaki, T. and Nishizawa, M., Org. Lett., 2004, 6, 3679.
Sniady, A., Durham, A., Morreale, M. S., Wheeler, K. A. and Dembinski, R., Org. Lett., 2007, 9, 1175.
Sniady, A., Wheeler, K. A. and Dembinski, R., Org. Lett., 2005, 7, 1769.
Couffignal, R., Synthesis, 1978, 581.
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Zhang, C.-Y. and Schmalz, H.-G., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2006, 45, 6704.
Marshall, J. A. and Wang, X., J. Org. Chem., 1991, 56, 960.
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Büchi, G., Demole, E. and Thomas, A. F., J. Org. Chem., 1973, 78, 123.
19
Typical Reactivity of Indoles, Benzo[b]
thiophenes, Benzo[b]furans, Isoindoles,
Benzo[c]thiophenes and Isobenzofurans
The fusion of a benzene ring to the 2,3-positions of a pyrrole generates one of the most important
heterocyclic ring systems – indole. This chapter develops a description of the chemistry of indole, then
discusses modifications necessary to rationalise the chemistry of the benzo[b]furan and benzo[b]thiophene
analogues. Finally, the trio of heterocycles in which the benzene ring is fused at the five-membered ring
3,4-positions, isoindole, benzo[c]furan and benzo[c]thiophene are considered.
Typical reactions of indole
The chemistry of indoles is dominated by easy electrophilic substitution. Of the two rings, the heterocyclic ring is very electron-rich, by comparison with a benzene ring, so attack by electrophiles always takes
place in the five-membered ring, except in special circumstances. Of the three positions on the heterocyclic
ring, attack at nitrogen would destroy the aromaticity of the five-membered ring, and produce a localised
cation, and so does not occur; both of the remaining positions can be readily attacked by electrophiles,
leading to C-substituted products, but the β-position is preferred by a considerable margin. This contrasts
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
370
Heterocyclic Chemistry
with the regiochemistry shown by pyrrole, but again can be well rationalised by a consideration of the
Wheland intermediates for the two alternative sites of attack.
Intermediates for electrophilic substitution of indole
The intermediate for α-attack is stabilised – it is a benzylic cation – but it cannot derive assistance from
the nitrogen without disrupting the benzenoid resonance (a resonance contributor, which makes a limited
contribution, is shown in parenthesis). The more stable intermediate from β-attack, has charge located
adjacent to nitrogen and able to derive the very considerable stabilisation attendant upon interaction with
the nitrogen lone pair of electrons.
The facility with which indoles undergo substitution can be illustrated using the Mannich reaction: the
electrophilic species in such reactions (C=N+R2) is generally considered to be a ‘weak’ electrophile, yet
substitution occurs easily under mild conditions.
An example of easy β-electrophilic substitution of indole with a weak electrophile
There is a strong preference for attack at C-3, even when that position carries a substituent, and it is
therefore important to consider, in detail, the 2-substitution of 3-substituted indoles. This could proceed in
three ways: (i) initial attack at a 3-position followed by 1,2-migration to the 2-position; (ii) initial attack
at the 3-position followed by reversal (when possible), then (iii); or (iii) direct attack at the 2-position. It
has been definitely demonstrated, in the case of some irreversible substitutions, that the migration route
operates, but equally it has been demonstrated that direct attack at an α-position can occur.
Possible mechanisms for the 2-substitution of 3-substituted indoles
Typical Reactivity of Indoles, Benzo[b]thiophenes, Benzo[b]furans, Isoindoles
371
Indoles react with strong bases losing the N-hydrogen and forming indolyl anions. When the counter ion
is an alkali metal, these salts have considerable ionic character and react with electrophiles at the nitrogen,
affording a practical route for N-alkylation (or acylation), for example in the synthesis of reversibly Nblocked indoles. These can be regioselectively lithiated at C-2, where the acidifying effect of the electronegative heteroatom is felt most strongly, often with additional chelation assistance from the N-substituent,
thus providing a route to 2-substituted indoles.
As in all heterocyclic chemistry, the advent of palladium(0)-catalysed processes (see Section 4.2 for a
detailed discussion) has revolutionised the manipulation of indoles, benzo[b]furans and benzo[b]
thiophenes; the example below is typical.
Palladium(0)-catalysed processes are very important in indole chemistry
The ready electron availability of indoles means that they are rather easily (aut)oxidised in the fivemembered ring. Reductions can be made selective for either ring: in acid solution, dissolving metals attack
the hetero-ring, and the benzenoid ring can be selectively reduced by Birch reduction conditions.
Indoles that carry leaving groups at benzylic positions, especially at C-3, undergo displacement processes
extremely easily, encouraged by stabilisation of positive charge by the nitrogen or, alternatively, in basic
conditions, by deprotonation of the indole hydrogen. One example of the latter is the lithium aluminium
hydride reduction of 3-acyl-indoles that produces 3-alkyl-indoles. In a sense, the 3-ketones are behaving
like vinylogous amides, and reduction intermediates are able to lose oxygen to give species that, on addition of a second hydride, produce the indolyl anion of the 3-alkyl-indole, converted into the indole during
aqueous work-up.
Reduction of 3-acylindoles to 3-alkylindoles
In comparison with indoles, benzo[b]furans and benzo[b]thiophenes have been studied much less fully,
however similarities and some differences can be noted. Benzo[b]furans and benzo[b]thiophenes undergo
electrophilic substitution, but the 3-regioselectivity is much lower than for indole, even to the extent that
some attack takes place in the benzene ring of benzo[b]thiophene and that 2-substitution is favoured for
benzo[b]furan. These changes are consequent upon the much poorer electron-donating ability of oxygen
and sulfur – the nitrogen of indole is able to make a much bigger contribution to stabilising intermediates,
particularly, as was shown above, for β-attack, and consequently to have a larger influence on regioselectivity. In the case of benzo[b]furan, it appears that simple benzylic resonance stabilisation in an intermediate
from attack at C-2 outweighs the assistance that oxygen might provide to stabilise an adjacent positive
charge.
Benzo[b]furans and benzo[b]thiophenes undergo lithiation at their 2-positions, consistent with the behaviour of furans, thiophenes, and of N-blocked pyrroles and indoles.
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
The chemical behaviour of isoindole, benzo[c]furan and benzo[c]thiophene is dominated by their lack
of a ‘complete’ benzene ring: these three heterocycles undergo cycloaddition processes across the 1- and
3-positions with great facility, because the products do now have a regular benzene ring. Often, no attempt
is made to isolate examples of these heterocycles, but they are simply generated in the presence of the
dienophile with which it is desired that they react. As a result of this strong tendency, few of the classical
electrophilic and nucleophilic processes have been much studied.
Typical cycloaddition behaviour of isoindoles, benzo[c]furans and benzo[c]thiophenes
There has probably been more work carried out on the synthesis of indoles than on any other single
heterocyclic system and consequently many routes are available; ring syntheses of benzo[b]furans and
benzo[b]thiophenes have been much less studied. The Fischer indole synthesis, now more than 100 years
old, is still widely used – an arylhydrazone is heated with an acid, a multi-step sequence ensues, ammonia
is lost and an indole is formed.
The Fischer indole synthesis
As an illustration of a modern and efficient route, 2,3-unsubstituted indoles are obtained from an orthonitrotoluene by heating with dimethylformamide dimethylacetal (DMFDMA), generating an enamine that,
after reduction of the nitro group, closes with loss of dimethylamine, generating the aromatic
heterocycle.
The Leimgruber–Batcho indole synthesis
Both benzo[b]furans and benzo[b]thiophenes can be obtained from the phenol or thiophenol respectively,
by O-/S-alkylation with a bromoacetaldehyde acetal and then acid-catalysed ring closure involving intramolecular electrophilic attack on the ring.
20
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
Indole1 and the simple alkyl-indoles are colourless crystalline solids with a range of odours from naphthalene-like, in the case of indole itself, to faecal, in the case of skatole (3-methylindole). Many simple indoles
are available commercially and all of these are produced by synthesis: indole, for example, is made by the
high-temperature vapour-phase cyclising dehydrogenation of 2-ethylaniline. Most indoles are quite stable
in air with the exception of those which carry a simple alkyl group at C-2: 2-methylindole autoxidises
easily, even in a dark brown bottle.
The word indole is derived from the word India: a blue dye imported from India was known as indigo
in the sixteenth century. Chemical degradation of the dye gave rise to oxygenated indoles (see 20.13),
which were named indoxyl and oxindole; indole itself was first prepared in 1866 by zinc-dust distillation
of oxindole.
For all practical purposes, indole exists entirely in the 1H-form, 3H-indole (indolenine) being present to
the extent of only ca. 1 ppm. 3H-Indole can be generated in solution but tautomerises to 1H-indole within
about 100 seconds at room temperature.2
20.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
20.1.1 Substitution at Carbon
20.1.1.1 Protonation
Indoles, like pyrroles, are very weak bases: typical pKaH values are: indole, −3.5; 3-methylindole, −4.6;
2-methylindole. −0.3.3 This means, for example, that in 6M sulfuric acid, two molecules of indole are
protonated for every one unprotonated, whereas 2-methylindole is almost completely protonated under the
same conditions. By NMR and UV examination, only the 3-protonated cation (3H-indolium cation) is
detectable;4 it is the thermodynamically stablest cation, retaining full benzene aromaticity (in contrast to
the 2-protonated cation) with delocalisation of charge over the nitrogen and α-carbon. The spectroscopically
undetectable N-protonated cation must be formed, and formed very rapidly, for acid-catalysed deuterium
exchange at nitrogen is 400 times faster than at C-3,5 indeed the N-hydrogen exchanges rapidly even at pH
7, when no exchange at C-3 occurs: clean conversion of indole into 3-deuterioindole can be achieved by
successive deuterio-acid then water treatments.6
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
374
Heterocyclic Chemistry
That 2-methylindole is a stronger base than indole can be understood on the basis of stabilisation of the
cation by electron release from the methyl group; 3-methylindole is a somewhat weaker base than indole.
Reactions of β-Protonated Indoles (see also 20.1.1.9, 20.2 and 20.7)
3H-Indolium cations are of course electrophilic species, in direct contrast with neutral indoles, and under
favourable conditions will react as such. For example, the 3H-indolium cation itself will add bisulfite at
pH 4, under conditions that lead to the crystallisation of the product, the sodium salt of indoline-2-sulfonic
acid (indoline is the widely used, trivial name for 2,3-dihydroindole). The salt reverts to indole on dissolution in water, however it can be N-acetylated and the resulting acetamide used for halogenation or nitration
at C-5, final hydrolysis with loss of bisulfite affording the 5-substituted indole.7
When Nb-acyl-tryptophans are exposed to strong acid, the indolium cation is trapped by cyclisation
involving the side-chain nitrogen.8 Comparable tricycles result from phenylselenylation of protected tryptophan9 or reaction with 4-methyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione,10 or dimethyl(succinimido)sulfonium chloride
(a CH2SMe group ends up at the indole C-3).11 If N-bromosuccinimide is employed, the initially formed
3-bromo-tricycle loses hydrogen bromide to produce an aromatic indole.12
20.1.1.2 Nitration; Reactions with Other Nitrogen Electrophiles
Indole itself can be nitrated using benzoyl nitrate as a non-acidic nitrating agent; the usual mixed acid
nitrating mixture leads to intractable products, probably because of acid-catalysed polymerisation. This can
be avoided by carrying out the nitration using concentrated nitric acid and acetic anhydride at low temperature – under these conditions, N-alkylindoles, and indoles carrying electron-withdrawing N-substituents,
but not indole itself, can be satisfactorily nitrated.13
2-Methylindole gives a 3-nitro derivative with benzoyl nitrate,14 but can also be nitrated successfully
with concentrated nitric/sulfuric acids, but with attack at C-5. The absence of attack on the heterocyclic
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
375
ring is explained by the complete protonation of 2-methylindole under these conditions; the regioselectivity
of attack, para to the nitrogen, may mean that the actual moiety attacked is a hydrogensulfate adduct
of the initial 3H-indolium cation, as shown in the scheme. 5-Nitration of 3H-indolium cations has been
independently demonstrated using a 3,3-disubstituted 3H-indolium cation.15 With an acetyl group at C-3,
nitration with nitronium tetrafluoroborate in the presence of tin(IV) chloride takes place at either C-5
or C-6 depending on the temperature of reaction.16
Indoles readily undergo electrophilic amination with bis(2,2,2-trichloroethyl) azodicarboxylate, the
resulting acylated hydrazine being cleaved by zinc dust to give a 3-acetylamino-indole.17
20.1.1.3 Sulfonation; Reactions with Other Sulfur Electrophiles
Sulfonation of indole,18 at C-3, is achieved using the pyridine–sulfur trioxide complex in hot pyridine.
Gramine is sulfonated in oleum to give 5- and 6-sulfonic acids, attack being on a diprotonated (C-3, sidechain-N) salt.19 1-Phenylsulfonylindoles are efficiently converted into 3-chlorosulfonyl-derivatives using
chlorosulfonic acid at room temperature.20 Sulfenylation of indole also occurs readily, at C-3, using a preformed sulfenyl chloride21 or N-thioalkyl- or N-thioaryl-phthalimides with magnesium bromide,22 or thiols
activated with N-chlorosuccinimide23 or Selectfluor™.24 Thiocyanation of indole can be achieved in virtually quantitative yield with a combination of ammonium thiocyanate with cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate25
or with iron(III) chloride.26
20.1.1.4 Halogenation
3-Halo-, and even more so, 2-halo-indoles are unstable and must be utilised as soon as they are prepared;
N-acyl- or N-sulfonyl-haloindoles are much more stable. A variety of methods are available for the βhalogenation of indoles: bromine or iodine (the latter with potassium hydroxide) in dimethylformamide27a
give very high yields; pyridinium tribromide27b works efficiently; iodination27c and chlorination27d tend to
376
Heterocyclic Chemistry
be carried out in alkaline solution or involve a preformed indolyl anion,28 and general halogenation with
copper(II) halides.29 Initial N-chlorination, then rearrangement may be involved in some cases.
Reaction of 3-substituted indoles with halogens can be more complex; initial 3-halogenation occurs
generating a 3-halo-3H-indole,30 but the actual products obtained then depend upon the reaction conditions,
solvent etc. Thus, nucleophiles can add at C-2 in the intermediate 3-halo-3H-indoles when, after loss of
hydrogen halide, a 2-substituted indole is obtained as final product, for example in aqueous solvents,
water addition produces oxindoles (20.13.1); comparable methanol addition gives 2-methoxyindoles. 2Bromination of 3-substituted indoles can be carried out using N-bromosuccinimide in the absence of radical
initiators.31 2-Bromo- and 2-iodo-indoles can be prepared very efficiently via α-lithiation (20.5.1).32 2-Haloindoles are also available from the reaction of oxindoles with phosphoryl halides.33 Some 2,3-diiodo-indoles
can be obtained by iodination of the indol-2-ylcarboxylic acid.34
20.1.1.5 Acylation
Indole only reacts at an appreciable rate with acetic anhydride, alone, above 140 °C, giving 1,3diacetylindole predominantly, together with smaller amounts of N- and 3-acetylindoles; 3-acetylindole is
prepared by alkaline hydrolysis of product mixtures.35 That β-attack occurs first is shown by the resistance
of 1-acetylindole to C-acetylation, but the easy conversion of the 3-acetylindole into 1,3-diacetylindole. In
contrast, acetylation in the presence of sodium acetate, or 4-dimethylaminopyridine,36 affords exclusively
N-acetylindole, probably via the indolyl anion (20.4.1). N-Acyl-indoles are much more readily hydrolysed
than ordinary amides, aqueous sodium hydroxide at room temperature being sufficient. This lability is due
in part to a much weaker mesomeric interaction of the nitrogen and carbonyl groups, making the latter
more electrophilic, and in part to the relative stability of the indolyl anion, which makes it a better leaving
group than amide anion. Trifluoroacetic anhydride, being much more reactive, acylates indole at room
temperature, at C-3 in dimethylformamide (but at nitrogen in dichloromethane).37
The use of a Lewis acid to catalyse Friedel–Crafts 3-acylation must be carried out with care, to avoid
oligomerisation: the method involves adding tin(IV) chloride to the indole first, then adding the acid chloride or anhydride.38
Simply heating indole with triethyl orthoformate at 160 °C leads to the alkylation of the indole nitrogen,
introducing a diethoxymethyl group that can be used as a reversible N-blocking substituent – it allows
2-lithiation (cf. 20.5.1) and can be easily removed with dilute acid at room temperature.39
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
377
The Vilsmeier reaction is a very efficient method for the preparation of 3-formyl-indoles,40 and for other
3-acyl-indoles using tertiary amides of other acids in place of dimethylformamide.41 Even indoles carrying
an electron-withdrawing group at the 2-position, for example ethyl indole-2-carboxylate, undergo smooth
Vilsmeier 3-formylation.42
Isocyanides attack under the influence of aluminium chloride, thus introducing an imine unit directly.43
A particularly useful and high-yielding reaction is that between indoles and oxalyl chloride, which gives
ketone-acid-chlorides convertible into a range of compounds, for example tryptamines; a synthesis of
serotonin utilised this reaction.44
Acylation of 3-substituted indoles is more difficult, however 2-acetylation can be effected with the aid
of boron trifluoride catalysis.44 Indoles, with a carboxyl-containing side-chain acid at C-3, undergo intramolecular acylation forming cyclic 2-acylindoles.45 Intramolecular Vilsmeier processes, using tryptamine
amides, have been used extensively for the synthesis of 3,4-dihydro-β-carbolines, a sub-structure found in
many indole alkaloids (β-carboline is the widely used, trivial name for pyrido[3,4-b]indole). Note that it
is the imine, rather than a ketone, that is the final product; the cyclic nature of the imine favours its retention rather than hydrolysis to amine plus ketone as in the standard Vilsmeier sequence;46 this ring closure
is analogous to the Bischler–Napieralski synthesis of 3,4-dihydro-isoquinolines (9.15.1.7).
378
Heterocyclic Chemistry
2-Acetylation of indol-3-ylacetic acid leads, in situ, to an enol-lactone: an indole fused to a 2-pyrone.
This can be hydrolysed to the keto-acid, or the diene character of the 2-pyrone (11.2.2.4) can be utilised,
as illustrated.47
Deactivation of the pyrrole ring by electron-withdrawing substituents allows acylation in the sixmembered ring. Lewis-acid-catalysed acylation of 3-trifluoracetylindole takes place at C-5, and if such
products are hydrolysed (a haloform reaction) to the 3-acids, decarboxylation then produces
5-acyl-indoles.48
1-Pivaloylindole gives high yields of 6-substituted ketones on reaction with α-halo-acid-chlorides and
aluminium chloride; simple acid chlorides react only at C-3.49 The sequence below shows how a 1-pivaloyl3-(indol-3-yl)propanoic acid undergoes Friedel–Crafts cyclisation to C-4, away from the deactivated heterocyclic ring.50
Acylation of 1-acetylindole in the presence of aluminium chloride goes cleanly at C-6, but with diacid
chlorides (malonyl, succinyl), 2-substitution occurs. The former result is due to strong deactivation of C-5
by a 1-acetyl–Lewis-acid complex and the latter is probably due to complexation of one acid chloride to
the 1-acetyl group, followed by intramolecular delivery of the other.51
20.1.1.6 Alkylation52
Indoles do not react with alkyl halides at room temperature. Indole itself begins to react with iodomethane
in dimethylformamide at about 80 °C, when the main product is skatole. As the temperature is raised,
further methylation occurs until eventually 1,2,3,3-tetramethyl-3H-indolium iodide is formed.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
379
The rearrangement of 3,3-dialkyl-3H-indolium ions by alkyl migration to give 2,3-dialkyl-indoles, as
shown in the sequence above, is related mechanistically to the Wagner–Meerwein rearrangement, and is
known as the Plancher rearrangement.53 It is likely that most instances of 2-alkylation of 3-substitutedindoles by cationic reagents proceed by this route, and this was neatly verified in the formation of
1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole by boron-trifluoride-catalysed cyclisation of 4-(indol-3-yl)butan-1-ol. The
experiment was conducted with material labelled at the benzylic carbon. The consequence of the rearrangement of the symmetrical spirocyclic intermediate, which results from attack at C-3, was the equal distribution of the label betweeen the C-1 and C-4 carbons of the product.54 It is important to note that other
experiments demonstrate that direct attack at C-2 can and does occur,55 especially when this position is
further activated by a 6-methoxyl group.56
In another elegant experiment, the intervention of a 3,3-disubstituted 3H-indolium-intermediate in an
overall α-substitution was proved by cyclisation of the mesylate of an optically active alcohol to give an
optically inactive product, via an achiral, spirocyclic intermediate, from initial attack at the β-position.57
3-(2-Bromoethyl)indole, on treatment with potassium carbonate in refluxing acetonitrile, gives a stable
spirocyclopropyl-indolenine, however this cyclisation is very slow when sodium bicarbonate is used as
base and this allows efficient N-alkylation of piperidines with the bromide.58 Nucleophiles, such as organolithiums and enolates, add to the indolenine without disrupting the cyclopropane ring.59,60
Reaction at C-3, with more electrophilic reagents, leading to allylated, benzylated and propargylated
indoles, can be achieved under various mild conditions. All the following alkylate indoles at C-3, at room
temperature: allyl halides with zinc triflate,61 allyl and benzyl halides in aqueous acetone (with also ca.
20% attack at C-2),62 allyl alcohols under ruthenium(IV) catalysis,63 allylic and propargylic acetates with
iodine64 and propargyl tertiary alcohols with p-toluenesulfonic acid.65 1-Bromo-2-benzoylethyne directly
alkynylates indole at room temperature on alumina.66
380
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Tryptophans can be obtained directly from indoles by reaction of serine with the indole, in the presence
of acetic anhydride.67
Indoles react with epoxides and aziridines in the presence of Lewis acids (see 20.4.1 for reaction of
indolyl anions with such reactants) with opening of the three-membered ring and consequent 3-(2hydroxyethylation) and 3-(2-aminoethylation) of the heterocycle. Both ytterbium triflate and phenylboronic
acid are good catalysts for reaction with epoxides under high pressure;68 silica gel is also an effective catalyst, but reactions are slow at normal pressure and temperature.69 Reaction with aziridines can be catalysed
by zinc triflate or boron trifluoride.70
Indoles react with homochiral aryloxiranes at the benzylic carbon in high optical yield, under very mild
conditions (1% InBr3, CH2Cl2, rt).71 Reactions with N-Cbz aziridines are similarly catalysed by scandium
triflate.72
20.1.1.7 Reactions with α,β-Unsaturated Ketones, Nitriles and Nitro-Compounds
Such reactions are usually effected using acid (see below), or one of a number of mild Lewis acids, such
as scandium iodide (with microwave heating),73 indium bromide74 or hafnium triflate,75 and can be looked
on as an extension of the reactions discussed in 20.1.1.6. In the simplest situation, indole reacts with methyl
vinyl ketone in a conjugate fashion in acetic acid/acetic anhydride.76
Analogous alkylations with unsaturated ketones can also be effected with silica-supported benzenesulfonic acid sodium salt77 or, with some stereoselectivity, using a chiral imidazolidinone organo-catalyst.78
Optical induction can also be achieved in the addition of indole to alkylidene malonates using bisoxazoline
copper(II) complexes.79
The use of Montmorillonite clay80 or ytterbium triflate,81 allows α-alkylation of β-substituted indoles.
This contrasts with the different, but very instructive, reaction pathway followed when mesityl oxide and
1,3-dimethylindole are combined in the presence of sulfuric acid – electrophilic attack at the already substituted β-position is followed by intramolecular nucleophilic addition of the enol of the side-chain ketone,
to C-2.82
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
381
An extension of this methodology allows the synthesis of tryptophans by aluminium-chloride-catalysed
alkylation with an iminoacrylate.83
Nitroethene is sufficiently electrophilic to substitute indole without the need for acid catalysis.84 Despite
this, it has been shown that silica-gel-supported CeCl3.7H2O/NaI brings about such reactions at room temperature under solvent-free conditions85 or, to take another solvent extreme, the reaction occurs in water
with a catalytic amount of a ‘heteropoly acid’ (H3PW12O40).86 The employment of 2-dimethylamino-1nitroethene in trifluoroacetic acid leads to 2-(indol-3-yl)nitroethene – the reactive species is the protonated
enamine and the process is similar to a Mannich condensation (20.1.1.9).87 The use of 3-trimethylsilylindoles, with ipso-substitution of the silicon,88 is an alternative means for effecting alkylation, avoiding the
need for acid catalysis.
The formation of a nitroethene electrophile in situ, is believed to be involved in the reaction between an
indole, paraformaldehyde and ethyl nitroacetate, giving precursors for tryptophans.89
20.1.1.8 Reactions with Aldehydes and Ketones
Indoles react with aldehydes and ketones under acid catalysis – with simple carbonyl compounds, the initial
products, indol-3-yl-carbinols are never isolated, for in the acidic conditions they dehydrate to 3-alkylidene3H-indolium cations; those from aromatic aldehydes have been isolated in some cases;90 reaction of
2-methylindole with acetone under anhydrous conditions gives the simplest isolable salt of this class.91
Reaction with 4-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde (the Ehrlich reaction, see 16.1.1.7) gives a mesomeric and
382
Heterocyclic Chemistry
highly coloured cation. Only where dehydration is inhibited have 3-(hydroxyalkyl)-indoles been isolated,
for example from reaction with diethyl mesoxalate92 or ethyl glyoxylate.93
3-Alkylidene-3H-indolium cations are themselves electrophiles and can react with more of the indole,
as illustrated for reaction with formaldehyde.94
The introduction of a sugar moiety to the indole 3-position proceeds best with 2-substituted indoles;
indium(III) chloride is used in combination with a glycosyl bromide.95
3-Alkylation of 2-alkyl- and 2-aryl-indoles can be achieved by trifluoracetic-acid-catalysed condensation
with either aromatic aldehydes or aliphatic ketones in the presence of the triethylsilane, which reduces the
intermediate 3-alkylidene-3H-indolium cations.96
20.1.1.9 Reactions with Iminium Ions: Mannich Reactions97
Under neutral conditions and at 0 °C, indole reacts with a mixture of formaldehyde and dimethylamine by
substitution at the indole nitrogen.98 This N-substitution may involve a low equilibrium concentration of
the indolyl anion (20.4.1) or may be the result of reversible kinetic attack followed by loss of proton. In
neutral solution at higher temperature or in acetic acid, conversion into the thermodynamically more stable
3-dimethylaminomethylindole, gramine, takes place. Gramine is formed directly, smoothly and in high
yield, by reaction in acetic acid.99 The Mannich reaction is useful in synthesis because not only can the
electrophilic iminium ion be varied widely, but also the product gramines are themselves intermediates for
further manipulation (20.11).
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
383
The iminium ion electrophile can also be prepared separately, as a crystalline solid known as ‘Eschenmoser ’s salt’ (Me2N+=CH2 I−)100 and, with this, the reaction is normally carried out in a non-polar solvent.
Examples that illustrate the variation in iminium ion structure that can be tolerated include the reaction of
indole with quinolines, catalysed by indium(III) chloride,101 with benzylidene derivatives of arylamines,
catalysed by lanthanide triflates,102 with ethyl glyoxylate imines103 (no catalyst required) and with
dihydro-1,4-oxazin-2-ones.104
A related, and possibly more versatile, process can be carried out using an aldehyde and an arylsulfinic
acid; the resulting sulfone can be displaced by a range of nucleophiles.105
In the mineral-acid-catalysed ‘dimerisation’ of indole,106 the indole is attacked by protonated indole, i.e.
the iminium ion is protonated indole. In all manipulations of indoles it is necessary to be aware of their
sensitivity to acidic conditions.
When protonated 3-bromoindole is employed as electrophile, a final elimination of hydrogen bromide
gives rise to re-aromatised 2-substituted indoles; pyrrole (illustrated) or indoles will take part in this type
of process.107
384
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Conducted in an intramolecular sense, Mannich reactions have been much used for the construction of
tetrahydro-β-carbolines.108 Tryptamines carrying a 2-carboxylic acid group, which can be conveniently
prepared (20.16.6.3), but are not easily decarboxylated as such, undergo cyclising Mannich condensation
with aldehydes and ketones, with loss of the carbon dioxide in a final step.109
These cyclisations may proceed by direct electrophilic attack at the α-position, or by way of β-attack,
then rearrangement. It may be significant that Mannich processes, as opposed to the alkylations discussed
in Section 20.1.1.6, are reversible, which would allow a slower, direct α-substitution to provide the principal
route to the α-substituted structure.
The cyclisation of nitrones derived from tryptamines is a similar process and can be carried out enantioselectively using a chiral Lewis acid.110 A similar enantioselective intermolecular process is the coppercatalysed reaction of indoles with tosyl-imines of aromatic aldehydes.111
20.1.1.10 Diazo-Coupling and Nitrosation
The high reactivity of indole is shown up well by the ease with which it undergoes substitution with weakly
electrophilic reagents, such as benzenediazonium chloride and nitrosating agents. Indoles react rapidly with
nitrous acid; indole itself reacts in a complex manner, but 2-methylindole gives a 3-nitroso substitution
product cleanly. This can also be obtained by a base-catalysed process using amyl nitrite as a source of the
nitroso group; these basic conditions also allow 3-nitrosation of indole itself. 3-Nitroso-indoles exist predominantly in the oximino 3H-indole tautomeric form.112
20.1.1.11 Electrophilic Metallation
Mercuration (CAUTION: mercury salts are highly toxic)
Indole reacts readily with mercuric acetate at room temperature to give a 1,3-disubstituted product.113
Even N-sulfonyl-indoles are substituted under mild conditions; the 3-mercurated compounds thus produced
are useful in palladium-catalysed couplings114 and can be used to prepare boronic acids (4.1.5.3).115
1-Phenylsulfonyl-3-substituted indoles mercurate at C-4, subsequent reaction with iodine giving
4-iodo-indoles.116
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
385
Thallation (CAUTION: thallium salts are highly toxic)
Thallium trifluoroacetate reacts rapidly with simple indoles, but well-defined products cannot be isolated.
3-Acyl-indoles, however, undergo a very selective substitution at C-4, due to chelation and protection of
the heterocyclic ring by the electron-withdrawing 3-substituent.117 The products are good intermediates for
the preparation of 4-substituted indoles, for example 4-iodo- and thence 4-alkoxy-,117b 4-alkenyl-118 and
4-methoxycarbonyl,119 via palladium-mediated couplings. The regiochemistry is neatly complemented
by thallation of N-acetylindoline, which goes to C-7, allowing introduction of substituents at this carbon120
(cf. 20.5.1).
20.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
Autoxidation occurs readily with alkyl-indoles, thus, for example, 2,3-diethylindole gives an isolable
3-hydroperoxy-3H-indole. Generally, such processes give more complex product mixtures resulting from
further breakdown of the initial hydroperoxide; singlet oxygen also produces hydroperoxides, but by a
different mechanism. If the indole carries a side-chain capable of trapping the indolenine by intramolecular
nucleophilic addition, then tricyclic hydroperoxides can be isolated.121
The reagent MoO5.HMPA, known as ‘MoOPH’, brings about addition of the elements of methyl hydrogen peroxide to an N-acyl-indole, and these adducts in turn, can be utilised: one application is to induce
loss of methanol, and thus the overall transformation of an indole into an indoxyl (20.13.2).122
Oxidative cleavage of the indole 2,3-double bond can be achieved with ozone, sodium periodate,123
potassium superoxide,124 with oxygen in the presence of cuprous chloride125 and with oxygen, photochemically in ethanolic solution.126
386
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The conversion of 3-substituted indoles into their corresponding oxindoles can be brought about
by reaction with dimethylsulfoxide in acid; the scheme below shows a reasonable mechanism for the
process – once again a small concentration of β-protonated indole is the key.127 In a comparable sequence
using Swern conditions, Me2S+ adds first to the indole β-position.128 Dimethyldioxirane converts Nmethoxycarbonyl-indoles (or -oxindoles) into 3-hydroxy-oxindoles.129
20.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents (see also 20.13.4)
As with pyrroles and furans, indoles undergo very few nucleophilic substitution processes. Most of those
that are known involve special situations: N-substituted benzene-ring-nitro-indoles undergo vicarious
nucleophilic substitutions (VNS) (3.3.3).130 A related process involves addition of stabilised enol(ate)s ortho
to a 5-sulfoxide, with loss of the oxygen from sulfur. The reaction is highly selective for C-4, even in the
presence of 3-substituents.131
2-Iodo- and 2-bromo-N-protected-indoles undergo displacement by reaction with silver nitrite to give
the corresponding 2-nitroindoles.132
20.4
Reactions with Bases
20.4.1 Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Indolyl Anions
As in pyrroles, the N-hydrogen in indoles is much more acidic (pKa 16.2) than that of an aromatic amine
(aniline has pKa 30.7). Any very strong base will effect complete conversion of an N-unsubstituted indole
into the corresponding indolyl anion, amongst the most convenient being sodium hydride, n-butyllithium
or an alkyl Grignard reagent.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
387
The indolyl anion has two main mesomeric structures showing the negative charge to reside mainly on
nitrogen and the β-carbon. Electron-withdrawing substituents, particularly at the β-position, increase the
acidity markedly, for example 3-formylindole is about five pKa units more acidic than indole and 2formylindole is some three units more acidic.133
In its reactions, the indolyl anion behaves as an ambident nucleophile; the ratio of N- to β-substitution
with electrophiles depends on the associated metal, the polarity of the solvent, and the nature of the electrophile. Generally, the more ionic sodio and potassio derivatives tend to react at nitrogen, whereas magnesio derivatives have a greater tendency to react at C-3 (see also 20.1.1.4),134 however, reaction of indolyl
Grignards in HMPA leads to more attack at nitrogen.135 Complimentarily, more reactive electrophiles show
a greater tendency to react at nitrogen than less electrophilic species.
N-Alkylation of indoles can utilise indol-1-ylsodiums,136 generated quantitatively with sodium hydride,
or it can involve a small concentration of an indolyl anion, produced by phase-transfer methods.137 Dimethyl
carbonate with DABCO can be used for N-methylation, and the acidity of indoles, especially carbazoles,
is sufficient for successful Mitsunobu alkylations.138,139,140
N-Aroyl-benzotriazoles react well with indolyl anions to give N-aroyl-indoles.141 N-Acylation142 and
N-arylsulfonylation143 can also be achieved efficiently using phase-transfer methodology.
Indolyl N-Grignards,144 or even better their zinc analogues,145 undergo reaction predominantly at C-3
with a variety of carbon electrophiles such as aldehydes, ketones and acid halides, or reactive halo-heterocycles.146 Including aluminium chloride in the zinc reactions produces high yields of 3-acyl-indoles.147 The
copper-catalysed reactions of indolyl-N-Grignards with N-t-butoxycarbonyl-aziridines also proceed well at
C-3.148
388
Heterocyclic Chemistry
1-Lithio-indoles are equally useful; again, the position of attack depends on both solvent and the nature
of the electrophile.149 It is important to note that when an N-metallated 3-substituted indole alkylates at
carbon, necessarily a 3,3-disubstituted-3H-indole is formed, which cannot re-aromatise to form an indole
(see 20.1.1.6 for rearrangements of 3,3-disubstituted indolenines).
20.5
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Indoles
20.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
C-Metallation of indoles has, in nearly all cases, been conducted in the absence of the much more acidic
N-hydrogen i.e. the presence of an N-substituent like methyl,156 or if required, a removable group: phenylsulfonyl,157 lithium carboxylate158 and t-butoxycarbonyl159 have been used widely; also recommended are
dialkylaminomethyl,160 trimethylsilylethoxymethyl161 and methoxymethoxy162 (the N-substituent cannot be
introduced into an indole – it requires a pre-formed 1-hydroxy-indole – but it is possible to reduce it off
to leave an N-hydrogen-indole). Each of these removable substituents assists lithiation by intramolecular
chelation and in some cases by electron withdrawal, reinforcing the intrinsic tendency for metallation to
proceed at the α-position.
When N-acyl or N-sulfonyl groups are utilised as protecting groups during indole manipulations, it is
important that there be efficient means for their final removal. Both types can be removed with hot base,
providing the rest of the molecule is sturdy enough, but milder methods are available. Carbamates can be
removed by reaction with hot aqueous methanolic potassium carbonate150 or with t-butylamine in refluxing
methanol,151 and N-tosyl groups can be cleaved with thioglycolic acid at room temperature,152 cesium carbonate in hot THF/methanol153 or by photo-induced electron transfer from triethylamine.154 Removal of
N,N-dimethylaminosulfonyl groups can be achieved by electrolysis.155
Magnesiation at C-2 can be carried out at room temperature; as well as serving in the usual way as
nucleophiles, magnesio-indoles can also be used directly for palladium-catalysed couplings.163
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
389
One of the most convenient N-protecting groups in indole α-lithiations is carbon dioxide158 because the
N-protecting group is installed in situ and, further, falls off during normal work-up. This technique has
been used to prepared 2-halo-indoles32 and to introduce a variety of substituents by reaction with appropriate electrophiles – aldehydes, ketones, chloroformates, etc.158
Given below are some α-substitutions achieved with various N-blocking/activating groups.39,157,164,165
Direct 3-lithiation can be accomplished with ortho-assistance from a 2-(2-pyridyl)-184 or a 2-carboxyl
group.166 Direct 3-lithiation even without a substituent at C-2 can be achieved with an N-di(t-butyl)
fluorosilyl-,167 N-tri-i-propylsilyl-168 or N-(2,2-diethylbutanoyl)-substituent in place, the latter using secbutyllithium in the presence of N,N,N′,N″,N″-pentamethyldiethylenetriamine.169 Other directed metallation
processes in the hetero-ring include: 2-lithiation of 1-substituted indole-3-carboxylic acids and amides,170
and of 3-hydroxymethyl-1-phenylsulfonylindole.171
390
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The dimethylamino group of gramine directs lithiation to C-4 when the indolic nitrogen is protected by
the bulky TIPS group, but metallation occurs normally at C-2 when this nitrogen bears a simple methyl.172
Comparable regioselectivity is found with 3-methoxymethyl-1-tri-iso-propylsilylindole.173 4-Lithiation
of 5-(dimethylcarbamoyloxy)-1-(t-butyldimethylsilyl)indole and the 6-lithiation of 4-substituted-5(dimethylcarbamoyloxy)-1-(t-butyldimethylsilyl)-indoles depend on ortho-directing effects.174
Metallation at C-7 can be achieved using a bulky N-2,2-diethylbutanoyl group, when a 3-substituent is
also present to further discourage metallation at C-2.175 An N-di-t-butylphosphinoyl group also directs
metallation to C-7, but the N-substituent is difficult to remove, so a blocking strategy can be employed:
the desired affect is achieved via a one-pot sequence from 1-(diethylaminocarbonyl)indole involving
2-lithiation, reaction with trimethylsilyl chloride (at C-2), and then peri-directed C-7-metallation.176
20.5.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
The two halogens in 2,3-dibromo-1-methylindole can be exchanged selectively – first that at the α-position
and then that at C-3177 indeed 2,3-dilithio-1-methylindole can also be generated from 2,3-diiodo-1-methylindole using t-butyllithium at −100 °C. It is significant that 2,3-diiodo-1-phenylsulfonylindole undergoes
comparable double metal–halogen exchange, but the dilithio-derivative ring opens, with the nitrogen anion
acting as a leaving group (cf. 17.4.2), even at −100 °C, to lithium 2-(N-lithiophenylsulfonamido)
phenylacetylide.
3-Lithio-indoles can be prepared by halogen exchange;178,179,180,181 the N-t-butyldimethylsilyl-derivative
is regiostable, even at 0 °C,182 whereas 3-lithio-1-phenylsulfonylindole isomerises to the 2-isomer at
temperatures above −100 °C, although hetero-ring opening and production of an alkyne is not a problem
at that temperature.183,184 The corresponding N-phenylsulfonyl-3-magnesium185 and -3-zinc186 species are
regiostable, even at room temperaure; they can be prepared from the 3-iodoindole by reaction with
ethylmagnesium bromide and lithium trimethylzincate respectively; the 2-zinc-reagent is comparably
prepared.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
391
2-Iodoindole can be converted, using three equivalents of n-butyllithium, into the 1,2-dilithio compound,
which reacts normally at C-2 with electrophiles.187
Lithium–bromine exchange can be achieved with each of the benzene-ring bromo-indoles after formation
of the N-potassium salt, i.e. N-protection.188
20.6
Reactions with Radicals
Radicals such as benzyl and hydroxyl are unselective in their interaction with indoles, resulting in mixtures
of products, so such reactions are of little synthetic use. On the other hand, benzoyloxylation of Nsubstituted indoles gives benzoates of indoxyl,189 i.e. it effectively oxidises the indole heterocyclic ring, via
β-attack by the strongly electrophilic benzoyloxy-radical. In contrast, the weakly electrophilic radical
derived from malonate reacts selectively at C-2, via an atom-transfer mechanism.190
Some efficient oxidative191 and reductive192 intramolecular carbon-radical additions can be carried out.
Ipso-replacement of toluenesulfonyl by tributylstannyl radical occurs readily at C-2193 (but not at C-3) as
does intramolecular replacement by carbon radicals.194
392
Heterocyclic Chemistry
2-Indolyl radicals can be generated under standard conditions by reacting 2-bromoindole with tributyltin
hydride.195 3-Methyl-1-tosylindole can be cyanated at C-2 in good yield by a mixture of TMSCN and PIFA
via oxidation of the indole to a cation radical, then addition of cyanide anion.196
20.7
Reactions with Reducing Agents
The indole ring system is not reduced by nucleophilic reducing agents, such as lithium aluminium hydride
or sodium borohydride; lithium/liquid ammonia does, however, reduce the benzene ring; 4,7-dihydroindole
is the main product.197
Reduction with lithium in the presence of trimethylsilyl chloride, followed by re-aromatisation, produces
4-trimethylsilylindole, an intermediate useful for the synthesis of 4-substituted indoles via electrophilic
ipso-replacement of silicon.198
Reduction of the heterocyclic ring is readily achieved under acidic conditions; formerly, metal–acid
combinations199 were used, but now much milder conditions employ relatively acid-stable metal hydrides,
such as sodium cyanoborohydride. Triethylsilane in trifluoroacetic acid is another convenient combination;
2,3-disubstituted indoles give 2,3-cis-indolines by this method.200 Such reductions proceed by hydride attack
on the β-protonated indole – the 3H-indolium cation.201 Catalytic reduction of indole, again in acid solution,
produces indoline initially, further slower reduction completing the saturation.202 Rhodium-catalysed highpressure hydrogenation of indoles with a t-butoxycarbonyl group on nitrogen proceeds smoothly to give
2,3-cis-indolines.203
20.8
Reactions with Carbenes
No cyclopropane-containing products have been isolated from the interaction of an indole 2,3-double bond
with carbenes (cf. 16.9). Methoxycarbonyl-substituted carbenes give rise only to a substitution product, at
C-3 if available and at C-2 from 3-substituted indoles.204,205
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
20.9
393
Electrocyclic and Photochemical Reactions
The heterocyclic double bond in simple indoles will take part in cycloaddition reactions with dipolar 4π
components,206 and with electron-deficient dienes (i.e. inverse electron demand), in most reported cases,
held close using a tether;207 a comparable effect is seen in the intermolecular cycloaddition of 2,3cycloalkyl-indoles to ortho-quinone generating a 1,4-dioxane.208 The introduction of electron-withdrawing
substituents enhances the tendency for cycloaddition to electron-rich dienes: 3-acetyl-1-phenylsulfonylindole, for example, undergoes aluminium-chloride-catalysed cycloaddition with isoprene,209 and 3-nitro-1phenylsulfonylindole reacts with 1-acylamino-buta-1,3-dienes without the need for a catalyst.210 Both 3- and
2-nitro-1-phenylsulfonyl-indoles undergo dipolar cycloadditions with azomethine ylides.211
Both 2- and 3-vinylindoles can take part as 4π components in Diels–Alder cycloadditions;212 mostly,
but not always,213 these employ N-acyl- or N-arylsulfonyl-indoles, in which the interaction between nitrogen
lone pair and π-system has been reduced.214 The example shows how this process can be utilised in the
rapid construction of a complex pentacycle.215
When tethered 1,2,4-triazines are used, their interaction with the indole 2,3-double bond generates carbolines. The tether can be incorporated into the product molecule,216 or be designed to be broken in situ,
as in the example below.217 1,2,4,5-Tetrazines react with the indole 2,3-bond in an intermolecular sense;
the initial adduct loses nitrogen and then is oxidised to the aromatic level by a second mole equivalent of
the tetrazine.218
394
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A 1-vinylamino-indole undergoes a 3,3-sigmatropic rearrangement giving the tricyclic ring system of
the eseroline alkaloids.219
Claisen ortho-ester rearrangement of indol-3-yl-alkanols introduces the migrating group to the indole
2-position.220
Under the influence of UV light, N-methylindoles add dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate, generating
cyclobuteno-fused products,221 and even simple alkenes add in an apparent 2 + 2 fashion to N-acyl-indoles,
but the mechanism probably involves radical intermediates.222 Other photochemical additions to form Nbenzoyl-indolines fused to four-membered rings include addition to the carbonyl group in benzophenone
and the double bond in methyl acrylate.223
20.10 Alkyl-Indoles
Only alkyl groups at indole α-positions show any special reactions. Many related observations confirm that
in a series of equilibria, β-protonation can lead to 2-alkylidene-indolines, and hence reactivity towards
electrophiles at an α-, but not a β-alkyl group, for example in DCl at 100 °C 2,3-dimethylindole exchanges
H for D only at the 2-methyl. This same phenomenon is seen in Mannich condensation224 and trifluoroacetylation225 of 1,2,3-trimethylindole at the α-methyl.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
395
Side-chain lithiation is again specific for an α-substituent, via an N-lithium carboxylate,226 or even
without N-protection.227
A quite different side-chain acylation can be achieved with aluminium chloride catalysis: here, association of the Lewis acid with the indole α-position is assumed to lead to a styrene intermediate, which is
acylated.228
20.11
Reactions of Indolyl-C–X Compounds
Gramine and, especially, its quaternary salts are useful synthetic intermediates in that they are easily prepared and the dimethylamino group is easily displaced by nucleophiles – reactions with cyanide229 and
acetamidomalonate230 anions, and boronic acids with rhodium(I) catalysis,231 are typical.
The easy displacement of the amine (ammonium) group proceeds by way of an elimination, involving
loss of the indole hydrogen, and thus the intermediacy of a β-alkylidene-indolenine that then readily adds
the nucleophile, regenerating the indole system. This mechanism has been verified by observing: (i) very
much slower displacement with a corresponding 1-methyl-gramine, and (ii) racemisation on displacement
using a substituted gramine in which the nitrogen-bearing carbon was a chiral centre.232
Utilising tri-n-butylphosphine to displace the dimethylamino group generates, in situ, a zwitterion which,
by proton transfer, becomes a Wittig intermediate and thus can be utilised to prepare 3-vinyl-indoles.233
396
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A related sequence is involved in the lithium aluminium hydride reduction of indol-3-yl-carbinols (which
can be obtained from the corresponding ketones using milder reducing agents), with formation of the alkylindole. This constitutes a useful synthesis of 3-alkyl-indoles.234 The one-pot conversion of 3-formylindole
into 3-cyanomethylindole with a mixture of sodium cyanide and sodium borohydride probably involves a
comparable elimination from the cyanohydrin, then reduction.235
Yet another use for (N-protected) gramines is conversion into 3-bromo-indoles: this involves βbromination and then retro-Mannich loss of the original substituent.236 Combined with the directing ability
of the original dimethylamino group (20.5.1) this provides a route to 4-substituted 3-bromo-indoles.
Although indolylic halides are generally unstable and not synthetically useful, N-acylated derivatives are
much more stable, can be prepared by side-chain radical substitution, and can be utilised in nucleophilic
substitution processes.237
20.12
Indole Carboxylic Acids
Both indole-3-carboxylic238 and indol-2-yl-acetic acids are easily decarboxylated in boiling water. In each
case carbon dioxide is lost from a small concentration of β-protonated 3H-indolium cation, the loss being
analogous to the decarboxylation of a β-keto-acid. Indole-1-carboxylic acid also decarboxylates very easily,
but is sufficiently stable to allow isolation and use in acylation reactions.239 Indole-2-carboxylic acids can
only be decarboxylated by heating in mineral acid or in the presence of copper salts.240
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
397
3-Trifluoroacetyl-indoles, very simply obtained from indoles by electrophilic substitution, are useful
stable equivalents of indol-3-yl-carboxylic acid chlorides, giving amides or acids in reactions with lithium
amides or aqueous base respectively. The reactivity of the N-hydrogen compounds is greater than of those
with N-alkyl, indicating the intermediacy of a ketene in the reactions of the former.241
In a nice exemplification of the mesomeric interaction between indole nitrogen and a 3-carbonyl, which
renders the 3-carbonyl somewhat amide-like (see also 20.11), 2,3-dicarboxylic acid anhydrides react with
some nucleophiles selectively at the 2-carbonyl; inductive withdrawal by the ring nitrogen may also play
a part in achieving this selectivity.242
20.13
Oxy-Indoles
Indoles with a hydroxyl group on the benzene ring behave like normal phenols; indoles with an oxygen at
either of the heterocyclic ring positions are quite different.
20.13.1 Oxindole
Oxindole exists as the carbonyl-tautomer, the hydroxyl-tautomer (‘2-hydroxyindole’) being undetectable.
There is nothing remarkable about the reactions of oxindole; for the most part it is a typical 5-membered
lactam, except that deprotonation at the β-carbon (pKa ∼ 18) occurs more readily than with simple amides,
because the resulting anion is stabilised by an aromatic indole resonance contributor. Such anions will react
with electrophiles like alkyl halides and aldehydes243,244 at the β-carbon, the last with dehydration and
the production of aldol condensation products. Oxindoles can be oxidised to isatins (20.13.3) via
easy 3,3-dibromination, then hydrolysis.245 Bromination of oxindole with N-bromosuccinimide gives
5-bromooxindole.193
The interaction of oxindole with the Vilsmeier reagent produces 2-chloro-3-formylindole efficiently;246
this difunctional indole has considerable potential for elaboration, for example nucleophilic displacement
of the halogen, activated by the ortho-aldehyde, can produce indoles carrying a nitrogen substituent at
C-2.247
398
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Of potential in palladium(0)-catalysed coupling processes to the indole 2-position is the 1-phenylsulfonylated 2-triflate readily obtained from 1-phenylsulfonyloxindole (see also 4.2.3).248
20.13.2
Indoxyl249
3-Hydroxyindole certainly contributes in the tautomeric equilibrium with the carbonyl form, though it is
the minor component. Indoxyl, pKa 10.46,250 is more acidic than oxindole, the anion produced is ambident;
reactions with electrophiles at both oxygen and carbon are known.251
The indoxyl anion is particularly easily autoxidised, producing the ancient blue dye, indigo. The mechanism probably involves dimerisation of a radical formed by loss of an electron from the anion.
O-Acetylindoxyl252 and N-acyl-indoxyls are more stable substances; the latter undergo normal ketonecarbonyl reactions, such as the Wittig reaction.253
Mirroring oxindoles, aldol-type condensation at the 2-position in indoxyls can be accomplished either
using the acetate of the enol form and base catalysis,254 or with indoxyl itself, in either acid or basic conditions.255 Borohydride reduction and dehydration allows these alkylidene condensation products to be converted into 2-substituted indoles.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
399
Peroxide oxidation of N-phenylsulfonylindole-3-boronic acid gives N-phenylsulfonylindoxyl, which can
be converted into the triflate of the 3-hydroxyindole tautomer.256 The same N-protected indoxyl can be
prepared by ring synthesis, as shown below.
20.13.3 Isatin257
Isatin is a stable, bright orange solid that is commercially available in large quantities. Because it readily
undergoes clean aromatic substitution reactions at C-5, N-alkylation via an anion, and ketonic reactions at
the C-3-carbonyl group, for example enolate addition,258 it is a very useful intermediate for the synthesis
of indoles and other heterocycles.
Conversion of isatins into oxindoles can be achieved by catalytic reduction in acid,259 or by the Wolff–
Kischner process.260,261 3-Substituted indoles result from Grignard addition at the ketone carbonyl, followed
by lithium aluminium hydride reduction of the residual amide, then dehydration.262 The reaction of isatin
with triphenylphosphine provides an easy synthesis of 3-(triphenylphosphorylidene)oxindole, a Wittig
reagent.263
A process that produces pyrroles, from ketones and hydroxyproline, works well with isatins.264
20.13.4 1-Hydroxyindole265
1-Hydroxyindole can be prepared in solution, but attempted purification leads to dimerisation via its nitrone
tautomer; however, O-alkyl-derivatives can be formed easily and are stable.266
400
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Lithiation of 1-methoxyindole takes place at C-2 and thus substituents can be introduced. Various
nucleophilic substitutions, with departure of the 1-substituent can take place. One of the reactions below
shows the introduction of a hydroxyl group onto the indole 5-position by aqueous acid treatment of a
1-hydroxyindole.267 1-Methoxy groups allow nucleophilic attack on the heterocyclic ring, as illustrated by
the second example.268
Cine-nucleophilic substitution of methoxy in a 1-methoxy-3-formyl-indole produces the 2-substituted
product.269
20.14 Amino-Indoles
2-Aminoindole exists mainly as the 3H-tautomer, presumably because of the energy advantage conveyed
by amidine-type resonance. 3-Aminoindole is very unstable, and easily autoxidised.270 Both 2- and 3acylamino-indoles are stable and can be obtained by catalytic reduction of nitro-precursors in the presence
of anhydrides.271 1-Amino-indoles can be prepared by direct amination of the indolyl anion.272
20.15 Aza-Indoles273,274
The (mono)-aza-indoles, or more correctly pyrrolo-pyridines, where a carbon of the six-membered ring
has been replaced by nitrogen, are of interest as bicyclic systems comprising an electron-rich ring fused to
an electron-poor ring. Simple aza-indoles are not known in nature, but polycyclic products containing
azaindole units have been isolated from sea sponges. Aza-indoles have elicited significant interest in
medicinal chemistry as isosteres of indoles, particularly as components of azatryptamine analogues and
even as di-deaza-purines.
Aza-indoles show the typical reactivity of both component heterocycles, but to a reduced and varying
degree, with reduced electron density in the five-membered ring and increased electron density in the sixmembered ring.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
401
The pKaHs for protonation on the pyridine nitrogen, of the four parent systems, demonstrate the degree
of push–pull interaction between the two rings. For example, the pKaHs of 5- and 7-azaindoles reflect, but
to a greater degree, the pKaHs of 4-aminopyridine (9.1) and 2-aminopyridine (7.2), respectively, and are
partly explained by the more favourable γ-interaction between the donating and accepting groups in the
former. This differential reactivity is exaggerated in mildly acidic solutions, such as are used in Mannich
reactions, where the 5-azaindole is present predominantly in protonated form, while the 7-azaindole is
mainly present in the form of its free base.
20.15.1 Electrophilic Substitution
Reactions with electrophilic reagents take place with substitution at C-3 or by addition at the pyridine
nitrogen. All the aza-indoles are much more stable to acid than indole (cf. 20.1.1.9), no doubt due to the
diversion of protonation onto the pyridine nitrogen, but the reactivity towards other electrophiles at C-3 is
only slightly lower than that of indoles. Bromination and nitration occur cleanly in all four parent systems275
and are more controllable than in the case of indole. Mannich and Vilsmeier reactions can be carried out
in some cases, but when the latter fails, 3-aldehydes can be prepared by reaction with hexamine, possibly
via the anion of the azaindole. Alkylation under neutral conditions results in quaternisation on the pyridine
nitrogen and reaction with sodium salts allows N-1-alkylation. Acylation under mild conditions also occurs
at N-1. The scheme below summarises these reactions for the most widely studied system – 7-azaindole.
Acylation at C-3 in all four systems can be carried out at room temperature in the presence of excess aluminium chloride.276
20.15.2 Nucleophilic Substitution
Only a few examples of nucleophilic substitution have been reported – displacement of halogen α and γ
to the pyridine nitrogen can be carried out under vigorous conditions or with long reaction times. No
Chichibabin substitutions have been reported. Reaction of 4-chloro-7-azaindole with a secondary amine
results in normal substitution of the halogen, but reaction with primary amines gives 5-azaindole rearrangement products by the sequence shown below.277
402
Heterocyclic Chemistry
4-Chloro-7-azaindole undergoes nucleophilic displacement with cyanide; the halide is available via the
N-oxide.278
The reactivity of 4-chloro-1-methyl-5-azaindole, for which data is available, towards nucleophilic substitution of chlorine by piperidine279 can be usefully compared with that of some related systems: it is
significantly less reactive than the most closely related bicyclic systems, probably due to increased electron
density in the six-membered ring resulting from donation from N-1.
Relative rates for nucleophilic displacement with piperidine in MeO(CH2)2OH at 100 °C280
1-Phenylsulfonyl-7-azaindole is lithiated at C-2 by lithium diisopropylamide; subsequent reactions of
the lithiated azaindole are normal, for example the preparation of a stannane.281
20.16
Synthesis of Indoles282
20.16.1 Ring Synthesis of Indoles
Indoles are usually prepared from non-heterocyclic precursors by cyclisation reactions on suitably substituted benzenes; they can also be prepared from pyrroles by construction of the homocyclic aromatic ring,
and from indolines by dehydrogenation.
Because of the importance of indoles in natural product synthesis and pharmaceutical chemistry, reports
of new routes to indoles and improvements to older reactions appear frequently. This section discusses the
most important methods now available, often those that have been used most frequently and are the most
adaptable.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
403
20.16.1.1 From Aryl-hydrazones of Aldehydes and Ketones
Still the most widely used route, heating an arylhydrazone, usually with acid, sometimes in an inert solvent
gives an indole with the loss of ammonia.
The Fischer Synthesis
The Fischer synthesis,283 first discovered in 1883, involves the acid- or Lewis-acid-catalysed rearrangement
of an arylhydrazone with the elimination of ammonia. The preparation of 2-phenylindole illustrates the
process in its simplest form.284
In many instances the reaction can be carried out simply by heating together the aldehyde or ketone and
arylhydrazine in acetic acid;285 the formation of the arylhydrazone and its subsequent rearrangement take
place without the necessity for isolation of the arylhydrazone. Toluenesulfonic acid, cation-exchange resins,
acidic clays and phosphorus trichloride have all been recommended for efficient cyclisations, sometimes
even at or below room temperature.286 Electron-releasing substituents on the benzene ring increase the rate
of Fischer cyclisation, whereas electron-withdrawing substituents slow the process down,287 though even
arylhydrazones carrying nitro groups can be indolised satisfactorily with appropriate choice of acid
and conditions, for example a two-phase mixture of toluene and phosphoric acid,288 or boron trifluoride in
acetic acid.289 Electron-withdrawing substituents meta to the nitrogen give rise to roughly equal amounts
of 4- and 6-substituted indoles; electron-releasing groups similarly oriented produce mainly the 6substituted indole.216 Na-Aroyl-290 and Na-Boc-291 arylhydrazones undergo normal Fischer closures, the latter
with loss of the Boc group in situ. The Fischer process can be conducted on solid support in traceless mode
by attaching the non-aromatic nitrogen to the support292 (this is lost in the conversion – see below).
The mechanistic details of the multi-step Fischer sequence are best represented by the sequence shown
below. Labelling studies proved the loss of the non-aromatic nitrogen as ammonia, and in some cases
intermediates have been detected by 13C and 15N NMR spectroscopy.293 The most important step – the one
in which a carbon–carbon bond is made, marked A – is electrocyclic in character and analogous to the
Claisen rearrangement of aryl allyl ethers.
404
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Support for this sequence also comes from the observation that, in many cases indolisation can be
achieved thermally, at a temperature as low as 110 °C, in the special case of pre-formed ene-hydrazines,
i.e. in which the first step of the normal sequence – acid-catalysed tautomerisation of imine to enamine –
has already been accomplished.294 The reaction does, however, still occur more rapidly in the presence
of acid and this is interpreted as protonation of the nitrogen, as shown above, facilitating the electrocyclic step.
Fischer cyclisations can be achieved thermally, but generally much higher temperatures are required
and proton transfer from solvent (typically a glycol) may be involved. However, using pre-formed Ntrifluoroacetyl-ene-hydrazines allows thermal cyclisation at temperatures as low as 65 °C.295 As the example
below shows, in the case of derivatives of cyclopentanones, the 2-aminoindoline intermediate can be isolated at lower temperatures; subsequent elimination of trifluoroacetamide is easy and efficient.
An extreme case of acid catalysis is the indolisation of phenylhydrazones of β-dicarbonyl-compounds
in concentrated sulfuric acid;296 in milder acid, only pyrazolones are produced from the interaction of βketo-esters with hydrazines (25.12.1.1).
An aspect of the Fischer reaction that is of considerable practical importance is the ratio of the two possible indoles formed from unsymmetrical ketones; in many instances, mixtures result because ene-hydrazine
formation occurs in both directions. It appears that strongly acidic conditions favour the least substituted
ene-hydrazine.297
Cyclic enol ethers, enamides and related compounds are very useful stable aldehyde equivalents, as they
can be precursors for tryptamine derivatives and analogues.298,299
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
405
Indolenines (3H-indoles) are formed efficiently on Fischer cyclisation of the arylhydrazones of branched
ketones; note, again, the use of a weaker acid medium to promote formation of the more substituted enehydrazine required for indolenine formation.300 Subjected to higher temperatures of reaction, the arylhydrazones of branched ketones give rise to 2,3-disubstituted indoles, via a 2 → 3 migration (cf. 20.1.1.6)
in the first-formed indolenine.301
An important extension to the Fischer route is the ability to prepare arylhydrazones in ways other than
from ketones/aldehydes. A generally applicable process is the palladium(0)-catalysed coupling of benzophenone hydrazone with aryl halides, which allows the convenient preparation of a wide range of arylhydrazones of benzophenone, then the benzophenone arylhydrazone can be either hydrolysed to the
arylhydrazine, or even more conveniently, used directly in the Fischer cyclisation, where exchange occurs
with the ketone.302
In another variant, N-Boc-hydrazine (t-BuOCONHNH2) is coupled with an aryl halide via the carbamate
nitrogen; the subsequent Fischer sequence can be conducted in the same pot after addition of acid, with
loss of the Boc group.303 Hydroamination of alkynes via various protocols304 also produces arylhydrazones,
ready for the Fischer process.
Transformations that are mechanistically analogous to the Fischer, and also produce indoles, use arylhydroxylamines instead of arylhydrazines, as shown below.305
406
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The Grandberg Synthesis
An exceptionally useful adaptation is the Grandberg synthesis of tryptamines from 4-halo-butanals, or more
often in practice their acetals,306 in which the nitrogen usually lost during the Fischer process is incorporated
as the nitrogen of the aminoethyl side-chain.307
20.16.1.2 From ortho-(2-Oxoalkyl)-Anilines and Equivalents
Cyclisation of ortho-(2-oxoalkyl)-anilines by simple intramolecular condensation with loss of water, occurs
spontaneously. There are several ways of generating the intermediate amino-ketone, or its equivalent; the
prototype is the Reissert synthesis.
The Reissert Synthesis
The acidity of a methyl group ortho to nitro on a benzene ring is the means for condensation with oxalate
in this route; the nitro group is then reduced to amino.308
With the nitrogen already at the oxidation level of amine, but carrying a t-butoxycarbonyl group to assist
the ortho-methyl (alkyl) lithiation, reaction with oxalate as in the classical sequence and final removal of
the N-substituent with acid, again leads to an indole-2-ester.309 The synthesis of 2-unsubstituted indoles is
achieved by reaction of the N,C-dilithiated species with dimethylformamide.310
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
407
Various other routes produce Reissert-type ring-closure precursors. For example, the palladium-catalysed
coupling, in the presence of a methoxyphenol additive, of ortho-halo-nitroarenes with methyl ketones,
followed by titanium trichloride reduction of the products, leads directly to 3-unsubstituted indoles.311 More
obviously, ortho-halo trifluoroacetanilides can be coupled with β-keto esters or amides, the base incorporated in the mixture leading to hydrolysis and closure to the indole.312
Coupling reactions using N-protected ortho-halo-anilines have been widely used to prepare ortho(2-oxoalkyl)-anilines; in these instances no reductive step is required though the carbonyl-unit is sometimes
incorporated in masked form, such as a 2-ethoxyvinyl-boronate, requiring deprotection.313
Aromatic nitro-compounds can be made to condense314 with silyl-enol-ethers using tris(dimethylamino)
sulfur (trimethylsilyl)difluoride (TASF); a non-aromatic nitronate intermediate is aromatised by reaction
with bromine, without isolation, to provide a 2-(ortho-nitroaryl)-ketone and thence an indole after nitro
group reduction.315
Leimgruber–Batcho Synthesis
The Leimgruber–Batcho synthesis316 is one of the most widely used variations and also depends on the
acidity of methyl groups ortho to aromatic nitro to allow introduction of the future indole α-carbon as an
enamine and thence the synthesis of pyrrole-ring-unsubstituted indoles. Condensation with hot dimethylformamide dimethyl acetal (DMFDMA) (no added base being necessary) leads to an enamine; the condensation can be enhanced by microwave irradiation in the presence of a catalyst, such as ytterbium triflate.317
Subsequent reduction of the nitro group, usually in acid conditions, leads directly to the hetero-ringunsubstituted indole probably via a C-protonated amino-enamine. Mechanistically, this process is dependent on ionisation of the reagent producing methoxide (which deprotonates the aromatic methyl) and an
electrophilic component, MeOCH=N+Me2, which combines with the side-chain-deprotonated aromatic.
Both tris(piperidin-1-yl)methane and bis(dimethylamino)-t-butoxymethane (Bredereck’s reagent) can function even better than DMFDMA.318 A variety of benzene substituents are tolerated and the approach has
been utilised for the syntheses of, amongst others, 4- and 7-indole-carboxylic esters.319
408
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A Leimgruger–Batcho-type amino-enamine intermediate is likely to be involved following reduction of
2-(ortho-nitroaryl)-nitroethenes.320 Reduction, traditionally with metal/acid combinations, but now with
reagents such as palladium/carbon with ammonium formate and formic acid,321 iron with acetic acid and
silica gel,322 or titanium(III) chloride,323 gives the indole.
20.16.1.3 From ortho-Nitro-Styrenes
It is convenient to include here some ring closures involving ortho-nitro-styrenes, i.e. with the future C-2
at a lower starting oxidation level. ortho-Nitro-styrenes are readily available by a number routes: (i) reaction of an (ortho-bromomethyl)-nitroarene with a phosphine then Wittig condensation with an aldehyde;
(ii) Wittig reaction employing an (ortho-nitro)-araldehyde as the carbonyl component; (iii) base-catalysed
condensation of a methyl group ortho to an aromatic nitro group with an aldehyde and (iv) ortho-nitration
of a styrene. Reduction of the nitro group over a catalyst, in the presence of carbon monoxide leads to the
indole.324
Methods involving ruthenium-catalysed condensations of arylamines with alcohols give indoles: the
mechanism involves hydride transfer giving aldehyde intermediates. The process can be carried out intramolecularly325 or intermolecularly, for example by the reaction of aniline with triethanolamine.326 At a still
lower oxidation level, 2-(ortho-aminoaryl)-ethanols can be converted327 directly into indoles with a catalyst
that can oxidise the alcohol to a carbonyl group, with expulsion of hydrogen.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
409
20.16.1.4 From ortho-Alkynyl-Arylamines
Cyclisation of ortho-alkynyl-arylamines can be achieved in various ways; Sonogashira reactions (4.2)
provide the starting ortho-alkynyl-anilines.
Sonogashira reactions allow easy access to arenes with an alkynyl substituent ortho to nitrogen, for
example from ortho-iodo- and -bromo-nitrobenzenes,328,329 or ortho-iodo- and -bromo-N-acyl- (or Nsulfonyl)-arylamines,330 or even by coupling acetylenes with 2-iodoaniline itself.331 Conversion of
ortho-alkynyl-nitrobenzenes and -arylamines into indoles can be achieved in several ways, for example
alkoxides add to the triple bond and form nitro-acetals, nitro-group reduction then acetal hydrolysis
bringing ring closure.329
Direct cyclisation of ortho-alkynyl-anilines can be effected simply by treatment with tetra-n-butylammonium fluoride,332 potassium t-butoxide or potassium hydride,333 or simply with gold(III) chloride.334
Treatment of 1-(2-arylethynyl)-2-nitroarenes with indium and aqueous hydrogen iodide produces 2aryl-indoles, the reagent combination both reduces the nitro to amine and then the acid activates the alkyne
for the ring closure.335 Copper(II) salts336 or diethylzinc in refluxing toluene337 can be utilised with
N-sulfonyl-ortho-alkynyl-anilines.
3-Iodo-indoles can be prepared simply by using the halogen (or bis(pyridine)iodonium(I) tetrafluoroborate338) to activate the alkyne for nucleophilic attack by the nitrogen.339 Even N,N-dimethyl ortho-alkynylanilines take part in such closures, iodomethane being lost in the final stage, with formation of an N-methyl
indole.340
When palladium is used to effect ring closure, the organopalladium intermediate can be either protonolysed, producing a 3-unsubstituted indole, or trapped out with consequent insertion of a substituent at the
indole β-position.341
410
Heterocyclic Chemistry
20.16.1.5
From ortho-Halo Aryl-Amines and Alkynes
Some reaction conditions using terminal alkynes and ortho-halo-anilines lead directly through to indoles,
but probably these involve initial alkynylation of the aromatic and then ring closure in situ (20.16.1.4).342,343,344
Using titanium tetrachloride, the two steps in situ are hydroamination then Heck cyclisation.345
Disubstituted acetylenes can be utilised in a palladium-catalysed cyclo-condensation of ortho-haloanilines giving the indole directly; the larger group (or hydroxyl-containing group) finishes at C-2.346 A
pyridin-2-yl-substituent tends to end at C-2, also, by coordinating the metal in the intermediate.347
20.16.1.6 From ortho-Toluidides
Base-catalysed cyclo-condensation of an ortho-alkyl-anilide gives an indole.
The Madelung Synthesis
In its original form, this route employed very harsh conditions (typically348 sodium amide or potassium tbutoxide at 250–350 °C) to effect condensation between an unactivated aromatic methyl and an orthoacylamino substituent, and was consequently limited to situations having no other sensitive groups. With
the advent of the widespread use of alkyllithiums as bases, these cyclocondensations can now be brought
about under much milder conditions.349
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
411
Modifications in which the benzylic hydrogens are acidified also allow the use of mild conditions; one
example is the generation of a phosphonium ylide and then an intramolecular Wittig-like reaction, involving the amide carbonyl;350 another variant uses a benzyl-silane.351 The use of an amino-silane permits
reaction at both nitrogen and benzylic carbon to take place in one pot.352
Formation of the 2–3 bond is also possible using the anion from an aryl-amino-nitrile adding intramolecularly to an unsaturated ketone or ester; the nitrile serves to acidify the future C-2-hydrogen and also to
bring about aromatisation via final loss of hydrogen cyanide.353
Finally, in this category there must be included cyclisations of the benzylic anions derived from orthoisocyano-toluenes; the scheme shows this route in its simplest form. However, the synthesis is very flexible,
for example the initial benzylic anion can be alkylated with halides or epoxides before the ring closure,
thus providing 3-substituted indoles and, additionally, the final N-lithioindole can be N-alkylated by adding
a suitable electrophile before work-up.354
20.16.1.7 From α-Arylamino-Carbonyl Compounds
An α-arylamino-ketone is cyclised by electrophilic attack onto the aromatic ring.
The Bischler Synthesis
In the original method, the Bischler synthesis, harsh acidic treatment of 2-arylamino-ketones (produced
from a 2-halo-ketone and an arylamine) was used to bring about electrophilic cyclisation onto the aromatic
ring; these conditions often result in mixtures of products via rearrangements.355 However, N-acylated
2-arylamino-ketones and, particularly, acetals can be cyclised under much more controlled conditions, and
in contrast to earlier work, this approach to indoles can even be used to produce hetero-ring-unsubstituted
412
Heterocyclic Chemistry
indoles.356 Lithium bromide, as a Lewis acid, will catalyse the ring closure of dimethoxyarylamino-ketones,
without rearrangement, under essentially neutral conditions, indeed a one-pot procedure will take a dimethoxyaniline and the chloro-ketone through to the indole.357
There is also a palladium(0) catalytic route involving formation of the 3–3a bond: assembly of an Nalkynyl-ortho-iodoaniline-tosylamide is followed by exposure to the catalyst and an amine, which becomes
incorporated into the indole at C-2.358
20.16.1.8 From Pyrroles (see also 16.8)
Several unrelated strategies have been utilised for the fusion of a benzene ring onto a pyrrole to generate
an indole;359 most follow a route in which a pyrrole, carrying a four-carbon side-chain at the α-carbon, is
cyclised via an electrophilic attack at the adjacent pyrrole β-position; one of these is shown.360 Another
route involves the electrocyclisation of 2,3-divinyl-pyrroles.361
20.16.1.9 From ortho-Substituted Nitro-Arenes
Bartoli Synthesis
In the extraordinary, but nonetheless efficient and extremely practically simple process now known as
the Bartoli synthesis, ortho-substituted nitrobenzenes362 treated with three mole equivalents of vinylmagnesium bromide give 7-substituted indoles. The process works best when the 7-substitutent is large363
(a bromine can be used as a removable ‘large’ group364) and it is thought that initial attack by the vinyl
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
413
Grignard is at the nitro group oxygen with subsequent elimination of magnesium enolate producing the
nitroso equivalent of the original – it seems likely that this step is encouraged by non-planarity of the nitro
group and the aromatic system, forced on the molecule by the large ortho-substituent. A second mole
equivalent of vinyl Grignard then adds, again to oxygen generating an intermediate which undergoes a
3,3-sigmatropic rearrangement, much like that involved in the Fischer sequence, and finally hetero-ring
closure occurs.362,365
20.16.1.10 From N-Aryl Enamines
It is not clear whether the palladium-mediated cyclisations of anilino-acrylates and related systems366
operate via a Heck sequence or via an electrophilic palladation of the enamine.
In a very useful modification, simple ketones with CH2 adjacent to the carbonyl (cyclic ketones work
much better than acyclic ketones) and ortho-iodo-arylamines react under palladium catalysis to give indoles
directly. The use of dimethylformamide as solvent and DABCO as the base are crucial to the success of
the route. Mechanistically, the sequence certainly proceeds through the enamine. As well as being conceptually and practically simple, this method tolerates functional groups that would be sensitive to the acid of
the traditional Fischer sequence.367 This method can also be applied to aldehydes, thus providing a direct
route to 2-unsubstituted indoles, including side-chain-protected tryptophans.368
20.16.1.11 From Enamines and p-Benzoquinones
The Nenitzescu Synthesis
The Nenitzescu synthesis369 is another process about which some of the mechanistic details remain unclear,370
but which can be used for the efficient synthesis of certain 5-hydroxy-indoles.371
414
Heterocyclic Chemistry
20.16.1.12 From Aryl-Amines
The Gassman Synthesis
The Gassman synthesis372 produces sulfur-substituted indoles, but these can easily be hydrogenolysed if
required.
20.16.1.13 From ortho-Acyl-Anilides
The Fürstner Synthesis373
This flexible synthesis depends on the reductive cyclisation of ortho-acyl-anilides with low-valent titanium
– the conditions used for the McMurray coupling of ketones. In the example below, the cyclisation precursor was built up via the acylation of 2-tri-n-butylstannylthiazole.374
20.16.1.14 From ortho-Isocyano-Styrenes
The Fukuyama Synthesis375
ortho-Isocyano-styrenes, which are readily prepared by dehydration of the corresponding formamides,
undergo tin-promoted radical cyclisation to give unstable 2-stannyl-indoles, which can either be hydrolysed
to afford the corresponding 2-unsubstituted indole, or used without isolation for coupling with aryl halides
using palladium(0) catalysis,376 or converted into 2-iodoindoles via ipso-substitution with iodine.377
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
415
20.16.1.15 By Cyclisation of Nitrenes
Thermolysis of ortho-azido-styrenes gives nitrenes that insert into the side-chain to form indoles.378 Similar
nitrenes have been generated by reaction of nitro-compounds with trialkyl phosphites. The azide thermolysis method can be used to prepare 2-nitroindoles.379
In a complementary sense, thermolysis of β-azido-styrenes also gives indoles, but here the intermediate
may be an azirine;380 this method, the Hemetsberger–Knittel synthesis, is particularly useful for the fusion
of a pyrrole ring onto rings other than a benzene ring, as illustrated.381
20.16.1.16 By Formation of the N–C-7a Bond
The formation of indoles by making the N–C-7a bond is relatively undeveloped. One method is to activate
the nitrogen using phenyliodine bis(trifluoroacetate): a radical sequence is believed to operate.382
Intramolecular displacement of an ortho-halogen can be achieved at high temperature383 or with copper(I)catalysis.384 Palladium-catalysed aminations of halide can be used to form either the N–C-2 or N–C-7a
links, or both, for example in the double displacement shown below.385
20.16.1.17 From Indolines
Indolines are useful intermediates for the synthesis of indoles with substituents in the carbocyclic ring.
In electrophilic substitutions, they behave like anilines; the example shows N-acetylindoline undergoing
regioselective 7-thallation. Nitration of indoline 2-carboxylic acid gives the 6-nitro-derivative; separation
416
Heterocyclic Chemistry
from the 5-nitro minor product is readily achieved by controlled pH extraction. The N-acetyl-derivative
nitrates at C-5.386
Indolines can be obtained easily from indoles by reduction (see 20.7) and can be cleanly oxidised back
to indoles using a variety of methods, including oxygen with cobalt catalysis (salcomine),387 hypochlorite/
dimethyl sulfide,388 Mn(III)389 and Au(III) compounds,390 DDQ or manganese dioxide.386
An attractive variant is to utilise certain products of reversible addition to 3H-indolium cations, such as
the indole bisulfite adduct, or where there has been an intramolecular nucleophilic addition (20.1.1.2): such
compounds, though they are indolines, are still at the oxidation level of indoles, needing only mild acid
treatment to regenerate the aromatic system.391
20.16.2 Ring Synthesis of Oxindoles392
The main synthesis of oxindoles is simple and direct and involves an intramolecular Friedel–Crafts alkylation reaction as the cyclising step.393 Also straightforward in concept is the displacement of halogen from
an ortho-halo-nitroarene with malonate, this leading to an oxindole after decarboxylation and reduction of
the nitro group with spontaneous lactamisation.261
An alternative route to oxindoles depends on the intramolecular insertion of a rhodium carbenoid, derived
from a 2-diazo-1,3-ketoamide, into an adjacent aromatic C–H bond.394
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
417
Oxindoles can also be prepared by palladium-catalysed enolate cyclisation of ortho-halo-anilides.395
20.16.3 Ring Synthesis of Indoxyls
Indoxyls are normally prepared from anthranilic acids via alkylation with a haloacetic acid followed by a
cyclising condensation with loss of carbon dioxide.396,397 Indoxyl itself is best prepared by Friedel–Crafts
type ring closure of N-phenylglycine activated with triphenylphosphine oxide/triflic anhydride in the presence of triethylamine at room temperature.398
It is possible to directly chloroacylate an aniline using chloroacetonitrile and boron trifluoride, ortho to
the nitrogen. After N-acylation, ring closure produces N-acetyl-indoxyls. The Sugasawa synthesis of indoles
utilises these same ortho-chloroacetyl-anilines, via borohydride reduction and ring closure.399
418
Heterocyclic Chemistry
20.16.4 Ring Synthesis of Isatins
An isatin can be readily prepared via the reaction of an aniline with chloral, the resulting product converted
into an oxime, and this cyclised in strong acid.400 An alternative route to the oximinoacetanilide intermediates involves acylation of the aniline with 2,2-diacetoxyacetyl chloride and then reaction with
hydroxylamine.401
N,N-Dialkyl-anilines react with oxalyl chloride producing N-alkyl isatins.402
20.16.5 Synthesis of 1-Hydroxy-Indoles
The oxidation of indolines with sodium tungstate/hydrogen peroxide both aromatises and also oxidises the
nitrogen, resulting in 1-hydroxy-indoles.162 1-Hydroxy-indoles can also be obtained via ring synthesis
involving lead-promoted reductive cyclisation of ortho-nitrobenzyl-ketones (or -aldehydes).403
20.16.6 Examples of Notable Indole Syntheses
20.16.6.1 Ondansetron
Ondansetron is a selective, 5-hydroxytryptamine antagonist, used to prevent vomiting during cancer chemotherapy and radiotherapy.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
419
20.16.6.2 Staurosporine Aglycone404
Staurosporine and related molecules are under active investigation as potential anti-tumour agents. The
synthesis illustrates several aspects of heterocyclic chemistry, including a 2-pyrone acting as a diene in an
intramolecular Diels–Alder reaction, and the use of nitrene insertion for the formation of 5-membered
nitrogen rings.
20.16.6.3 Serotonin
Serotonin has been synthesised by several routes; the method shown405 relies on a Fischer indole synthesis,
the requisite aryl-hydrazone being constructed by a process known as the Japp–Klingemann reaction in
which the enol of a 1,3-dicarbonyl compound is reacted with an aryl-diazonium salt, with subsequent
cleavage of the 1,3-dicarbonyl unit.
20.16.6.4 Chuangxinmycin406
This synthesis uses the approach of starting from a pyrrole: the cyclic ketone intermediate is in general a
useful intermediate for the synthesis of 4-substituted indoles – in this case a sulfur substituent – it is already
at the aromatic oxidation level needing only the loss of the 4-chlorophenylthiol.
420
Heterocyclic Chemistry
20.16.6.5 Dragmacidin D407
A synthesis of dragmacidin D, isolated from sea sponges, a selective inhibitor of threonine protein
phosphatases, illustrates indole, pyrazine and imidazole chemistry. The final stages of the synthesis
rest on palladium(0)-catalysed couplings: a bromo-iodo-pyrazine entered regioselectively into coupling
with two indoles; the final stage, making the imidazole ring involved a 2-amino-ketone reacting with
cyanamide.
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
421
20.16.7 Synthesis of Aza-Indoles (see also 8.4.1)
Most syntheses of aza-indoles start from pyridines and parallel the standard indole syntheses discussed
above. However, the Fischer reaction using pyridyl-hydrazones is much less consistent and useful than for
arylhydrazones; the Madelung reaction is also not as useful, however the Bartoli route408 (20.16.1.9)
and the Gassman approach409 (20.16.1.12) can be used to effect. The most successful methods involve
palladium-catalysed coupling of acetylenes with amino-halo-pyridines either as one-410 or two-step333,411
processes. The starting amino-halo-pyridines are generally available via directed metallations.
Syntheses utilising nitro-pyridines by Leimgruber–Batcho processes work well412 and can be modified
by the introduction of a further substituent at the enamine stage.413
422
Heterocyclic Chemistry
7-Aza-indoles can be prepared from 2,6-dichloropyridin-3-yl-epoxides by reaction with primary amines414
and 5-, 6-, and 7-azaindole-2-esters can be made415 via the Hemetsberger–Knittel route. Note that 4-azaindoles cannot be made this way since cyclisation of the appropriate precursor takes place preferentially
onto the ring nitrogen generating a pyrazolo[1,5-a]-pyridine.
The sequence below shows the assembly of a ring-closure precursor using a VNS (3.3.3) reaction.416
Synthesis from pyrroles is useful in particular cases.412,417
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 19 and 20):
(a) What is the pKaH of indole as a base and where does it protonate? What is the pKa of indole as an acid?
(b) At what position is electrophilic substitution of indole fastest? Cite two examples.
(c) What are the structures of the intermediates and final product in the following sequence: indole with
(COCl)2 → C10H6ClNO2, then this with ammonia → C10H8N2O2, then this with LiAlH4 → C10H12N2?
Explain the last transformation in mechanistic terms.
(d) How could one prepare from indole: (i) 3-formylindole; (ii) 3-(2-nitroethyl)indole; (iii) 3dimethylaminomethylindole; (iv) 1-methylindole.
(e) At what position does strong base deprotonate an N-substituted indole? Name two groups that can be
used to block the 1-position for such deprotonations and that could be removed later. How would these
blocking groups be introduced onto the indole nitrogen?
(f) What is the mechanism of the conversion of 3-dimethylaminomethylindole into 3-cyanomethylindole
on reaction with NaCN?
(g) Which phenyl-hydrazones would be required for the Fischer indole synthesis of: (i) 3-methylindole;
(ii) 1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole; (iii) 2-ethyl-3-methylindole; (iv) 3-ethyl-2-phenylindole?
Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
423
(h) How could one convert 2-bromoaniline into 2-phenylindole (more than one step is required)?
(i) What are the advantages of using an indoline (a 2,3-dihydroindole) as an intermediate for the synthesis
of indoles?
More advanced exercises:
1. Indole reacts with a mixture of N-methyl-2-piperidone and POCl3, followed by NaOH work-up to give
C14H18N2O. What is its structure?
2. Suggest a structure for the tetracyclic product, C18H19NO, formed when 3-methylindole is treated with
2-hydroxy-3,5-dimethylbenzyl chloride.
3. When indole dimer is subjected to acid treatment in the presence of indole, ‘indole trimer ’, C24H21N3,
is produced. Suggest a structure for the ‘trimer ’. (Hint: consider which of the two reactants would be
most easily protonated, and at which atom.)
4. Starting from indole, and using a common intermediate, how could one prepare: (i) indol-3-ylacetic
acid and (ii) tryptamine?
5. What would be the products from the reactions of 5-bromo-3-iodo-1-phenylsulfonylindole with:
(i) PhB(OH)2/Pd(PPh3)4/aq. Na2CO3; (ii) ethyl acrylate/Pd(OAc)2/Ph3P/Et3N?
6. Deduce a structure, and write out the mechanism for the conversion of 2-formylindole into a tricyclic
compound, C11H9N, on treatment with a combination of NaH and Ph3P+CH = CH2 Br−.
7. When 3-ethyl-3-methyl-3H-indole is treated with acid, two products, each isomeric with the starting
material, are formed – deduce their structures and explain the formation of two products.
8. Suggest a structure for the salt C15H13N2+ Br− formed by the following sequence: 2-(2-pyridyl)indole
reacted first with n-BuLi then PhSO2Cl (→ C19H14N2O2S), then this sequentially with t-BuLi at
−100 °C, then ethylene oxide (→ C21H18N2O3S), aq. NaOH (→ C15H14N2O), and this finally reacted
with PBr3.
9. What are the products formed in the following sequence: indole/n-BuLi, then I2, then LDA, then
PhSO2Cl → C14H10INO2S, then this with LDA, then I2 → C14H9I2NO2S.
10. When indol-3-yl-CH2OH is heated with acid, di(indol-3-yl)methane is formed: suggest a mechanism
for this transformation.
11. What product, C10H11NO, would be obtained from refluxing a mixture of phenylhydrazine and 2,3dihydrofuran in acetic acid?
12. Draw structures for the aza-indoles resulting from treatment of 2-methyl-3-nitro- and 4-methyl-3-nitropyridines, respectively, with (EtO2C)2/EtONa, followed by H2/Pd–C. Both products have the molecular
formula C10H10N2O2.
13. Heating DMFDMA with the following aromatic compounds led to condensation products; subsequent
reduction with the reagent shown gave indoles. Draw the structures of the condensation products and
the indoles: (i) 2,6-dinitrotoluene then TiCl3 gave C8H8N2; (ii) 2-benzyloxy-6-nitrotoluene then H2/Pt
gave C15H13NO; (iii) 4-methoxy-2-nitrotoluene then H2/Pd gave C9H9NO; (iv) 2,3-dinitro-1,4dimethylbenzene then H2/Pd gave C10H8N2.
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Indoles: Reactions and Synthesis
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402
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21
Benzo[b]thiophenes and Benzo[b]furans:
Reactions and Synthesis
Benzo[b]thiophene1 and benzo[b]furan,2 frequently (and in the rest of this chapter) referred to simply as
benzothiophene and benzofuran, are respectively the sulfur and oxygen analogues of indole, but have been
much less fully studied.
21.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
21.1.1 Substitution at Carbon
The electrophilic substitution of these systems is much less regioselective than that of indole, for which
there is effectively complete selectivity of attack at C-3, even to the extent that the hetero-ring positions
are only a little more reactive than some of the benzene ring positions. Measurements of detritiation of
2- and 3-tritiobenzothiophenes in trifluoroacetic acid showed rates which are effectively the same for both
hetero-ring positions.3 Nitric acid nitration of benzothiophene gives a mixture in which, although the main
product is the 3-nitro derivative, lesser quantities of 2-nitro-, 4-nitro- 6-nitro- and 7-nitrobenzothiophenes
are also all produced4 however ceric ammonium nitrate in acetic anhydride at room temperature produces
a high yield of 3-nitrobenzothiophene.5 2-Nitrobenzothiophene and 2-nitrobenzofuran can be obtained in
good yields by the photo-promoted reaction of the corresponding 2-trimethylstannyl-heterocycles with
dinitrogen tetroxide and tetranitromethane.6 Friedel–Crafts acetylation7 of benzothiophene gives a mixture
or 3- and 2-acetyl-derivatives in a ratio of 7 : 3, however in other electrophilic substitutions the 3-isomer
is the only product – iodination8 falls into this category. Controlled reaction of benzothiophene with bromine
produces 3-bromobenzothiophene in moderate yield,9 however this compound is better prepared by room
temperature, high-yielding 2,3-dibromination then regioselective metallation at C-2 and protonation.10
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
434
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Benzofuran displays a lesser selectivity for 3-substitution: formylation of benzofuran gives only the
2-formyl-derivative,11 and nitric acid nitration12 produces 2-nitrobenzofuran, as does a combination of
sodium nitrite and ceric ammonium nitrate (CAN)13 or in high yield, CAN in acetic anhydride.5 Dinitrogen
tetroxide nitration produces a 5:2 mixture of 3- and 2-nitrobenzofurans, but an activating group on the
benzene ring tips the balance and leads to benzene-ring substitution.14 Treatment of benzofuran with halogens results in 2,3-addition products; reaction with the interhalogen BrCl gives 2-bromo-3-chloro adducts;
from these addition products, by base-promoted hydrogen halide elimination, 3-monohalo-benzofurans can
be obtained in high yields.15 N-Bromosuccinimide smoothly 3-brominates 2-substituted benzofurans.16
Friedel–Crafts substitution is complicated for hetero-ring-unsubstituted benzofurans because typical catalysts tend to cause resinification, but 3-acylations17 are achieved using ferric chloride. Ytterbium-triflatecatalysed hydroxyalkylation by ethyl glyoxylate is efficient, and regioselective for C-3 for both
benzothiophene and benzofuran.18
With substituents already present, the pattern of electrophilic substitution can be difficult to predict: some
examples serve to illustrate this. Nitration of 2-bromobenzothiophene results in ipso-substitution and thus
the formation of 2-nitrobenzothiophene, whereas 2-chlorobenzothiophene gives the 3-nitro-substitution
product;19 nitration of 3-bromobenzothiophene proceeds in moderate yield to give the 2-nitro derivative.20
On the other hand, 3-carboxy- or 3-acyl-benzothiophenes nitrate mainly in the benzene ring.21 Bromination22
and Friedel–Crafts substitution23 of 3-methyl- and 2-methylbenzothiophenes takes place cleanly at the
vacant hetero-ring position; similarly 2-bromobenzothiophene undergoes Vilsmeier formylation at C-3.24
3-Methoxybenzothiophene gives the corresponding 2-aldehyde under Vilsmeier conditions.25
21.1.2 Addition to Sulfur in Benzothiophenes
Benzothiophenium salts26 are produced by the reaction of the sulfur heterocycle with powerful alkylating
reagents such as Meerwein salts; benzothiophenium salts can themselves act as powerful alkylating agents
with fission of the C–S+ bond.27
S-Oxidation produces 1,1-dioxides, which readily undergo cycloadditions as dienophiles,28 or photodimerisation, the head-to-head dimer being the major product.29 S-Oxidation of the sulfur using a microbiological method gives the S-oxide.30
Benzo[ b]thiophenes and Benzo[b]furans: Reactions and Synthesis
21.2
435
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Halogen at a benzothiophene 2-position is subject to displacement with amine nucleophiles,31 and, more
easily than halogen at the 3-position.
21.3
Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Benzothiophenes and Benzofurans
In some of the earliest uses of n-butyllithium, 2-lithiobenzofuran was obtained by metal–halogen
exchange between the 2-bromo-heterocycle and n-butyllithium,32 or by metallation of benzofuran.33
The generation of 3-metallated benzofurans generally results in fragmentation with the production of
2-hydroxyphenylacetylene at room temperature,34,98 though the 3-lithio derivative can be utilised by maintaining a very low temperature.35 2,3-Dibromobenzofuran lithiates at C-2.36
Sodium amide causes ring cleavage of benzothiophene to produce 2-ethynylphenyl thiol.37 Ring opening
in a rather different manner results from exposure of the heterocycle to lithium dimethylamide, followed
by trapping with iodomethane, producing an enamine which must result from initial addition at C-2, perhaps
by a minor pathway, but one which then leads to irreversible ring-opening elimination.38
A ring opening can also be observed via butyllithium attack at sulfur.39
3-Lithio-benzothiophenes can be generated, and reacted with electrophiles, if the temperature is kept
low.40 Direct deprotonation of benzothiophenes follows the usual pattern for five-membered heterocycles
and takes place adjacent to the heteroatom,41 and in concord with this pattern, metal–halogen exchange
processes favour a 2- over a 3-halogen; the sequence below shows how this can be utilised to develop
substituted benzothiophenes.42 2-Lithiated reagents react with electrophiles: for example with ptoluenesulfonyl cyanide, 2-cyano derivatives are produced43 and similarly, 2-trimethylstannylbenzofuran
and -benzothiophene6 and benzofuran-2-44 and benzothiophene-2-boronic acids45 can be prepared.
436
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Metallation of thiophene 2- and 3-esters takes place adjacent to the ester functionality, i.e. at C-3 and
C-2, respectively.46
21.4
Reactions with Radicals
There are few examples of radical substitution of benzofuran or benzothiophene: perfluoroalkylation of
benzofuran is one such, as illustrated.47 This process can also be applied to 2-substitution of thiophene,
pyrrole, imidazole and indole.
21.5
Reactions with Oxidising and Reducing Agents
Hydrodesulfurisation of benzothiophenes is conveniently achieved using Raney nickel.48 Reduction of the
hetero-rings of both benzofuran and benzothiophene giving 2,3-dihydro derivatives, notably with retention
of the sulfur in the latter case, can be achieved using triethylsilane in acidic solution,49 or with hydrogen
over colloidal rhodium.50 Reductive cleavage of benzofuran to 2-hydroxystyrene is caused by lithium with
4,4′-di-t-butylbiphenyl (DTBB).51
2,3-Dihydroxylation of benzofuran and benzothiophene giving cis-2,3-dihydro-2,3-dihydroxy derivatives can be achieved using Pseudomonas putida.52 Benzofurans can be epoxidised at the hetero-ring double
bond with dimethyl dioxirane, or alternatively converted into dioxetanes by reaction of that double bond
with singlet oxygen. Both oxidised species are unstable and undergo a variety of complex further
processes.53
21.6
Electrocyclic Reactions
2-54 and 3-Vinyl-55 benzofurans and benzothiophenes will serve as dienes in Diels–Alder cycloadditions,
though under forcing conditions. The fusion of a pyridine ring onto benzothiophene can be achieved via a
Staudinger reaction, using either 2- or 3-azides, to give phosphinimines, which undergo aza-Wittig condensations with unsaturated aldehydes, the ensuing electrocyclisation being followed by spontaneous
dehydrogenation.56
Benzo[ b]thiophenes and Benzo[b]furans: Reactions and Synthesis
437
Rhodium-catalysed carbenoid addition to benzofuran using a chiral catalyst proceeds with high ee.57
21.7
Oxy-58 and Amino-Benzothiophenes and -Benzofurans
Benzothiophen-2-ones can be conveniently accessed by oxidation of 2-magnesio-benzothiophenes.59
Benzothiophen-2-one will condense at the 3-position with aromatic aldehydes;60 benzothiophen-3-one
reacts comparably at its 2-position.61
Both benzofuran-2-one, known trivially in the older literature as coumaranone, and best viewed as a
lactone, and the isomeric benzofuran-3-one, form ambident anions by deprotonation at a methylene group,
the former62 requiring a stronger base than the latter.63 Triflates suitable for metal-catalysed coupling processes are easily obtained from benzofuran-3-ones.64
Little is known of simple 2- and 3-amino derivatives; 2-dialkylamino-benzothiophenes can be obtained
by reaction of benzothiophene-2-thiol with secondary amines.23a In many ways 2-aminobenzothiophene
behaves like a normal aromatic amine, but diazotisation leads directly to benzothiophen-2-one.65
21.8
Synthesis of Benzothiophenes and Benzofurans
21.8.1 Ring Synthesis
21.8.1.1 From 2-Arylthio- or 2-Aryloxy-Aldehydes, -Ketones or -Acids
Cyclisation of 2-arylthio- or 2-aryloxy-aldehydes, -ketones or -acids via intramolecular electrophilic attack
on the aromatic ring, with loss of water, creates the heterocyclic ring; this route is a common method for
the ring synthesis of benzothiophenes.
438
Heterocyclic Chemistry
In order to produce hetero-ring unsubstituted benzothiophenes66 an arylthioacetaldehyde acetal is generally employed, prepared in turn, from bromoacetaldehyde acetal and the thiophenol. An exactly parallel
sequence produces 2,3-unsubstituted benzofurans.67 2-Aryloxy-acetates (or 1-aryloxy-acetones) heated with
DMFDMA, produce enamines which cyclise on treatment with zinc chloride, giving 3-unsubstituted
benzofuran-2-carboxylates (3-unsubstituted 2-acetyl-benzofurans).68
Comparable acid- (or Lewis acid) -catalysed ring closures of 2-arylthio-69 and 2-aryloxy-70 -ketones, and
-2-arylthio-71 and 2-aryloxyacetyl-72 chlorides lead to 3-substituted heterocycles and 3-oxygenated heterocycles, respectively. It is possible to combine the preparation of the arylthio-ketone and the ring closure
steps utilising two solid-supported reagents in a one-pot procedure, as illustrated.73 Formation of 3-arylbenzothiophenes by this route can be complicated by partial or complete isomerisation to the 2-arylheterocycle,74 however using boron trifluoride as the Lewis acid produces only the 3-aryl-isomer.75
3-Tosylamino-benzofurans can be prepared from aryl glyoxal hydrates.76
Benzo[ b]thiophenes and Benzo[b]furans: Reactions and Synthesis
439
21.8.1.2 From 2-(ortho-Hydroxy(or Mercapto)aryl)-Acetaldehydes, -Ketones or -Acids
Cyclising dehydration of 2-(ortho-hydroxyaryl)-acetaldehydes, -ketones or -acids (and in some cases sulfur
analogues) give the heterocycles; this route is important for benzofurans.
Claisen rearrangement of allyl phenolic ethers, followed by oxidation of the alkene generates orthohydroxy-arylacetaldehydes which close to give benzofurans under acid catalysis, the example showing the
synthesis of 8-methoxypsoralen (33.8.1).77 The formation of 2-substituted benzofurans from 2-(orthohydroxyaryl)-ketones is also very easy.78
The employment of aryl 2-chloroprop-2-enyl sulfides (or ethers) as thio-Claisen rearrangement substrates
neatly eliminates the necessity for an oxidative step, thus providing a route to 2-methyl-benzothiophenes
(-benzofurans).79
Propargyl aryl ethers undergo a Claisen rearrangement and then ring closure to produce 2-methylbenzofurans directly.80
The electrocyclic rearrangement of O-aryl-ketoximes produces benzofurans. The acid-catalysed rearrangement81 exactly parallels the rearrangement of phenylhydrazones, which gives indoles – the classical
Fischer indole synthesis (20.16.1.1).
440
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Another route to compounds of the same oxidation level involves Suzuki coupling of enol ether
boronates82 or Heck reaction with 2,5-dihydro-2,5-dimethoxyfuran, which leads to methyl benzofuran3-acetate.83
21.8.1.3 From 2-(ortho-Haloaryl)-Ketones or -Thioketones
Utilising various catalytic procedures, ring closure of ketones (thioketones), with replacement of an orthohalogen, can be achieved.
Copper(I)84 and palladium(0)85 catalysis can be used to ring close 2-(ortho-haloaryl)-ketones and the
latter method has also been applied to thioketones.
Furo[2,3-b]pyridin-4(7H)-ones can be generated from 2-pyridones carrying an alkynyl substituent at
C-3.86
Conveniently included in this section is the ring closure (and subsequent decarboxylation if required) of
2-mercapto-3-arylprop-2-enoic acids with iodine and heating, best applied using microwaves.87 This process
probably involves S-iodination and then electrophilic cyclisation onto the benzene ring.
Benzo[ b]thiophenes and Benzo[b]furans: Reactions and Synthesis
441
21.8.1.4 From ortho-Acylaryloxy- or -Arylthioacetic Acids, Esters or Ketones
Cyclising condensation of ortho-acylaryloxy- or -arylthioacetic acids (esters) or ketones gives the bicyclic
heterocycles.
Intramolecular aldol/Perkin type condensation of ortho-formylaryloxyacetic acids and arylthioacetic
esters produces benzofuran-88 and benzothiophene-2-esters89 respectively, as illustrated below. The synthesis can be performed in one pot, thus ortho-hydroxyaryl-aldehydes or -ketones, are O-alkylated with α-haloketones, then intramolecular aldol condensation in situ produces 2-acyl or 2-aroyl-benzofurans.90,91 For
benzothiophenes, the ring-closure substrates can also be obtained via methyl thioacetate displacement of
fluoride from ortho-fluoro-araldehydes.92
ortho-Haloaryl benzyl ethers react with t-butyllithium resulting in lithium–halogen exchange and metallation of the benzylic methylene group; addition of a carboxylic ester now leads to 3-hydroxy-2,3-dihydrobenzofurans requiring dehydration.93
442
Heterocyclic Chemistry
ortho-Formyl- or ortho-acylaryl benzyl ethers, can be comparably closed to produce 2-aryl-benzofurans,
using potassium fluoride or caesium fluoride on alumina when the benzyl group carries an electronwithdrawing substituent,94 or with simpler benzyl groups, using a phosphazene base.95 Even the S-methyl
groups of ortho-methylthio-arylcarboxamides can be deprotonated leading by cyclisation to
benzothiophen-3-ones.96
21.8.1.5 From ortho-Halophenols; From ortho-Alkynyl-phenols
Palladium(0)-catalysed coupling of an ortho-halophenolic ether (thioether) with a terminal alkyne (or with
an alkynylboronic ester97) and ring closure promoted with an electrophile – iodine has been most often
used – is an excellent method to make both benzothiophenes98,99,100,101 and benzofurans.102,103 ortho-Alkynylphenols can be comparably closed with palladium catalysis in the presence of copper(II) halides to give
the corresponding 3-halo-benzofurans,104 and ortho-alkynyl pyridin-2- and -3-yl acetates likewise ring close
with iodine, generating furopyridines.105
Variations on the theme include the use of gold(I) chloride to transform ortho-alkynylphenylthio-silanes
into 3-trialkylsilyl-benzothiophenes,106 carbonylative closures to produce 3-aroyl-benzofurans,107 and cyclisation with hot lithium chloride.108
However, it is possible to produce the furan ring of a benzofuran directly by interaction between an
ortho-iodo-phenol and an alkyne, the two carbon atoms of the triple bond providing C-2 and C-3 of the
furan ring and the larger substituent of the alkyne (often SiR3) ending up at the heterocyclic
2-position.109
Benzo[ b]thiophenes and Benzo[b]furans: Reactions and Synthesis
443
21.8.1.6 From Partially Reduced Benzofurans and Benzothiophenes
It can be an advantage for the introduction of benzene ring substitutents to operate with hetero-ringreduced derivatives, the aromatic heterocycle being obtained by a final dehydrogenation. 2,3Dihydrobenzothiophenes can be oxidised up with sulfuryl chloride or N-chlorosuccinimide;110
2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyanobenzoquinone has been employed to dehydrogenate 2,3-dihydrobenzofurans.111
In the example shown, a benzene ring substitution is followed by aromatisation via elimination of
hydrogen iodide and isomerisation of the double bond into the aromatic position.112
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 19 and 21):
(a) In the electrophilic substitution of benzothiophene and benzofuran there is less selectivity than for
comparable reactions of indole – why?
(b) What is the principal method for the efficient introduction of substituents to the 2-positions of benzofuran and benzothiophene?
(c) Beginning from a phenol carrying no substituents ortho to the hydroxyl, describe two methods for the
synthesis of benzofurans.
(d) How can salicaldehydes be used for the synthesis of benzofurans?
More advanced exercises:
1. Suggest structures for the compounds formed at each stage in the following sequence: PhSH with
ClCH2COCH2CO2Et (→ C12H14SO3), then PPA/heat (→ C12H12SO2), then NH3 (→ C10H9NSO), then
LiAlH4 (→ C10H11NS), then HCO2H/heat, (→ C11H11NSO), then POCl3/heat giving finally a tricylic
substance, C11H9NS.
2. Draw structures for the heterocycles formed from the following combinations: (i) C13H16O from 2,4,5-trimethylphenol with 3-chloro-2-butanone then the product with c. H2SO4; (ii) C12H8O4 from 7-hydroxy8-methoxycoumarin with CH2=CHCH2Br/K2CO3, then the product heated strongly giving an isomer,
then reacted successively with O3 then H+; (iii) 4-trifluoromethylfluorobenzene with LDA then DMF
(→ C8H4F4O), then with HSCH2CO2Me/NaH giving C11H7F3O2S; (iv) C9H7NO3 from 4-fluoronitrobenzene with Me2C=NONa then c. HCl/heat.
3. Deduce structures for the bi- and tetracyclic heterocycles formed in the following two steps respectively:
4-chlorophenylthioacetic acid with PCl3 then AlCl3 (→ C8H5ClOS), then this with phenylhydrazine in
hot AcOH → C14H8ClNS.
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Aoyama, T., Takido, T. and Kodomari, M., Synlett, 2005, 2739.
Banfield, J. E., Davies, W., Gamble, N. W. and Middleton, S., J. Chem. Soc., 1956, 4791.
Kim, S., Yang, J. and DiNinno, F., Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40, 2909.
Chen, C.-X., Liu, L., Yang, D.-P., Wang, D. and Chen., Y.-J., Synlett, 2005, 2047.
de Souza, N. J., Nayak, P. V. and Secco, E., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1966, 3, 42.
Tinsley, S. W., J. Org. Chem., 1959, 24, 1197.
Anderson, W. K., LaVoie, E. J. and Bottaro, J. C., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1976, 1.
Ishii, H., Ohta, S., Nishioka, H., Hayashida, N. and Harayama, T., Chem. Pharm. Bull., 1993, 41, 1166; Moghaddam, F. M., Sharifi, A. and Saidi,
M. R., J. Chem. Res. (S), 1996, 338; Lingam, V. S. P. R., Vinodkumar, R., Mukkanti, K., Thomas, A. and Goplan, B., Tetrahedron Lett., 2008, 49,
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I., Tetrahedron Lett., 1967, 859.
Satoh, M., Miyaura, N. and Suzuki, A., Synthesis, 1987, 373.
Samizu, K. and Ogasawara, K., Heterocycles, 1994, 38, 1745.
Chen, C.-y. and Dormer, P, G., J. Org. Chem., 2005, 70, 6964.
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Bossharth, E., Desbordes, P., Monteiro, N. and Balme, G., Tetrahedron Lett., 2009, 50, 614.
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Lett., 2004, 45, 9645.
Burgstahler, A. W. and Worden, L. R., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. V, 1973, 251.
Bridges, A. J., Lee, A., Maduakor, E. C. and Schwartz, C. E., Tetrahedron Lett., 1992, 33, 7499.
Elliott, E. D., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1951, 73, 754.
Rao, M. L. N., Awasthi, D. K. and Banerjee, D., Tetrahedron Lett., 2007, 48, 431.
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22
Isoindoles, Benzo[c]thiophenes and
Isobenzofurans: Reactions and Synthesis
Isoindole,1 benzo[c]thiophene2 and isobenzofuran3 are much less stable than their isomers, indole, and
benzo[b]thiophene and benzo[b]furan. This is undoubtedly associated with their lower aromaticity, which
can be appreciated qualitatively by noting that in these [c]-systems, the six-membered ring is not a complete
benzenoid unit. Of the three unsubstituted heterocycles, benzo[c]thiophene is the most stable – it survives
as a solid for a few days at −30 °C – but most chemistry has been carried out with substituted derivatives.
The instability manifests itself in a strong tendency to add reagents so as to generate products that do have
a complete benzene ring, in particular these heterocycles are susceptible to cycloaddition of dienophiles.
In this context, then, it is not surprising that for isoindole, for which an alternative tautomer (1H-isoindole,
sometimes called ‘isoindolenine’) is possible, which does have a complete benzenoid unit, an appreciable
percentage of that alternative exists in equilibrium.4 Indeed, some isoindoles exist largely as the tautomer
with a C–N double bond – 1,3,4,7-tetramethylisoindole is an example5 – but 1-phenylisoindole favours the
2H-tautomer to the extent of 91%.6 Substituents on the benzenoid ring can also influence both the stability
of the isoindole and the position of tautomeric equilibrium, for example 4,5,6,7-tetrabromoisoindole is a
stable crystalline solid which exists wholly as the 2H-tautomer;7 a pivaloyl substituent at C-5, though remote
from the sensitive heterocyclic ring, can also stabilise an isoindole.8 The position of such tautomeric equilibria can be altered by changing solvent – solvents such as dimethylsulfoxide tend to favour the N-hydrogen
tautomer, where protic solvents like alcohols favour the imine tautomer.
22.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
Isoindoles protonate to generate only one cation;5 this electrophilic addition of protons sets the pattern for
substitution in these systems, but there are relatively few clear cut examples, no doubt partly because of
the instability of less substituted isoindoles, isobenzofurans and benzo[c]thiophenes. Detritiation studies
showed the intrinsic reactivity of 2-methylisoindole in this electrophilic substitution to be 104 greater than
that of 1-methylindole.9
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
448
Heterocyclic Chemistry
2-t-Butylisoindole is much more stable than the unsubstituted heterocycle or other 2-substituted isoindoles, thus its reactions can be used as a measure of intrinsic reactivity, set aside from instability: even
weak electrophiles such as aryl-diazonium ions attack it and it undergoes alkylation, in each case at the
1-position.10
An interesting example of electrophilic substitution is the conversion of phthalimidine (2,3-dihydro-1Hisoindol-1-one) into 1-bromo-3-formylisoindole under Vilsmeier conditions (formation of 1-bromo2H-isoindole may be the first step).11 Mannich substitution of 2-methyl-1-phenylisoindole is another
straightforward example.12
22.2
Electrocyclic Reactions
Each of the three systems has a strong tendency for cycloaddition with dienophiles across the 1- and 3positions, thereby gaining the stabilising contribution of a complete benzene ring, isobenzofuran itself, for
example, reacts instantly at 0 °C with maleic anhydride.13 Isobenzofuran has been dubbed ‘the most reactive isolable diene’. More typically, the synthesis of one of these non-isolable, or extremely reactive
systems, is immediately followed by a trapping with a dienophile, so that discussion of synthesis must
inevitably involve discussion of the product cycloaddition chemistry.
Reactions of 1,3-diphenylisobenzofuran, which is much more stable, are typical: it undergoes Diels–
Alder cycloaddition with diethyl acetylenedicarboxylate14 and adds singlet oxygen,15 indeed this commercially available isobenzofuran has been very frequently used as a trapping reagent for alkenes and alkynes,
both stable and transient. Less stable isobenzofurans are traditionally generated and reacted in situ: the
reactions shown below of 1-methyl-3-phenylisobenzofuran16 and 1-phenylisobenzofuran17 are typical.
Isoindoles, Benzo[c]thiophenes and Isobenzofurans: Reactions and Synthesis
449
More modern methods for the production of isobenzofurans in solution have allowed detailed study of
the rates of various substituted derivatives with N-methylmaleimide.18 Diels–Alder additions are also known
for benzo[c]thiophene19,20 and isoindoles.4
22.3
Phthalocyanines21
The phthalocyanine macrocyclic system, formally derived from four isoindoles, is the basis for many blue
dyestuffs. Metal derivatives have a cation complexed at the centre, much like the iron atom in heme (see
32.3). Phthalocyanine can be produced by the reductive cyclisation of 2-cyanobenzamide or, in a route
which makes its relationship to isoindole more obvious, by the combination of four molecules of 1,3diiminoisoindoline with the elimination of ammonia.22
22.4
Synthesis of Isoindoles, Benzo[c]thiophenes and Isobenzofurans
22.4.1 Isoindoles
Isoindoles can be produced by eliminations from N-substituted isoindolines (1,3-dihydro-isoindoles), themselves readily produced by the reaction of a nitrogen nucleophile and a 1,2-bis(bromomethyl)-benzene:23
examples are the pyrolytic elimination of acetic acid from the cyclic hydroxylamine acetate,4 or, at a much
lower temperature, of benzyl alcohol from an N-hydroxy-isoindoline benzyl ether,24 or of methanesulfonic
acid from a corresponding mesylate.25 N-substituted isoindoles, too, have generally been made from an
isoindoline by elimination processes, thus N-oxides can be made to lose water by pyrolysis,26 or better, by
treatment with acetic anhydride.27
A synthesis of 1-phenylisoindole represents a classical approach to the construction of a heterocycle: a
precursor is assembled in which there is an amino group (initially protected in the form of a phthalimide)
five atoms away from a carbonyl group with which it must interact and form a cyclic imine.28
450
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Several routes involve cycloreversions as final steps;29 each of the starting materials shown below is
available from the cycloadduct (cf. 16.8) of benzyne and 1-methoxycarbonylpyrrole.
1,3-Diaryl-isoindoles can be constructed from 1,2-diaroyl-benzenes by reaction with an amine and a
reducing agent.30
22.4.2 Benzo[c]thiophenes
Elimination from dihydrobenzo[c]thiophene S-oxides has been successfully applied, as for isoindoles, for
the preparation of benzo[c]thiophenes, including the parent compound20,31 and isolable 4,6,7-tri-tbutylbenzo[c]thiophene.32
A general route to 1,3-diaryl-benzo[c]thiophenes starts with the synthesis of an aryl-substituted phthalide,
reaction of this with an aryl (heteroaryl) Grignard reagent, then thionation using Lawesson’s reagent.33
It is comparatively rare for the construction of a benzanellated heterocycle to involve formation of the
benzene ring as a final step, however benzo[c]thiophenes can be made by this strategy, utilising a double
Friedel–Crafts-type alkylation of a 2,5-disubstituted (to prevent attack at α-positions) thiophene with a
1,4-diketone.34
Isoindoles, Benzo[c]thiophenes and Isobenzofurans: Reactions and Synthesis
451
22.4.3 Isobenzofurans
Isobenzofuran can be isolated by trapping on a cold finger, following thermolysis of a suitable
precursor such as 1,4-epoxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene,13,35 but although isolable, for trapping experiments it can be conveniently produced by either acid- or base-catalysed elimination of methanol from
1-methoxyphthalan in the presence of the intended dienophile.36
1-Methoxyphthalan is obtained by partial oxidation of 1,2-bis(hydroxymethyl)benzene with hypochlorite
in methanol; treatment with lithium diisopropylamide gives isobenzofuran.37 Conditions have been defined
whereby this elimination can be run in such a way as to allow immediate ring lithiation; the lithiated isobenzofuran can then be further reacted to give alkylated isobenzofurans, which can be characterised by
reaction with dimethyl acetylendicarboxylate.38 This same starting material can be converted into isobenzofuran under neutral conditions, by reaction with a catalytic amount of Pd2(dba)3.CHCl3 at 100 °C, again
in the presence of dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate.39
A spectacular demonstration of this approach is provided by the synthesis of the ‘stretched’ isobenzofuran
shown below.40 Note that the first cycloaddition is with a dienophile able to provide the ortho-related carbinol/aldehyde arrangement ready for the formation of another furan ring.
Most of the stable isobenzofurans are 1,3-diaryl-substituted, and are deep yellow. Such compounds are
available via the partial reduction, and dehydrating cyclisation of 1,2-diaroyl-benzenes.41 Both 1-mono- and
1,3-disubstituted isobenzofurans are available from phthalides by Grignard addition42 and symmetrical
1,3-diaryl-isobenzofurans are efficiently formed from 3-methoxy-3H-isobenzofuran-1-one on reaction
with two equivalents of aryl Grignard reagents, each process requiring final acid-catalysed elimination
of water.43
452
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 19 and 22):
(a) The [c]-fused heterocycles considered in this chapter are much less stable than the [b]-fused isomers
– why?
(b) What factors favour 1H-isoindoles over 2-H-isoindoles?
(c) What is the most characteristic reactivity of the [c]-fused heterocycles considered in this chapter? Give
three examples of this typical reactivity.
(d) Describe one method each for the ring synthesis of isoindoles, benzo[c]thiophenes and
isobenzofurans.
More advanced exercises:
1. Deduce structures for the compounds formed at each stage in the following sequence: (i)
1,2-bis(bromomethyl)-4-pivaloylbenzene with H2NH2CC=CH/Et3N → C16H19NO, which was then
heated at 500 °C producing C13H15NO, which was trapped with N-phenylmaleimide → C23H22N2O3 (what
is the mechanism of the high temperature reaction?)
2. What products would be formed when: (i) phthalaldehyde is reacted, in sequence, with 2 × NaHSO3,
then MeNH2, then 2 × KCN → C10H8N2; (ii) benzoic acid N,N-diethylamide is treated with n-BuLi, then
PhCH=O then acid → C14H10O2, then this with PhMgBr then acid → C20H14O and finally this with O2/
methylene blue/hν/–50 °C → C20H14O3.
3. Phthalaldehyde reacts with HO(CH2)2OH/CuSO4 to give C10H10O3 – what is its structure? This product
can be reduced with NaBH4, and when followed by TsOH with MeO2CC=CCO2Me in hot toluene,
C14H12O5 is formed – deduce a structure.
4. What would be the result of reacting benzo[c]thiophene with maleic anhydride, then hot NaOH, then
acid – the product has the formula C12H8O4?
References
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‘Benzo[c]furans’, Friedrichsen, W., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1980, 26, 135; ‘Isobenzofuran’, Haddadin, M. J., Heterocycles, 1978, 9, 865; ‘Progress
in the chemistry of isobenzofurans; applications to the synthesis of natural products and polyaromatic hydrocarbons’, Rodrigo, R., Tetrahedron, 1988,
44, 2093; ‘Recent advances in the chemistry of benzo[c]furans and related compounds’, Friedrichsen, W., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1999, 73, 1.
Bonnett, R., Brown, R. F. C. and Smith, R. G., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1973, 1432.
Bender, C. O. and Bonnett, R., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1966, 198.
Veber, D. F. and Lwowski, W., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1964, 86, 4152.
Kreher, R. and Herd, K. J., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1974, 13, 739.
Kreher, R., Kohl, N. and Use, G., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1982, 21, 621.
Laws, A. P. and Taylor, R., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, 1987, 591.
Kreher, R. P. and Use, G., Chem. Ber., 1989, 122, 337.
von Dobeneck, H., Reinhard, H., Deubel, H. and Wolkenstein, D., Chem. Ber., 1969, 102, 1357.
Theilacker, W. and Kalenda, H., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1953, 584, 87.
Wiersum, U. E. and Mijs, W. J., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1972, 347.
Berson, J. A., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1953, 75, 1240.
Rio, G. and Scholl, M.-J., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1975, 474.
Faragher, R. and Gilchrist, T. L., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1976, 336.
Martin, C., Maillet, P., and Maddaluno, J., Org. Lett., 2000, 2, 923.
Tobia, D. and Rickborn, B., J. Org. Chem., 1987, 52, 2611.
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Mayer, R., Kleinert, H., Richter, S. and Gewald, K., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1962, 1, 115.
Cava, M. P., Pollack, N. M., Mamer, O. A. and Mitchell, M. J., J. Org. Chem., 1971, 36, 3932.
‘Advances in the chemistry of phthalocyanines’, Lever, A. B. P., Hempstead, M. R., Leznoff, C. C., Liew, W., Melnik, M., Nevin, W. A. and Seymour,
P., Pure. Appl. Chem., 1986, 58, 1461.
Elvidge, J. A. and Linstead, R. P., J. Chem. Soc., 1955, 3536.
Bornstein, J. and Shields, J. E., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. V, 1973, 1064.
Kreher, R. and Seubert, J., Z. Naturforsch., 1966, 20b, 75.
Kreher, R. and Herd, K. J., Heterocycles, 1978, 11, 409.
Thesing, J., Schäfer, W. and Melchior, D., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1964, 671, 119.
Kreher, R. and Seubert, J., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1964, 3, 639; ibid., 1966, 5, 967.
Veber, D. F. and Lwowski, W., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1964, 86, 4152.
Priestley, G. M. and Warrener, R. N., Tetrahedron Lett., 1972, 4295; Bornstein, J., Remy, D. E. and Shields, J. E., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun.,
1972, 1149.
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23
Typical Reactivity of 1,3- and 1,2-Azoles and
Benzo-1,3- and -1,2-Azoles
The 1,3- and 1,2-azoles each contain one heteroatom in an environment analogous to that of the nitrogen
in pyridine – an imine nitrogen – and one heteroatom like the nitrogen in pyrrole, or the sulfur in thiophene
or the oxygen in furan. Consequently, the chemical reactions of the 1,2- and 1,3-azoles present a fascinating
combination and mutual interaction of the types of reactivity that have been described earlier in this book
for azines, on the one hand, and for pyrrole, thiophene and furan, on the other, with the variation in electronegativity of the five-membered-type heteroatom having a substantial differentiating effect.
Typical reactions of 1,3-azoles
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
456
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Many of the lessons to be learnt apply to both 1,3- and 1,2-azoles, though the direct linking of the two
heteroatoms in the latter has a substantial inductive influence, altering properties in degree. Thus the 1,2azoles tend to be less nucleophilic and less basic at the imine nitrogen than their 1,3-isomers. That such
electrophilic additions occur readily, illustrates, as for pyridine, that an imine nitrogen lone pair is not
involved in the aromatic sextet of electrons.
Typical reactions of 1,2-azoles
Electrophilic substitution in the azoles is intermediate in facility between pyridine on the one hand and
pyrroles, thiophenes and furans on the other; the presence of the electron-withdrawing imine unit has an
effect on the five-membered aromatic heterocycles just as it does when incorporated into a six-membered
aromatic framework, i.e. the comparison is like that between benzene and pyridine (Chapter 7). The order
of reactivity – pyrrole > furan > thiophene – is echoed in the azoles, though the presence of the basic
nitrogen complicates such comparisons. The regiochemistry of electrophilic attack can be rationalised
nicely by comparing the ‘character ’ of the various ring positions – those that are activated in being fivemembered in character and those that are deactivated by their similarity to α- and γ- positions in
pyridine.
Influences on the positional reactivities of 1,3- and 1,2-azoles towards electrophilic substitution
The converse of electrophilic substitution following the five-membered pattern, is that nucleophilic
substitution of halogen follows the pyridine pattern i.e. it is much faster at the 2-position of 1,3-azoles and
at the 3-position of 1,2-azoles, than at other ring positions. Resonance contributors to the intermediates for
such substitutions make the reason for this plain: the imine nitrogen can act as an electron sink for the
attack, only at these positions.
Intermediates for nucleophilic displacements on azoles
Typical Reactivity of 1,3- and 1,2-Azoles and Benzo-1,3- and -1,2-Azoles
457
The utility of palladium(0)-catalysed processes for the elaboration of azoles has been developed extensively; one typical example serves to point up the importance of such process in azole chemistry (see
Section 4.2 for a detailed discussion of palladium-catalysed processes).
Continuing the analogy with pyridine reactivity, methyl groups at the 2-positions of 1,3-azoles and the
3-positions of 1,2-azoles carry acidified hydrogen atoms and can be deprotonated with strong bases. In
further analogy with pyridines, quaternisation of the imine nitrogen makes such deprotonations even easier;
the resulting enamines react with electrophiles at the side-chain carbon.
Deprotonation of 2-methyl-1,3-azolium salts
Ring deprotonation using a strong base is regioselective for the 2-position in the 1,3-azoles and for the
5-position in the 1,2-azoles.
Preferred position of ring-deprotonation of azoles
The facility with which 1,3-azolium cations form ylides by 2-deprotonation is central to the biological
activity of thiamine pyrophosphate (32.2.4). Such ylides have a neutral carbene resonance contributor.
Thiazolium ylide resonance contributors
The benzo-1,3- and -1,2-azoles do not undergo electrophilic substitution on the hetero-ring; some
examples of electrophilic halogenations are known in the benzene ring. These bicyclic systems are slightly
weaker bases than the azoles, but react easily with alkyl halides to give salts. N-Deprotonation of indazoles
or benzimidazoles allows substitution on nitrogen.
458
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Typical reactions of benzo-1,3-azoles
Typical reactions of benzo-1,2-azoles
It has long been known that 1,3-azoles can be assembled from a component providing the two heteroatoms, for example a thioamide or an amidine, and an α-haloketone. A more recent route employs the
interaction between the anion of an isonitrile and an aldehyde, thioaldehyde or imine.
Two routes for the ring synthesis of 1,3-azoles
To produce a 1,2-azole, a 1,3-dicarbonyl-compound needs to be condensed with a unit providing the two
heteroatoms – a hydrazine or hydroxylamine. The 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of nitrile oxides or nitrile
imines to alkynes provides an important route to isoxazoles and pyrazoles.
Typical Reactivity of 1,3- and 1,2-Azoles and Benzo-1,3- and -1,2-Azoles
459
Two routes for the ring synthesis of 1,2-azoles
The benzo-1,3-azoles are commonly prepared from ortho-disubstituted benzenes by reaction with a
carboxylic acid anhydride, or equivalent.
The usual ring synthesis route for benzo-1,3-azoles
Some of the routes to benzo-1,2-azoles require a heteroatom–heteroatom bond formation, but these are
difficult to categorise generally, being of various mechanistic types. In one example, the generation of a
sulfenyl chloride allows N–S bond formation.
A benzisothiazole synthesis
24
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and
Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
The three 1,3-azoles, imidazole,1 thiazole and oxazole,2 are all very stable compounds that do not autoxidise.
Oxazole and thiazole are water-miscible liquids with pyridine-like odours. Imidazole, which is a solid at
room temperature, and 1-methylimidazole are also water soluble, but are odourless. They boil at much
higher temperatures (256 °C and 199 °C) than oxazole (69 °C) and thiazole (117 °C); this can be attributed
to stronger dipolar association resulting from the very marked permanent charge separation in imidazoles
(the dipole moment of imidazole is 5.6 D; cf. oxazole, 1.4 D; thiazole, 1.6 D) and for imidazole itself, in
addition, extensive intermolecular hydrogen bonding. The dihydro- and tetrahydro-1,3-azoles are named
imidazoline/imidazolidine, thiazoline/thiazolidine and oxazoline/oxazolidine.
24.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
24.1.1 Addition at Nitrogen
24.1.1.1 Protonation.
Imidazole, thiazole and alkyl-oxazoles, though not oxazole itself, form stable crystalline salts with strong
acids, by protonation of the imine nitrogen, N-3, known as imidazolium, thiazolium and oxazolium
salts.
Imidazole, with a pKaH of 7.1, is a very much stronger base than thiazole (2.5) or oxazole (0.8). That
it is also stronger than pyridine (5.2) is due to the amidine-like resonance that allows both nitrogens to
participate equally in carrying the charge. The particularly low basicity of oxazole can be understood as a
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
462
Heterocyclic Chemistry
combination of inductive withdrawal by the oxygen and weaker mesomeric electron release from it. The
1,3-azoles are stable in hot, strong aqueous acid.
Hydrogen Bonding in Imidazoles
Imidazole, like water, is both a good donor and a good acceptor of hydrogen bonds; the imine nitrogen
donates an electron pair and the N-hydrogen, being appreciably acidic (see 24.4), is an acceptor. This
property is central to the mode of action of several enzymes that utilise the imidazole ring of a histidine
(32.1) one of the 20 amino acids found in proteins.
Imidazoles with a ring N-hydrogen are subject to tautomerism, which becomes evident in unsymmetrically substituted compounds such as the methylimidazole shown. This special feature of imidazole chemistry means that to write simply ‘4-methylimidazole’ would be misleading, for this molecule is in rapid
tautomeric equilibrium with 5-methylimidazole. All such tautomeric pairs are inseparable and the convention used to cover this phenomenon is to write ‘4(5)-methylimidazole’. In some pairs, one tautomer
predominates, for example 4(5)-nitroimidazole favours the 4-nitro-tautomer by 400 : 1.
Tautomerism in imidazoles
24.1.1.2 Alkylation at Nitrogen
The 1,3-azoles are quaternised easily at the imine nitrogen with alkyl halides; the relative rates are: 1-me
thylimidazole:thiazole:oxazole, 900 : 15 : 1.3 Microwave irradiation makes the process particularly rapid.4
In the case of imidazoles that have an N-hydrogen, the immediate product is a protonated N-alkyl-imidazole;
this can lose its N-hydrogen to unreacted imidazole (acting as a base) and react a second time, meaning
that reactions with alkyl halides give mixtures of imidazolium, 1-alkyl-imidazolium and 1,3-dialkylimidazolium salts. The use of a limited amount of the alkylating agent, or reaction in basic solution,5
when it is the imidazolyl anion (24.4.1) that is alkylated, can minimise these complications. A 4(5)substituted imidazole can give two isomeric 1-alkyl-derivatives: generally the main product results from
alkylation of that tautomer which minimizes steric interactions, i.e. 4(5)-substituted imidazoles give 1-alkyl4-substituted imidazoles mainly. Formation of doubly N-alkylated derivatives can be achieved by reacting
1-trimethylsilylimidazole with an alkyl halide.6
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
463
N-Alkylation of oxazoles,7 or imidazoles carrying, for example, a phenylsulfonyl or acyl8 group on
nitrogen, is more difficult, requiring methyl triflate or a Meerwein salt (e.g. Et3O+BF4–) for smooth reaction.
Subsequent simple alcoholysis of the imidazolium-sulfonamide (acylamide) releases the N-substituted
imidazole.9 Moreover, since acylation of 4(5)-substituted imidazoles gives the sterically less crowded
1-acyl-4-substituted imidazoles, subsequent alkylation, then hydrolytic removal of the acyl group, produces
1,5-disubstituted imidazoles.10 Complementarily, the 1,4-disubstitution pattern can be achieved by alkylating 1-protected-5-substituted imidazoles (see 24.4.1) at N-3, then removing the N-protection.11 Such protecting groups include trityl, removal of the triphenylmethyl group after alkylation requiring only simple
acid treatment,12 or 2-cyanoethyl, final elimination of acrylonitrile being the reverse of the Michael-type
reaction used to introduce this group.13
Another device to control the position of N-alkylation is applicable to histidine and histamine: a cyclic
urea is first prepared by reaction with carbonyl dimidazole (24.1.1.3), forcing the alkylation onto the other
nitrogen, methanolytic ring opening then providing the N-1-alkylated, carbamate-protected derivative.14
Exposure of imidazole to ‘normal’ Mannich conditions leads to N-(dimethylaminomethyl)imidazole,
presumably via attack at the imine nitrogen, followed by loss of proton from the other nitrogen.15
N-Arylation or N-vinylation of imidazoles or benzimidazole can be achieved efficiently with metal
catalysis16 (see 4.2).
24.1.1.3 Acylation at Nitrogen
Acylation of imidazole produces N-acylimidazoles via loss of proton from the initially-formed N-3-acylimidazolium salt.17 N-Acyl-imidazoles are even more easily hydrolysed than N-acyl-pyrroles; moist air is
sufficient. The ready susceptibility to nucleophilic attack at carbonyl carbon has been capitalised upon:
commercially available 1,1′-carbonyldiimidazole (CDI), prepared from imidazole and phosgene, can be
used as a safe, phosgene synthon, and also in the activation of acids for formation of amides and esters via
the N-acyl-imidazole.18
464
Heterocyclic Chemistry
In another application, N-acyl-imidazoles react with lithium aluminium hydride at 0 °C to give aldehydes,
providing a route from the acid oxidation level.19 In a similar way, 1-cyanoimidazole acts as a mild and
efficient N-, S- and C-cyanating agent.20
24.1.2 Substitution at Carbon
24.1.2.1 Protonation
In acid solution, via a protonation-deprotonation sequence, hydrogen at the imidazole 5-position exchanges
about twice as rapidly as at C-4 and >100 times faster than at C-2.21 An altogether faster exchange, which
takes place at room temperature in neutral or weakly basic solution, but not in acidic solution, brings about
C-2–H exchange;22 oxazole and thiazole also undergo this regioselective C-2–H exchange, the relative rates
being in the order: imidazole > oxazole > thiazole.23 The mechanism for this special process involves first,
formation of protonic salt, then C-2–H deprotonation of the salt, producing a transient ylide, to which a
carbene form is an important resonance contributor. It follows from this mechanism that quaternary salts
of 1-alkyl-imidazoles, and of oxazole and thiazole will also undergo regioselective C-2–H exchange, and
this is indeed the case. The relative rates of exchange, via the ylide mechanism, are in the order: oxazolium > thiazolium > N-methylimidazolium, in a ratio of about 105 : 103 : 1.24 Much attention25 has been paid
to thiazolium salts because of the involvement of exactly such an ylide in the mode of action of thiamin
in its role as a component of a coenzyme in several biochemical processes26 (32.2.4). ‘N-Heterocyclic
carbenes’, C-2-ylides from imidazolium salts, have become very important ligands in palladium catalysis
(see 24.10 and 4.2.2).
In the thermal decarboxylation of 1,3-azole-5-acids, the order of ease of loss of carbon dioxide is again
oxazole- > thiazole- > N-methylimidazole-5-acids, but about 106 more slowly, than decarboxylation of the
2-acids.27
24.1.2.2 Nitration
Imidazole is much more reactive towards nitration than thiazole, substitution taking place via the salt,28 as
does nitration of alkyl-thiazoles.29 Thiazole itself is untouched by nitric acid/oleum at 160 °C, but methylthiazoles are sufficiently activated to undergo substitution, the typical regioselectivity being for formation
of more 5-nitro than 4-nitro derivatives;30 the 2-position is not attacked: 4,5-dimethylimidazole is resistant
to nitration. The much less reactive oxazoles do not undergo nitration.
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
465
24.1.2.3 Sulfonation
Here again, thiazoles are much less reactive than imidazoles,31 generally requiring high temperatures and
mercury(II) sulfate as catalyst for any reaction to take place;32 oxazole sulfonations are unknown.
24.1.2.4 Halogenation
Imidazole,33 and 1-alkyl-imidazoles,34 are brominated with remarkable ease at all free nuclear positions. It
is, at first sight, somewhat surprising that such relatively mild conditions allow bromination of imidazole
at C-2, but it must be remembered that the neutral imidazole, not its protonic salt (cf. nitration and sulfonation), is available for attack, thus electrophilic addition of bromine to imine nitrogen, then addition of
bromide at C-2 and finally elimination of hydrogen bromide may be the key to the 2-bromination.
4(5)-Bromoimidazole can be obtained by reduction of tribromoimidazole with sodium sulfite,35 via regioselective exchange of the 2- and 5-halogens using n-butyllithium, then water quenching,36 or by bromination of imidazole with 4,4-dibromocyclohexa-2,5-dienone.37 Chlorination with hypochlorite in alkaline
solution effects substitution only at the 4- and 5-positions.38 Iodination of imidazoles that have a free Nhydrogen, in alkaline solution and therefore via the imidazolyl anion, can also give fully halogenated
products;39 4,5-diiodination of imidazole takes place in cold alkaline solution.40
Thiazole does not undergo bromination easily, though 2-methylthiazole brominates at C-5; when the
5-position is not free, no substitution occurs, thus 2,5-dimethylthiazole, despite its two activating substituents, is not attacked.41 2-Bromothiazole brominates to produce the 2,5-dibromo-isomer.42 Halogenation of
simple oxazoles has not been reported, however addition products, mainly 1,4-oriented and analogous to
those obtained from furan (cf. 18.1.1.4), are obtained with substituted oxazoles.43
24.1.2.5 Acylation
Friedel–Crafts acylations are unknown for the azoles, clearly because of interaction between the basic
nitrogen and the Lewis-acid catalyst. It is, however, possible to 2-aroylate 1-alkyl-imidazoles44 or indeed
imidazole itself45 by reaction with the acid chloride in the presence of triethylamine, the substitution proceeding via an N-acyl-imidazolium ylide. Trifluoroacetylation of N-substituted imidazoles, and some
oxazoles and thiazoles, also produces 2-substituted products in good yields.46 In the reverse sense, 2-acylsubstituents can be cleaved by methanolysis, the mechanism again involving an imidazolium ylide.47
466
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Another example of the utility of N-acyl-imidazolium ylides is a synthesis of 2-formylimidazole: the
electrophile which attacks the ylide is in this case an N-benzoylimidazolium cation.48
24.1.2.6 Reactions with Aldehydes
The discovery of ipso-displacement of silicon from the thiazole 2-position under mild conditions led to the
development of this reaction as an essential component of a route to complex aldehydes. Subsequent quaternisation, saturation of the heterocyclic ring using sodium borohydride, and then mercury(II)- or copper(II)catalysed treatment leads to the destruction of the thiazolidine and the formation of a new, homologous
aldehyde; an example is shown below.49
24.1.2.7 Reactions with Iminium Ions
The standard, acidic Mannich conditions do not allow simple C-substitutions of the imidazole, (cf. 24.1.1.2
for N-substitution), thiazole or oxazole systems.
24.2
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
24.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Resistance to oxidative breakdown falls off in the order thiazoles > imidazoles > oxazoles. 2-Substituted
thiazoles can be converted into N-oxides,50 however peracids bring about degradation of imidazoles;
oxazole N-oxides can only be prepared by ring synthesis. Substituted oxazoles are converted into imides,
with loss of C-5.51
24.3.1 With Replacement of Hydrogen
Generally speaking, the 1,3-azoles do not show the pyridine-type reactions in which hydrogen is displaced
on reaction with a strong nucleophile.
24.3.2 With Replacement of Halogen
There are many examples of halogen at a 2-position undergoing nucleophilic displacement; examples
chosen at random are 2-halo-thiazoles with sulfur nucleophiles52 (indeed, more rapidly than for 2-halopyridines), 2-halo-1-substituted imidazoles,53 and 2-chloro-oxazoles54 with nitrogen nucleophiles.
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
24.4
467
Reactions with Bases
24.4.1 Deprotonation of Imidazole N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Imidazolyl Anions
The pKa for loss of the N-hydrogen of imidazole is 14.2; it is thus an appreciably stronger acid than pyrrole
(pKa 17.5) because of the enhanced delocalisation of charge, involving both nitrogens in the imidazolyl
anion. Salts of imidazoles can be alkylated or acylated on nitrogen. One convenient method is to use the
dry sodium/potassium salt obtained by evaporation of an aqueous alkaline solution;55 sodium hydride in
dimethylformamide also serves very well for this purpose.
When there is a route for the entering group to be lost again, as in the addition to a cyano-conjugated
alkene, a 4(5)-substituted imidazole will give the less hindered 1,4-disubstituted product rather than the
1,5-isomer.56
24.5
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated 1,3-Azoles57
24.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
The specific deprotonation of a C-2–hydrogen in the azoles, in neutral solution, via an ylide, has already
been discussed (24.1.2.1). Preparative strong-base lithiation of oxazoles,58 thiazoles59 and N-methylimidazole60 takes place preferentially at C-2, or at C-5 if the former position is substituted.61 A variety of
removable N-protecting groups have been used to achieve metallations for the eventual synthesis of Nunsubstituted imidazoles, including phenylsulfonyl,62 dimethylaminosulfonyl,63 dimethylaminomethyl,15
trimethylsilylethoxymethyl,64 diethoxymethyl,65 1-ethoxyethyl66 and trityl.67
The intrinsic tendency to lithiate at C-2, then C-5, taken with metal–halogen exchange processes for the
4-position, are a powerful combination for elaborations of the 1,3-azoles. For example, the sequence shown
below produces SEM-protected 5-substituted imidazoles,63,68 with retention of a 2-silyl-substituent if
required.69
Although oxazoles follow the pattern and lithiate at C-2, 4-substituted products are produced with some
electrophiles; this is explained by a ring opening of the anion, to produce an enolate, which after Celectrophilic attack, recloses. An estimate by NMR spectroscopy showed the ring-cleaved tautomer to
dominate the equilibrium.70 Some electrophiles produce good yields of oxazole products: reaction of lithiated oxazole with hexachloroethane produces 2-chlorooxazole in good yield.71 The open enolates can be
468
Heterocyclic Chemistry
trapped by reaction with chlorotrimethylsilane; the open, enol trimethylsilyl ether will undergo a thermal
rearrangement to form 2-trimethylsilyloxazole.72 More usefully, reaction with silyl triflates gives exclusively the C-silylated oxazole. 2-Triisopropylsilyloxazole, obtained in this way, is stable and can be lithiated
at C-5.73
The ring-opened products can also be avoided by transmetallation to a zinc compound,74 or by metallation with lithium tri-n-butylmagnesate75 or iso-propylmagnesium chloride.76
24.5.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
The regioselectivity of metal–halogen exchange processes mirrors the C–H metallations discussed above:
thus 2,4-dibromothiazole reacts at C-2 firstly.77
Metal–halogen exchange of 4(5)-bromoimidazole using n-butyllithium,78 or of 4(5)-iodoimidazole, using
methylmagnesium chloride with lithium chloride,79 is possible without N-protection.
24.6
Reactions with Radicals
The preferred site for Minisci substitution of imidazoles in acid solution is C-2,80 however intramolecular
alkylation of a 4-formylimidazole in neutral solution occurs at C-5.81 Intramolecular displacement of tosyl
as a C-2 substitutent, has also been demonstrated.82
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
24.7
469
Reactions with Reducing Agents
Of the 1,3-azoles, oxazoles are the most easily reduced, catalytic sequences also bringing about C–O bond
cleavage. 1,3-Azolium salts are easily attacked by hydride reducing agents: thiazolium salts produce tetrahydro derivatives (24.1.2.6).83
24.8
Electrocyclic Reactions
Oxazoles readily undergo Diels–Alder type cycloaddition across the 2,5-positions, in parallel with the
behaviour of furans (18.7). Thiazole and imidazole do not show this mode of reactivity, however they do
react with highly electrophilic alkynes via initial electrophilic addition to the nitrogen, then nucleophilic
intramolecular cyclising addition (cf. the comparable reactivity of quinolines, 9.13).84
Oxazole cycloadditions have been reported with alkyne dienophiles85 (tandem Diels–Alder addition and
retro Diels–Alder loss of a nitrile leads on to furans), benzyne (the primary adduct can be isolated),86 and
with typical alkene dienophiles and the adducts can be transformed87 into pyridines (8.14.1.4).
Electron-releasing substituents on the oxazoles increase the rate of reaction: 5-alkoxy-oxazoles are comparable in reactivity to typical all-carbon dienes. 4-(Trimethylsilyloxy)-oxazoles react smoothly to produce
furans at modest temperatures.88
470
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Particularly useful dienophiles are N-acyl-oxazolones – the products are protected cis-1,2-aminoalcohols.89
24.9 Alkyl-1,3-Azoles
Protons on methyl groups at 1,3-azole 2-positions are sufficiently acidic for strong-base deprotonation,90
and are more acidic than methyl groups at other positions; an ortho-tertiary carboxamide can overcome
this intrinsic tendency.91 The presence of a 5-nitro group allows much milder base-catalysed condensations
to occur by assisting in the stabilisation of the carbanion.29 Condensation at the 2-methyl of thiazoles
proceeds in organic acid solution.92 N-Acylation also increases the acidity of 2-methyl groups, allowing
C-acylation via a non-isolable enamide.93
24.10
Quaternary 1,3-Azolium Salts
1,3-Dialkyl-imidazolium salts, for example 1-n-Butyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate (or tetrafluoroborate) are a major group of ionic liquids (for a fuller discussion, see 31.5).
N-Alkoxycarbonyl-1,3-azolium salts, generated in situ by reaction with chloroformates, will react with
allylstannanes,94 or allylsilanes95 by addition of the equivalent of an allyl anion. In the same way, silyl enol
ethers add the equivalent of an enolate to give 2,3-dihydro-2-substituted imidazoles and thiazoles.96
Azolium salts are readily attacked by hydroxide, addition at C-2 being followed by ring opening.97
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
471
The C-2-exchange of azolium salts via an ylide mechanism was discussed in Section 24.1.2.1. Thiamin
pyrophosphate acts as a coenzyme in several biochemical processes and in these, its mode of action depends
on the intermediacy of a 2-deprotonated species (32.2.4). In the laboratory, thiazolium salts (3-benzyl-5(2-hydroxyethyl)-4-methylthiazolium chloride is commercially available) will act as catalysts for the
benzoin condensation, and in contrast to cyanide, the classical catalyst, allow such reactions to proceed
with alkanals, as opposed to araldehydes; the key steps in thiazolium ion catalysis for the synthesis of
2-hydroxy-ketones are shown below and depend on the formation and nucleophilic reactivity of the C-2ylide. Such catalysis provides acyl-anion equivalents.
Significantly, replacing a thiazolium ring with an oxazolium ring gives a thiamin analogue in which there
is no catalytic activity;98 similarly 3,4-dimethyloxazolium iodide does not catalyse a benzoin condensation.99 Nature has selected the heterocyclic system with the correct balance – oxazolium ylides are formed
faster, but because of the greater stability that this reflects, do not then add to carbonyl groups as is required
for catalytic activity. In keeping with the carbenoid character of thiazolium ylides, they dimerise; the dimers,
either in their own right, or by reversion to monomer, are also catalysts for the benzoin condensation.100
What have become known as N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) are important ligands for transition metals
(see 4.2), especially in catalytic processes.101 Isolable, crystalline carbenes can be derived even from a salt
as simple as 1,3,4,5-tetramethylimidazolium. The NHC which has been most utilized in stabilizing both
high- and low-valency states of metals, is the 1,3-bis(2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)imidazole carbene.102 The pKaHs
for NHCs, in the range of 22–24, show them to be amongst the most basic neutral compounds; they are
strongly nucleophilic.
24.11
Oxy-103,104 and Amino-1051,3-Azoles
Amino-1,3-azoles exist as the amino tautomers. 2-Amino-1,3-azoles tend to be more stable than other
isomers. All amino-1,3-azoles protonate on the ring nitrogen. 2-Aminothiazole has a pKaH of 5.39, which
compares with the value for 2-aminoimidazole of 8.46, reflecting, in part, the symmetry of the resonating
guanidinium type system in the latter.
The amino-1,3-azoles behave as normal arylamines, for example undergoing carbonyl condensation
reactions, easy electrophilic substitutions106 and diazotisation,107 though 2-amino-oxazoles cannot be diazotised,108 presumably due to the greater electron withdrawal by the oxygen.
472
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The oxygen-substituted 1,3-azoles exist in their carbonyl tautomeric forms. The bromination of thiazol2-one, at C-5, is a nice demonstration of relative reactivity: here the double bond carries both sulfur and
nitrogen, and it is the latter, i.e. the enamide rather than the enethiol ester character, that dictates the site
of electrophilic attack.109
1,3-Azol-2-ones can be converted into the 2-halo-azoles by reaction with phosphorus halides.53 Thiazolidine-2,4-dione is converted efficiently into 2,4-dibromothiazole by heating with phosphoryl bromide.42
When accompanied by dimethylformamide, i.e. under Vilsmeier conditions, ring formylation also occurs
and, after hydrogenolytic removal of halogen, the overall sequence can be seen to be a means for the
preparation of 5-hydroxymethylthiazole.110
The 5-ones condense in an aldol fashion at C-4.111 Alkylation of the 1,3-azolones can take place either
on the oxygen, giving alkyloxy-1,3-azoles, or on nitrogen; for example thiazol-2-one reacts with diazomethane giving 2-methoxythiazole, but with methyl iodide/methoxide, to give 3-methylthiazol-2-one.112
4(5)-Oxazolones are simply cyclic anhydrides of N-acyl-α-amino acids, and are constructed in the way
that this implies. If the nitrogen also carries an alkyl group, cyclisation113 can only lead to an overall neutral
product by adopting a zwitterionic structure, for which no neutral canonical form can be written – a
mesoionic structure. Mesoionic oxazolones (named ‘münchnones’ by Huisgen after their discovery at the
University of München, Germany) undergo ready dipolar cycloadditions,114 with loss of carbon dioxide
from the initial adduct; the examples115 show the conversion of a münchnone into a mesoionic thiazolone
and into an imidazole.
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
24.12
473
1,3-Azole N-Oxides
The chemistry of azole-N-oxides is relatively underdeveloped compared, for example, with that of pyridine
N-oxides, largely because of difficulty in their preparation from the azoles themselves.116 Some ring synthetic methods can be used, for example the reaction of 1,2-dicarbonyl-mono-oximes with imines as
shown.117
1-Benzyloxyimidazole undergoes useful 2-lithiations; hydrogenolysis produces 2-substituted 1-hydroxyimidazoles and these, in turn, can be converted into the 2-substituted imidazoles by reduction with
titanium(III) chloride.118
24.13
Synthesis of 1,3-Azoles119,120,121
24.13.1 Ring Synthesis
Considerable parallelism emerges from an examination of the major methods for the construction of
oxazole, thiazole and imidazole ring systems.
24.13.1.1 From an α-Halo-Carbonyl-Component (or an Equivalent) and a Three-Atom Unit Supplying
C-2 and Both of the Heteroatoms
This route is particularly important for thiazoles and imidazoles.
Simple examples of this strategy, which for the synthesis of thiazoles is known as the Hantzsch synthesis,
are shown below (note there is an important pyridine ring synthesis, also named a Hantzsch synthesis
(8.14.1.2)): the syntheses of 2,4-dimethylthiazole, where the heteroatoms are provided by thioacetamide,122
and 2-aminothiazole, in which 1,2-dichloroethyl ethyl ether is utilised as a synthon for chloroacetaldehyde
and the heteroatoms derive from thiourea.123 The use of thioureas as the sulfur component with 2-chloroacetamides as the second unit gives rise to 2,4-diamino-thiazoles,124 and N-acyl-thioureas with 2-bromoketones produce 2-(N-acylamino)-thiazoles.125 The first step in such ring syntheses is S-alkylation.126 Useful
variants include the use of an α-diazo-ketone in place of the α-halocarbonyl-component127 and the conversion of 1,3-diketones into their 2-phenyl-iodonium derivatives and reaction of these with thioureas producing 2-amino-5-acyl-thiazoles.128
474
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The interaction of ammonia with carbon disulfide produces ammonium dithiocarbamate in solution,
which reacts with 2-halo-ketones to produce thiazole-2-thiones;129 similarly, methyl dithiocarbamate serves
as a component for the construction of 2-methylthiothiazole, reducable to thiazole itself by hydrogenolysis,
thus providing a good route to the unsubstituted heterocycle.130
Imidazole itself can be prepared efficiently from bromoacetaldehyde ethylene acetal, formamide and
ammonia; it is likely that displacement of halogen by ammonia occurs at an early stage.131 A mono-enol
ether of bromomalonaldehyde reacts with amidines giving 5-formyl-imidazoles.132 Amidines react with
2-bromo-ketones giving 2-substituted imidazoles133 and 2-acetylamino-imidazoles are formed efficiently
from the interaction of 2-bromo-ketones and N-acetylguanidine.134 The 2-hydroxy-aldehyde unit in sugars
can be utilized in the synthesis of 4(5)-polyhydroxyalkyl-imidazoles, using ammonia and formamide: the
reactions are carried out by heating at high pressure.135
24.13.1.2 By Cyclising Dehydration of α-Acylamino-Carbonyl-Compounds
Cyclising dehydration of an α-acylamino-carbonyl-compound is particularly important for oxazoles, and
can be adapted for thiazole or imidazole formation.
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
475
The classical method for making oxazoles, the Robinson–Gabriel synthesis, which is formally analogous
to the cyclising dehydration of 1,4-dicarbonyl compounds to furans (18.13.1.1), is the acid-catalysed closure
of α-acylamino-carbonyl-compounds and a simple example is shown below.136
Amino acid-derived aldehydes can be converted into 5-unsubstituted oxazoles137 and in a related sense,
imidazoles can be produced by introducing ammonia to an 2-acylamino-ketone.138
A route to all three ring systems depends on a rhodium-carbene insertion into the N–H of an amide, then
direct dehydrative ring closure to an oxazole, or production of a thiazole with Lawesson’s reagent, or of
an imidazole with ammonia or a primary amine.139
The construction of an amide using aminomalononitrile and a carboxylic acid under typical peptide
coupling conditions is accompanied by ring closure and thus the production of 5-amino-oxazoles.140
A synthesis shown below of ethyl oxazole-4-carboxylate illustrates a sophisticated use of this strategy,
in which an imino ether and the potassium enolate of an aldehyde are involved;141 iminoethers on reaction
with aminoacetal give amidines, which close in acid to give 2-substituted imidazoles.142,143 The process can
be conducted without isolation of the intermediate.144
476
Heterocyclic Chemistry
α-Acylthioketones react with ammonia to give thiazoles.145
24.13.1.3 From Isocyanides
Tosylmethylisocyanide (TosMIC), can be used for the synthesis of all three 1,3-azole types.
Tosylmethylisocyanide reacts with aldehydes, affording adducts that lose toluenesulfinate on heating,
giving oxazoles;146 with carbon disulfide it produces 4-tosyl-5-alkylthio-thiazoles (following a subsequent
S-alkylation)147 and, in analogy to its interaction with aldehydes, it adds to N-alkyl-imines148,149 or Ndimethylaminosulfamyl-imines150 when, following elimination of toluenesulfinate, imidazoles are formed.
The analogous benzotriazolylmethyl isocyanide (BetMIC) can serve in the same way and has advantages
in some situations.151
Anions derived from other isocyanides can be acylated (or thioformylated152), the products spontaneously
closing to oxazoles153 (thiazoles).
24.13.1.4 Oxazoles from α-Diazocarbonyl Compounds154
The carbene or carbenoid derived from an α-diazocarbonyl-compound cycloadds to nitriles to produce
oxazoles with the nitrile R group at C-2.
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
477
The generation of a carbene (or when using a metal catalyst, a carbenoid) from an α-diazocarbonylcompound, in the presence of a nitrile, results in overall cycloaddition and the formation of an oxazole.
Both α-diazo-ketones and α-diazo-esters have been used, the examples in the sequence below showing that
the result in the latter situation is the formation of a 5-alkoxy-oxazole.155 The exact sequence of events is
not certain, but may involve a nitrile ylide, the result of electrophilic addition of the carbene to the nitrile
nitrogen.
24.13.1.5 From 1,2-Diketones, Aldehydes and Ammonia
The microwave assisted interaction of a 1,2-diketone, an aldehyde and ammonia produces trisubstituted
imidazoles.156
24.13.1.6 By Dehydrogenation
The ring synthesis of the tetrahydro-1,3-azoles is simply the formation of N,N-, N,O- or N,S-analogues of
aldehyde cyclic acetals; the ring synthesis of the 4,5-dihydro-heterocycles requires reaction with an acid
oxidation level component or the inclusion of iodine in a reacting mixture of ethylene diamine or aminoethanol and an aldehyde. A good route to the aromatic systems is therefore the dehydrogenation of these
reduced and partially reduced systems. Nickel peroxide,157 manganese(IV) oxide,158 copper(II) bromide/
base159 and bromotrichloromethane/diazabicycloundecane160 have been used. The example shown uses
cysteine methyl ester with a chiral aldehyde to form the tetrahydrothiazole.
478
Heterocyclic Chemistry
24.13.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses Involving 1,3-Azoles
24.13.2.1 4(5)-Fluorohistamine
4(5)-Fluorohistamine was synthesised161 via nucleophilic displacement of a side-chain leaving group (cf.
pyrroles, 16.11).
24.13.2.2 Thieno[2,3-d]imidazole162
The synthesis of thieno[2,3-d]imidazole illustrates again the selectivity in halogen–metal exchange processes in imidazoles. In this sequence a vinyl was used as N-protecting group, and it includes a nucleophilic
displacement of bromine from the 4-position, activated by the 5-aldehyde.
24.13.2.3 Inhibitor of Transforming Growth Factor β1, Type 1 Receptor
This sequence illustrates the interaction of an amidine and a 2-bromo-ketone with subsequent ring halogenation and palladium-catalysed coupling.163
1,3-Azoles: Imidazoles, Thiazoles and Oxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
479
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 23 and 24):
(a) Place the three 1,3-azoles in order of basicity and explain this order.
(b) What problems are associated with the N-alkylation of imidazoles in particular?
(c) What is carbonyl diimidazole (CDI) used for and why does it function well in that role?
(d) What factors must be considered in a discussion of electrophilic substitution of 1,3-azoles? How do
they compare in this regard with pyrrole, thiophene and furan, respectively?
(e) What is the positional order of selectivity for deprotonation of 1,3-azoles? How, then, would you make
5-methylthiazole from thiazole?
(f) What is the most typical electrocyclic process undergone by the 1,3-azoles and which of them show
this tendency to the highest degree?
(g) Describe one typical synthesis for: (i) an imidazole, (ii) a thiazole and (iii) an oxazole.
More advanced exercises:
1. Suggest structures for the halo-compounds formed in the following ways: (i) imidazole with
NaOCl → C3H2Cl2N; (ii) 1-methylimidazole with excess Br2 in AcOH → C4H3Br3N2, then this with
EtMgBr followed by water → C4H4Br2N2 and this in turn with n-BuLi, then (MeO)2CO gave C6H7BrN2O2.
2. Draw structures for the intermediates and final products that are formed when: (i) 4-phenyloxazole
is heated with but-1-yn-3-one → C6H6O2; (ii) 5-ethoxyoxazole is heated with dimethyl
acetylenedicarboxylate → C10H12O6.
3. Deduce structures for the products formed at each stage of the following syntheses: 1,2-dimethyl-5nitroimidazole heated with Me2NCH(Ot-Bu)2 → C8H12N4O2; this then heated with Ac2O → C10H14N4O3.
This product reacted: (i) with guanidine [H2NC(NH2)=NH] → C9H10N6O2 and (ii) with
MeNHNH2 → C9H11N5O2.
4. Deduce structures for the products formed in the following sequences: 1-methylimidazole/n-BuLi/
–30 °C, then TMSCl → C7H14N2Si, then n-BuLi/–30 °C, then TMSCl → C10H22N2Si2, then this with
MeOH/rt → C7H14N2Si, which was different to the first product.
5. Explain the following: 4-bromo-1-methylimidazole treated with n-BuLi/–78 °C, then DMF gave
C5H6N2O. Carrying out the same sequence, but allowing the solution to warm to 0 °C before addition
of DMF gave an isomeric product.
6. Thiazole-2-thione reacted with Br(CH2)3Br to give, mainly, a salt C6H8NS2+ Br–; suggest a structure and
a mechanism for its formation.
7. Deduce structures for the 1,3-azoles that are produced from the following reactant combinations:
(i) 1-chlorobutan-2-one and thiourea; (ii) thiobenzamide and chloroacetaldehyde; (iii) thioformamide
and ethyl bromoacetate.
8. Write structures for the intermediates in the following synthesis of 3,4-bis(acetoxymethyl)furan: phenacyl bromide/NH4+ HCO2– → C9N7NO; this then heated with AcOH2CC≡CCH2OAc.
480
Heterocyclic Chemistry
9. What imidazoles would be formed from the following reactant combination: (i) MeN≡C/n-BuLi and
PhC≡N; (ii) 2-amino-1,2-diphenylethanone and H2NC≡N?
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Bayer, H. O., Huisgen, R., Knorr, R. and Schafer, F. C., Chem. Ber., 1970, 103, 2581.
‘Cycloaddition chemistry of anhydro-4-hydroxy-1,3-thiazolium hydroxides’ (thioisomunchnones) for the synthesis of heterocycles’, Padwa, A.,
Harring, S. R., Hertzog, D. L. and Nadler, W. R., Synthesis, 1994, 993.
Huisgen, R., Funke, E., Gotthardt, H. and Panke, H.-L., Chem. Ber., 1971, 104, 1532; Consonni, R., Croce, P. D., Ferraccioli, R. and La Rosa, C.,
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‘Thiazole and thiadiazole S-oxides’, Clerici, F., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 2001, 81, 107.
Mloston, G., Gendek, T. and Heimgartner, H., Helv. Chim. Acta, 1998, 81, 1585.
Eriksen, B. L., Vedso, P., Morel, S. and Begtrup, M., J. Org. Chem., 1998, 63, 12.
‘The preparation of thiazoles’, Wiley, R. H., England, D. C. and Behr, L. C., Org. React., 1951, 6, 367.
‘Imidazole and Benzimidazole Synthesis’, Grimmett, M. R., Academic Press, 1997.
‘Synthesis and biological activity of vicinal diaryl-substituted 1H-imidazoles’, Bellina, F., Cauteruccio, S., and Rossi, R., Tetrahedron, 2007, 63,
4571.
Schwarz, G., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. III, 1955, 332.
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Flaig, R. and Hartmann, H., Heterocycles, 1997, 45, 875.
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Kim, H.-S., Kwon, I.-C. and Kim, O.-H., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1995, 32, 937.
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P., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1996, 33, 575.
Buchman, E. R., Reims, A. O. and Sarjent, H., J. Org. Chem., 1941, 6, 764.
Brandsma, L., de Jong, R. L. P. and VerKruijsse, H. D., Synthesis, 1985, 948.
Brederick, H., Gompper, R., Bangert, R. and Herlinger, H., Angew. Chem., 1958, 70, 269.
Shilcrat, S. C., Makhallati, M. K., Fortunak, J. M. D. and Pridgen, L. N., J. Org. Chem., 1997, 62, 8449.
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Tebben, A., Vacca, J. P., Varga, S. L., Agarwal, L., Dabcheck, K., Forsyth, A. J., Fletcher, D. S., Frantz, B., Hanlon, W. A., Harper, C. F., Hofsess,
S. J., Kostura, M., Lin, J., Luell, S., O’Neill, E. A.,Orevillo, C. J., pang, M., parsons, J., Rolando, A., Sahly, Y., Visco, D. M. and O’Keefe, S. J., J.
Med. Chem., 1999, 42, 2180.
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Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40, 5191.
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Freeman, F., Chen, T. van der Linden, J. B., Synthesis, 1997, 861.
Cornforth, J. W. and Cornforth, R., J. Chem. Soc., 1947, 96.
Galeazzi, E., Guzmán, A., Nava, J. L., Liu, Y., Maddox, M. C. and Muchowski, J. M., J. Org. Chem., 1995, 60, 1090.
Weinmann, H., Harre, M., Koenig, K., Merten, E. and Tilstam, U., Tetrahedron Lett., 2002, 43, 593.
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Dubs, P. and Stuessi, R., Synthesis, 1976, 696.
van Leusen, A. M., Hoogenboon, B. E. and Siderius, H., Tetrahedron Lett., 1972, 2369; van Leusen, A. M. and Oldenziel, O. H., ibid., 2373; Kulkarni,
B. A. and Ganesan, A., Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40, 5637.
van Leusen, A. M. and Wildeman, J., Synthesis, 1977, 501.
van Leusen, A. M., Wildeman, J. and Oldenziel, O. H., J. Org. Chem., 1977, 42, 1153.
Gracias, V., Gasiecki, A. F. and Djuric, S. W., Org. Lett., 2005, 7, 3183.
ten Have, R., Huisman, M., Meetsma, A. and van Leusen, A. M., Tetrahedron, 1997, 53, 11355.
Katritzky, A. R., Cheng, D. and Musgrave, R. P., Heterocycles, 1997, 44, 67.
Hartman, G. D. and Weinstock, L. M., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. VI, 1988, 620.
Schröder, R., Schöllkopf, U., Blume, E. and Hoppe, I., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1975, 533; Hamada, Y., Morita, S. and Shioiri, T., Heterocycles,
1982, 17, 321; Ohba, M., Kubo, H., Fujii, T., Ishibashi, H., Sargent, M. V. and Arbain, D., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 6697.
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155
156
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Doyle, K. J. and Moody, C. J., Tetrahedron, 1994, 50, 3761.
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Evans, D. L., Minster, D. K., Jordis, U., Hecht, M., Mazzu, A. L. and Meyers, A. I., J. Org. Chem., 1979, 44, 497.
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Chem., 1996, 61, 7671.
Barrish, J. C., Singh, J., Spergel, S. H., Han, W.-C., Kissick, T. P., Kronenthal, D. R. and Mueller, R. H., J. Org. Chem., 1993, 58, 4494.
Williams, D. R., Lowder, P. D., Gu, Y.-G. and Brooks, D. A., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 331.
Montgomery, J. A., Hewson, K., Struck, R. F. and Sheely, Y. F., J. Org. Chem., 1959, 24, 256; Kirk, K. L. and Cohen, L. A., J. Am. Chem. Soc.,
1973, 95, 4619.
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A., Weinstock, J. and Laping, N. J., J. Med. Chem., 2002, 45, 999.
25
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles,
Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
The physical properties of the three 1,2-azoles, pyrazole,1 isothiazole2 and isoxazole3 can be usefully compared and contrasted with those of their 1,3-isomeric counterparts. Echoing the higher boiling point of
imidazole, pyrazole, which is the only one of the trio to be solid at room temperature, also has a much
higher boiling point (187 °C) than isothiazole or isoxazole (114 °C and 95 °C), again reflecting the intermolecular hydrogen bonding available only to pyrazole. This association probably takes the form of dimers,
trimers and oligomers; dimeric forms are of course not available to imidazole. Each 1,2-azole has a pyridinelike odour, but is only partially soluble in water. The dihydro- and tetrahydro-heterocycles are named
pyrazoline/pyrazolidine, isothiazoline/isothiazolidine and isoxazoline/isoxazolidine.
Rapid tautomerism, involving switching of hydrogen from one nitrogen to the other, as in imidazoles
(see 24.1.1.1), means that substituted pyrazoles are inevitably mixtures, and a nomenclature analogous to
that used for imidazoles is employed to signify this: 3(5)-methylpyrazole, for example. In some cases, one
tautomer is predominant.4
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
486
25.1
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
25.1.1 Addition at Nitrogen
25.1.1.1 Protonation
Direct linking of two heteroatoms has a very marked base-weakening effect, as one can see by comparing
ammonia with hydrazine and hydroxylamine (pKaHs: NH3, 9.3; H2NNH2, 7.9; HONH2, 5.8), and this is
mirrored in the 1,2-azoles: pyrazole with a pKaH of 2.5 is some 4.5 pKa units weaker than imidazole; isothiazole (−0.5) and isoxazole (−3.0) are some three pKa units weaker than their 1,3-isomers. The higher
basicity of pyrazole reflects the symmetry of the cation, with its two equivalent contributing resonance
structures. Clearly, again, oxygen has a larger electron-withdrawing effect than sulfur.
25.1.1.2 Oxidation at Nitrogen
The preparation of 1-hydroxy-pyrazoles can employ peracidic conditions (i.e. imine N-oxidation then loss
of N-hydrogen)5 or basic conditions,6 when it is the pyrazolyl N-anion (25.4.1) that reacts with the oxidising
agent, dibenzoyl peroxide.
25.1.1.3 Alkylation at Nitrogen
The 1,2-azoles are more difficult to quaternise than their 1,3-analogues: isothiazoles, for example, require
reactive reagents such as benzyl halides or Meerwein salts (e.g. Et3O+BF4–).7 Additionally, isoxazolium
salts are particularly susceptible to ring cleavage (see 25.10). 3(5)-Substituted pyrazoles that have an Nhydrogen, can, in principle, give rise to two isomeric N-alkyl-pyrazoles after loss of proton from nitrogen,
and there is the further complication that this initial product can, in principle, undergo a second alkylation,
producing an 1,2-disubstituted quaternary salt.8 However, the quaternisation of an already 1-substituted
pyrazole generally requires more vigorous conditions, no doubt because of steric impediment to reaction
due to the substituent on the adjacent nitrogen. Thus, in the N-methylation of pyrazole using dimethyl
carbonate at 140 °C, a high yield of the mono-methylated product is obtained.9 Microwave irradiation
improves the rate of N-alkylation with phenacyl bromides, mono-alkylated salts being formed in high
yields.10
Exposure of pyrazole to Mannich conditions produces an N-protected pyrazole, presumably via attack
at the imine nitrogen, followed by loss of proton from the other nitrogen 11 and an N-tetrahydropyranyl
pyrazole can be similarly prepared.12
25.1.1.4 Acylation at Nitrogen
The introduction of an acyl13 or phenylsulfonyl14 group onto a pyrazole nitrogen is usually achieved in the
presence of a weak base, such as pyridine; such processes proceed via imine N-2 acylation, then N-1+–H
deprotonation. Since acylation, unlike alkylation, is reversible, the more stable product is obtained.
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
487
N-Acyl-pyrazoles are useful acylating agents: although they are ca. 20 times less reactive than N-acylimidazoles and this can be an advantage in the greater stability of the N-acyl-pyrazoles as reagents.15
Pyrazole reacts with cyanamide very efficiently to produce an N-derivative that can be utilised, by reaction with primary or secondary amines, to synthesise guanidines;16 conversion to a doubly t-butoxycarbonylprotected derivative allows this to be used for the direct synthesis of protected guanidines, as
illustrated.17
25.1.2 Substitution at Carbon
25.1.2.1 Nitration
Pyrazole,18 isothiazole19 and isoxazole20 undergo straightforward nitration, at C-4. With acetyl nitrate or
dinitrogen tetraoxide/ozone,21 1-nitropyrazole is formed, but this can be rearranged to 4-nitropyrazole in
acid at low temperature.22
25.1.2.2 Sulfonation
Electrophilic sulfonation of isoxazole is of no preparative value; the substitution of only the phenylsubstituent of 5-phenylisoxazole with chlorosulfonic acid makes the same point.23 Both isothiazole24
and pyrazole25 can be satisfactorily sulfonated at C-4.
25.1.2.3 Halogenation
Halogenation of pyrazole gives 4-monohalo-pyrazoles, for example 4-iodo-,26 or 4-bromopyrazole27 under
controlled conditions. Poor yields are obtained on reaction of isothiazole28 and isoxazole29 with bromine,
again with attack at C-4, but with stabilising groups present, halogenation proceeds better30 and efficient
4-bromination of isoxazoles and pyrazoles is achieved using N-bromosuccinimide and microwave irradiation.31 3,4,5-Tribromopyrazole is formed efficiently in alkaline solution, presumably the pyrazolyl anion
(25.4.1) is the reacting species.32
25.1.2.4 Acylation
Only for pyrazole, of the trio, have any useful electrophilic substitutions involving carbon electrophiles
been described,14,33 and, even here, only N-substituted pyrazoles react well.
488
25.2
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
The 1,2-azole ring systems are relatively stable to oxidative conditions, even allowing substituent alkyl- or,
more efficiently, acyl-groups to be oxidised up to carboxylic acid.34 Ozone cleaves the isoxazole ring.35
25.3
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
The 1,2-azoles do not generally react with nucleophiles with replacement of hydrogen. In favourable
situations, an N-nitro group in 1-nitro-pyrazoles can act as a leaving group to allow substitution of
hydrogen.36
There is a limited number of examples of displacements of leaving groups from the isothiazole 5-position37 when it is activated by a 4-keto or similar group, but 3-halo-groups are less easily displaced; 4-halides
behave like halo-benzenes.
25.4
Reactions with Bases
25.4.1 Deprotonation of Pyrazole N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Pyrazolyl Anions
The pKa for loss of the N-hydrogen of pyrazole is 14.2, thus it is an appreciably stronger acid than pyrrole
(pKa 17.5), and the same as that of imidazole; the anion has, like the imidazolyl anion, two, equallycontributing resonance forms.
N-Alkylations can be conducted in strongly basic,38 or phase-transfer conditions39 or in the presence of
4-dimethylaminopyridine,40 and it seems likely that under these conditions it is the pyrazolyl anion that is
alkylated. The use of sodium hydrogen carbonate, without solvent, but with microwave heating, is also
recommended.41
3(5)-Substituted pyrazoles sometimes give a product isomeric with that which is obtained by reaction in
neutral solution.8
N-Arylation of pyrazoles can be achieved efficiently with metal catalysis (see 4.2)
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
25.5
489
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated 1,2-Azoles42
25.5.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
The C-5-lithiation of pyrazoles requires the absence of the N-hydrogen: removable N-protecting groups
that have been used include phenylsulfonyl,43 trimethylsilylethoxymethyl,44 hydroxymethyl,45 methylsulfonyl,46 dimethylaminosulfonyl,47 tetrahydropyran-2-yl,12 and pyrrolidin-1-ylmethyl.11 Lithiation of 1benzyloxypyrazole48 or 3-benzyloxyisothiazole49 takes place at C-5 and of 1-substituted pyrazole N-oxides
at C-3.50
Attempted C-lithiation of isoxazoles with hydrogen at C-3 leads inevitably to ring opening, with
the oxygen as anionic leaving group,51 indeed this type of cleavage was first recognised as long ago as
1891, when Claisen found that 5-phenylisoxazole was cleaved by sodium ethoxide52 (see 25.10 for ring
cleavage of isoxazolium salts). Comparable cleavages of isothiazoles that have a 3-hydrogen can also be
a problem.
An alternative ring cleavage results from 5-lithiation of 3-phenylisoxazole and leads on to azetidinonecontaining structures.53
3-Methoxymethoxy-5-phenylisoxazole lithiates at C-4,54 as does 3-t-butoxycarbonylamino-5methylisoxazole (two equivalents of n-butyllithium required).55
The reactions of 5-lithiated isothiazoles and of 5-lithiated-1-substituted pyrazoles allow the introduction of substituents at that position by reaction with a range of electrophiles; three examples are shown
below.11,56,57,58
490
Heterocyclic Chemistry
25.5.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
It is significant that treatment of 4-bromo-1-phenylsulfonylpyrazole with n-butyllithium results in 5lithiation and not metal–halogen exchange,43 however 4-bromo-1-triphenylmethylpyrazole undergoes
normal exchange and in this way, for example, a tin derivative can be obtained.40
Metal–halogen exchange can be achieved in the formation of 3-lithio-1-methylpyrazole from the bromopyrazole,59 and reaction of 4-bromopyrazole with two equivalents of n-butyllithium produces a 1,4-dilithiopyrazole that reacts with electrophiles at C-4.60 4-Iodoisothiazole can be converted into a magnesium
compound that shows normal nucleophilic Grignard properties.61
25.6
Reactions with Radicals
The interaction of 1,2-azoles with radical reagents is an area in which little is known so far. Displacement
of tosyl from the 5-position of a protected pyrazole shows that there is potential for further
development.62
25.7
Reactions with Reducing Agents
Pyrazoles are relatively stable to catalytic and chemical reductive conditions, particularly when there is no
substituent on nitrogen, though catalytic reduction can be achieved in acid solution.63 Isothiazoles are
reductively desulfurised using Raney nickel, with loss of the ring.64 Catalytic hydrogenolysis of the N–O
bond in isoxazoles takes place readily over noble-metal catalysts,65 and this process is central to the stratagem in which isoxazoles are employed as masked 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds. The immediate products of
N–O hydrogenolysis, β-amino-enones, can often be isolated as such, or further processed. The use of this
ring cleavage to provide routes to pyrimidinones,66 and to pyrazoles, as illustrated.67
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
491
5-Alkoxy-isoxazoles undergo ring contraction with iron(II) chloride, producing azirine esters.68
25.8
Electrocyclic and Photochemical Reactions
There are examples of 1,2-azoles being converted into their 1,3-isomers by irradiation, though such processes are of limited preparative value. 69
In a similar way, irradiation converts many simpler pyrazoles into imidazoles,70 phenylisothiazoles71
and methylisothiazoles72 partially into the corresponding thiazoles, and 3,5-diarylisoxazoles into 2,5disubstituted oxazoles.73 The transformation of 1,2-azoles carrying, at C-3, a side-chain of three atoms
terminating in a doubly bonded heteroatom, into isomeric systems with a new five-membered ring is a
general process,74 though there is no definitive view as to the details of its mechanism.
1,2-Azoles do not act as 1-azadienes in cycloadditions. 4-Nitro-isoxazoles react with dienes across the
4,5-bond75 and in processes useful for the synthesis of purine analogues, 3(5)-amino-pyrazoles add to
electron-deficient 1,3,5-triazines, across the pyrazole 4,5-bond, subsequent eliminations giving the final
aromatic product.76
492
Heterocyclic Chemistry
25.9 Alkyl-1,2-Azoles
4-Methyl-isothiazoles are not especially acidic, but it is rather surprising that 3-methyl-isothiazoles are also
not reactive, whereas 5-methyl substituents will undergo condensation reactions.77 This same effect is also
found in isoxazoles: with the 3-position blocked to prevent ring degradation (25.5.1), 3,5-dimethylisoxazole
exchanges, with methoxide in methanol, 280 times faster at the 5- than at the 3-methyl group and preparative deprotonations proceed exclusively at the 5-methyl substituent.78 By working at low temperature, even
5-methylisoxazole can be deprotonated at the methyl without ring degradation.79 Conversion to N-oxide80
activates adjacent methyl groups, for example subsequent reaction with trimethylsilyl iodide permits sidechain iodination.81
On subjection of 3-methyl-5-phenylisothiazole or 3-methyl-5-phenylisoxazole to lithiation conditions,
competitive side-chain and C-4 deprotonation is observed, except when lithium i-propyl(cyclohexyl)amide
(LICA) is used – this allows exclusive side-chain lithiation.82
25.10
Quaternary 1,2-Azolium Salts
The base-catalysed degradation of the ring of isoxazolium salts is particularly easy, requiring only alkali
metal carboxylates to achieve it. The mechanism,83 illustrated for the acetate-initiated degradation of
2-methyl-5-phenylisoxazolium iodide, involves initial 3-deprotonation with cleavage of the N–O bond;
subsequent rearrangements lead to an enol-acetate which rearranges to a final keto-imide.
Isothiazolium salts84 are often prepared by ring synthesis involving oxidative nitrogen-to-sulfur bond
formation, however these quaternary salts can be prepared in the normal way from an isothiazole with a
reactive electrophile. They are cleanly cleaved by reducing agents, for example sodium borohydride, producing β-enamino-thioketones.85
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
25.11
493
Oxy- and Amino-1,2-azoles
Only 4-hydroxy-1,2-azoles can be regarded as being phenol-like.86 3- and 5-Hydroxy-1,2-azoles exist
mainly in carbonyl tautomeric forms, encouraged by resonance involving donation from a ring heteroatom,
and are therefore known as pyrazolones,87 isothiazolones and isoxazolones, though for all three systems,
and depending on the nature of other substituents, an appreciable percentage of hydroxy tautomer exists
in solution.
The reactivity of the 3- and 5-azolones centres mainly on their ability to react with electrophiles, such
as halogens,88 (giving 4,4-dihalo derivatives with excess reagent – 4,4-dibromo-3-methylpyrazol-5-one is
a para-selective brominating agent for phenols and anilines89), or to nitrate,90 or undergo Vilsmeier
formylation;91 the example shown below is the formylation of ‘antipyrine’ once used as an analgesic.
Many dyestuffs have been synthesised via coupling of aryldiazonium cations with 5-pyrazolones at C-4
– tartrazine is such an example.
Pyrazolones also condense with aldehydes92 in aldol-type processes, or react with other electrophiles,
such as carbon disulfide,93 in each case reaction presumably proceeding via the enol tautomer, or its anion.
In basic solution isoxazol-3-ones alkylate either on oxygen or nitrogen, and the choice of base can influence
the ratio.52
Amino-1,2-azoles94 exist as the amino tautomers. Amino-pyrazoles and amino-isothiazoles are relatively
well-behaved aromatic amines, for example 3(5)-aminopyrazole undergoes substituent-N-acetylation and
easy electrophilic bromination at C-4.95 Diazotisation and a subsequent Sandmeyer reaction provides routes
to halo-isothiazoles61,19 and azido-pyrazoles.96
494
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Diazotisation of 4-amino-pyrazoles, then deprotonation yields isolable diazo-pyrazoles.97
25.12
Synthesis of 1,2-Azoles98
25.12.1 Ring Synthesis
There are parallels, but also methods unique to particular 1,2-azoles, in the principal methods available for
the construction of pyrazoles, isothiazoles and isoxazoles: neither the reaction of propene with sulfur
dioxide and ammonia at 350 °C, which gives isothiazole itself99 in 65% yield, nor a synthesis100 from
propargyl aldehyde and thiosulfate (shown below) have direct counterparts for the other 1,2-azoles.
25.12.1.1 From 1,3-Dicarbonyl Compounds and Hydrazines or Hydroxylamine
Pyrazoles and isoxazoles can be made from a 1,3-dicarbonyl component and a hydrazine or hydroxylamine,
respectively.
This, the most widely used route to pyrazoles and isoxazoles rests on the doubly nucleophilic character
of hydrazines and hydroxylamine, allowing them to react in turn with each carbonyl group of a 1,3-diketone101 or 1,3-keto-aldehyde, often with one of the carbonyl groups (especially when aldehyde) masked as
enol ether,102 acetal, imine103 or enamine,104,105 or other synthon for one of these.
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
495
When β-keto-esters are used, the products are pyrazolones106 or isoxazolones;107 similarly, β-keto-nitriles
with hydrazines give 3(5)-amino-pyrazoles.108 3(5)-Aminopyrazole itself is prepared via a dihydro precursor
formed by addition of hydrazine to acrylonitrile then cyclisation;109 hydrolysis of the first cyclic intermediate in this sequence and dehydrogenation via elimination of p-toluenesulfinate allows preparation of
3(5)-pyrazolone.110
Generally speaking, unsymmetrical 1,3-dicarbonyl components produce mixtures of 1,2-azole products.86
This difficulty can be circumvented in a number of ways: by the use of acetylenic aldehydes or ketones
(as synthons), where a hydrazone or oxime can be formed first by reaction at the carbonyl group, and
this can then be cyclised in a separate, second step.111,112 A nice example of this is the formation of
5-silyl-pyrazoles and -isoxazoles using silyl-alkynones.113 The regioselective reaction of arylhydrazines
with 1,3-diketones shows what can sometimes be achieved by careful choice of reaction conditions and
solvent.114
Pyrazole itself can be formed by the reaction of hydrazine with propargyl aldehyde.10 Using β-chloro-,115
β-alkoxy-116 β-amino-117 -enones as 1,3-dicarbonyl synthons are other ways to influence the regiochemistry
of reaction.118 2-(Dimethoxymethyl)-ketones react with arylhydrazines at the ketonic carbonyl, thus reversing the intrinsic reactivity of a β-keto-aldehyde.119
496
Heterocyclic Chemistry
25.12.1.2 Dipolar Cycloadditions of Nitrile Oxides and Nitrile Imines
Isoxazoles are produced by the dipolar cycloaddition of nitrile oxides to alkynes; pyrazoles result from the
comparable interaction of alkynes with nitrile imines.
Nitrile oxides (R–C≡N+–O–),120 which can be generated by base-catalysed elimination of hydrogen
halide from halo-oximes (RC(Hal)=NOH), or by dehydration of nitro compounds121 (RCH2NO2), readily
add to alkenes and to alkynes, generating five-membered heterocycles. Addition to an alkene produces an
isoxazoline, unless the alkene also incorporates a group capable of being eliminated in a step after the
cycloaddition, as shown below.122 However, isoxazolines can also be dehydrogenated to the aromatic
system.123,124
Cycloaddition of a nitrile oxide to an alkyne generates an aromatic isoxazole directly, but mixtures are
sometimes obtained. 125,126
A useful route to 3-bromo-isoxazoles rests on the cycloaddition of bromonitrile oxide.127
Nitrile imines can be generated in a similar way: the dehydrohalogenation of hydrazonyl halides (from
N-halosuccinimide and a hydrazone), or, as in the sequence below, elimination of benzenesulfonate.128
1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
497
The cycloaddition of diazoalkanes to alkynes gives pyrazoles; the use of stannyl alkynes129,130 produces
tin derivatives of the heterocycle (cf. 4.1.6), for use in subsquent electrophilic ipso-displacements, or in
palladium(0)-catalysed couplings. Aryl-diazomethanes can be generated in situ, from tosylhydrazones, for
formation of pyrazoles.131
25.12.1.3 From Oximes and Hydrazones
Exposure of ketone oximes that have an α-hydrogen to two mole equivalents of n-butyllithium leads to
O- and C-lithiation (syn to the oxygen); reaction with dimethylformamide as electrophile then allows Cformylation and ring closure in situ to a 5-unsubstituted isoxazole.132 Similarly, reaction of the dianion to
an acylating agent (an ester133 or a Weinreb amide134) leads through to 5-substituted isoxazoles, or with
diethyl oxalate, to isoxazole-5-esters.135
Displacement of the halogen of an α-bromo-ketone oxime with an alkyne leads to an intermediate, which
closes to an isoxazole simply on treatment with mild base.136
An elegant route to pyrazoles, involves forming a ring closure precursor by Horner–Emmons condensation of a tosylhydrazone-phosphonate with an aldehyde, which becomes the 5-substituent; intramolecular Michael addition and then loss of toluenesulfinate as the final aromatising step, completes the
sequence.137
498
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapters 23 and 25):
(a) Compare 1,2- with 1,3-azoles in pairs – which is the more basic? Why?
(b) What is incorrect about the name: ‘3-methylpyrazole’?
(c) Name some groups that can be used to mask the N-hydrogen in pyrazoles during C-lithiation.
(d) For what functionality are isoxazoles synthons if the N–O bond is cleaved? How could one cleave the
N–O bond?
(e) How are 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds used for the synthesis of isoxazoles and pyrazoles?
(f) Describe a method involving an electrocyclic process for the ring synthesis of an isoxazole.
(g) Describe a method for the utilisation of the oxime of a dialkyl ketone, to make an isoxazole.
More advanced exercises:
1. Suggest structures for the isomeric products, C9H7N3O2 formed when 1-phenylpyrazole is reacted with:
(i) c. H2SO4/c. HNO3 or (ii) Ac2O/HNO3. Explain the formation of different products under the two
conditions.
2. Draw structures for the products obtained by reacting 3,5-dimethylisoxazole with NaNH2, then: (i) nPrBr; (ii) CO2; or (iii) PhCO2Me.
3. Deduce structures for the products obtained by treating 5-methylisoxazole with SO2Cl2 → C4H4ClNO,
and this with aqueous sodium hydroxide → C4H4ClNO (which contains no rings).
4. Draw the structures of the products that would be formed from the reaction of BnNHNH2 with
MeCOCH2COCO2Me.
5. Deduce structures for the products formed in the following sequence: pyrazole/Me2NSO2Cl/
Et3N → C5H9N3O2S, then this with n-BuLi/–70 °C, then TMSCl → C8H17N3O2SSi, then this with
PhCH=O/CsF → C12H15N3SO3.
6. Draw the structures of the two products that are formed when hydroxylamine reacts with PhCOCH2CH=O;
suggest an unambiguous route for the preparation of 5-phenylisoxazole.
7. Deduce the structures of the heterocyclic substances produced: (i) C7H9NO, from cyclohexanone oxime
with 2 mole equivalents of n-BuLi, then dimethyl formamide; (ii) C11H15NOSSi from thien-2-ylC(=NOH)
CH2Br and Me3SiC≡CLi, then K2CO3/MeOH; (iii) C11H12N2 from MeCOC(=NNHPh)Me with
(EtO)2POCH2SEt/n-BuLi.
8. Suggest a structure for the heterocyclic product, C7H13NOSi, formed by reaction of Me3SiC≡CC≡CSiMe3
and hydroxylamine.
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1,2-Azoles: Pyrazoles, Isothiazoles, Isoxazoles: Reactions and Synthesis
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26
Benzanellated Azoles: Reactions and Synthesis
There is only one way in which a benzene ring can be fused to each of the three 1,3-azoles, generating
1H-benzimidazole,1 benzoxazole and benzothiazole. Indazole2 is the only possibility for the analogous
fusion to a pyrazole; it exists as a 1H tautomer – the 2H-tautomer cannot be detected, though 2-substituted
2H-indazoles are known. Two distinct isomers each are possible for the other two benzo-fused 1,2-azoles:
1,2-benzoisothiazole and 2,1-benzoisothiazole,3 1,2-benzisoxazole and 2,1-benzisoxazole,4 respectively.
26.1
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
26.1.1 Addition at Nitrogen
26.1.1.1 Protonation
Benzimidazole is somewhat weaker as a base and stronger as an N–H acid, than imidazole. These trends
are echoed in the other benzo-azoles: the bicyclic systems are weaker bases than the corresponding monocyclic heterocycles and indazole is a slightly weaker acid than pyrazole.
26.1.1.2 Alkylation at Nitrogen
The neutral heterocycles form quaternary salts by reaction at nitrogen with alkyl halides. Normally, indazoles react at the imine nitrogen, N-2.5
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
504
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Alkylation of 6-methylindazole with dihydropyran and acid produces the N-1-tetrahydropyranyl derivative;6 as in N-1-acylation of indazoles, this 1-substituted product may be a thermodynamic product resulting
from reversible alkylation.
A very useful alternative protection of indazoles is achieved using trimethylsilyl chloride in the presence
of a hindered base, producing 2-trimethylsilylindazole: it is the neutral indazole which is silylated by reaction at the imine nitrogen, the hindered base being present to deprotonate the initially formed salt.7
26.1.1.3 Acylation at Nitrogen
Acid anhydrides, with or without pyridine, bring about N-acylation of benzimidazoles, N-1-acylation of
indazoles, and 1,3-diacylation of benzimidazol-2-one.8 N-2-Acylation of indazole can be achieved in the
presence of a hindered base.7
26.1.2 Substitution at Carbon
The only known C-substitutions in the heterocyclic rings of any benzo-azole are the 2-bromination of
benzimidazole with N-bromosuccinimide,9 the 2-substitution of benzothiazole with bromine at 450 °C10
and the 3-nitration of indazole.11 The general rule is that electrophilic nitrations and halogenations can be
achieved only in the benzene ring at the 5-, or 6- or 7-positions, for example 5-bromobenzimidazole can
be obtained in high yield from the unsubstituted heterocycle.12 The efficient conversion of indazole into
3-iodoindazole13 is achieved in the presence of base and probably involves iodination of the indazolyl anion
(see 26.3).
2-Bromobenzimidazole can be obtained from the reaction of benzimidazole-2-thiol with bromine,14 but
in general, hetero-ring halides are prepared from the corresponding oxygen-substituted heterocycle by
treatment with thionyl chloride or phosphoryl chloride.6
The reluctance to undergo electrophilic C-substitution in the five-membered ring can be overcome
using silylated derivatives, as illustrated.15
Benzanellated Azoles: Reactions and Synthesis 505
26.2
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
The only position in these heterocycles where nucleophilic displacement of a leaving group is activated is
that on the heterocyclic ring; conversion to thiol using thiourea as the nucleophile,16 and amine displacements on 2-chloro-benzoxazoles17 show the mildness of the conditions required.
Both oxygen and sulfur substituents can be easily displaced from benzoxazoles18 or benzothiazoles19 by
organolithiums or amines.
Susceptibility to nucleophilic displacement is central to a method for removing benzothiazol-2-ylsulfonyl
protecting groups – reaction with a thiol at the heterocyclic ring 2-position releases the amine (either
primary or secondary) as indicated, the sequence also being a reminder of the usual addition/elimination
sequence for nucleophilic displacements at imine carbon.
26.3
Reactions with Bases
26.3.1 Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Benzimidazolyl and Indazolyl Anions
The pKa for benzimidazole is 12.3 and for indazole, the value is 13.9. The benzimidazolyl and indazolyl
anions react straightforwardly on nitrogen with electrophiles, though mixtures of N-1- and N-2-substituted
products can result in the latter case. For example, amination with hydroxylamine O-sulfonic acid gives a
2 : 1 ratio of 1-amino-1H-indazole and 2-amino-2H-indazole20 or to take another example, the ratio of N-1to N-2-ethylated products from methyl indazol-3-ylcarboxylate can vary from 1 : 1 to 18 : 1 depending on
the base and the solvent.21 The N-arylation of benzimidazoles and indazoles can be achieved with palladium
or copper catalysis (See 4.2.10).
26.4
Ring Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Derivatives
Benzothiazoles and benzimidazoles (blocked or protected on nitrogen) lithiate at the hetero-ring 2-position.
This allows subsequent reaction with the usual range of electrophiles; the examples below show the introduction of iodine22 and a silicon substituent;23 2-lithio-benzimidazoles also react efficiently with simple
esters to give ketones.24
506
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Lithiation of benzoxazole leads to a mixture of the 2-lithiated species and a ring-opened ortho-isocyanophenolate. This difficulty can be avoided by magnesation and good yields of 2-substituted products obtained
thereby.25
1,2-Benzisothiazole and 1,2-benzisoxazole have not been lithiated in the heterocyclic ring, no doubt
because attempts so to do would lead to fragmentation of the heterocyclic ring in a way analogous to that
observed on exposure of isoxazoles to lithiating conditions (25.5.1), and when indazole-3-acids are heated
in quinoline.26 However, 3-bromoindazole can be converted into an N,C-dithio species – this takes advantage of the fact that following deprotonation of the N-hydrogen, N-1 is no longer a leaving group.27
Lithiation of 2-alkyl-2H-indazoles proceeds straightforwardly and thus 3-substituted 2H-indazoles can
be obtained28 and comparable lithiations of 2-trimethylsilyl-indazoles, followed by removal of the silicon
substituent, produce 3-substituted indazoles.
26.5
Reactions with Reducing Agents
The selective reduction of the hetero-ring of benzo-1,3-azoles or the benzo-1,2-azoles has not been reported,
though benzazolium salts can be easily reduced to 1,2-dihydro derivatives with sodium borohydride or
lithium aluminium hydride.29
26.6
Electrocyclic Reactions
2,1-Benzisothiazole and 2,1-benzisoxazole seem not to display the tendency to act as aza-dienes that might
have been expected on the basis of comparison with the typical reactivity of isoindoles, benzo[c]thiophenes
and isobenzofurans (cf. 22.2). In a different sense, electron-deficient 2-alkenyl-benzothiazoles react as
1-aza-1,3-dienes with electron-rich alkenes.30
26.7
Quaternary Salts
Benzo-1,3-azolium salts are susceptible to nucleophilic addition at C-2, for example, they are converted
into the corresponding ortho-substituted benzene, with loss of C-2, by aqueous base, a process that must
involve addition of hydroxide at C-2 as an initiating step.31
By a sequence involving 2-lithiation of benzothiazole, then reaction with an aldehyde, quaternisation,
C-2-addition of an alkyllithium, and finally silver-promoted ring cleavage of the resulting dihydro-
Benzanellated Azoles: Reactions and Synthesis 507
benzothiazole, the heterocycle can be made the means for the construction of α-hydroxy-ketones.32 Lithium
enolates also add smoothly to benzothiazolium salts.33
Reissert-type adducts (cf. 9.13) can be obtained from benzothiazole, benzoxazole and indazole, as
exemplified.34
N-Heterocyclic carbenes35 (cf. 24.10) can be obtained from 1,3-dialkyl-benzimidazole quaternary salts
by 2-deprotonation,36 or from 1,3-dialkyl benzimidazole-2-thione using sodium/potassium alloy.37
26.8
Oxy- and Amino-Benzo-1,3-Azoles
The benzo-1,3-azol-2-ones exist in the carbonyl tautomeric forms. Indazol-3-one, however, at least in
dimethylsulfoxide solution, is largely in the hydroxy tautomeric form,38 in contrast to 1,2-benzisothiazol3-one, which is wholly in the carbonyl form, in the solid.39
It is possible to be quite selective in the introduction of alkyl groups onto one of the two nitrogens of
3-hydroxyindazole. Reaction with a halide in neutral solution, no doubt involving the imine tautomer, is
selective for N-2;40 the anion reacts at N-1.41
Hot aqueous base brings about hydrolytic cleavage of the heterocyclic ring of benzo-1,3-azol-2-ones
giving the corresponding ortho-disubstituted benzene.42 Alkylation in basic medium generally leads to Nand O-substitution; thiones alkylate on the thione sulfur.43
26.9
Synthesis
26.9.1 Ring Synthesis of Benzo-1,3-Azoles
26.9.1.1 From ortho-Heteroatom-Substituted Arenes
The most important strategy for the synthesis of benzothiazoles, benzimidazoles and benzoxazoles is the
insertion of C-2 into a precursor with ortho-heteroatoms on a benzene ring. The component that is required
for this purpose usually has the future C-2 at the oxidation level of an acid, but many variants on this have
been described.
508
Heterocyclic Chemistry
In the standard form of this route, a carboxylic acid is heated with the ortho-disubstituted benzene:
ortho-amino-phenol, -thiophenol or -aniline. An iminoether will react at a much lower temperature44 and
iminochlorides, generated in situ using the acid, triphenylphosphine and hot carbon tetrachloride, can be
used for benzimidazole or benzoxazole synthesis.45 Orthoesters with a KSF clay is a highly recommended
variant and can be used for the synthesis of all three unsubstituted benzo-1,3-azoles.46
Important variants for the synthesis of benzimidazoles allow the use of aldehydes, rather than acids:
ytterbium triflate47 (best for aliphatic aldehydes) or scandium triflate48 catalyse the condensation and the
subsequent air oxidation of the dihydrobenzimidazole immediate product. Incorporating nitrobenzene in
the reaction mixture as the oxidant can also be used.49 ortho-Nitroanilines can be used by incorporating a
reducing agent in the reaction mixture – e.g. hydrogen over palladium50 or sodium dithionite51 – for in situ
generation of the ortho-phenylenediamine. 2-Aryl-benzothiazoles can be made from 2-aminobenzenethiol,
aromatic aldehydes and air, in the presence of activated carbon.52
There are efficient ways in which to use starting materials that have the carboxylic acid component
already installed on both heteroatoms: conversion to bis(silyloxy) derivatives,53 or simply heating with ptoluenesulfonic acid.54 An excellent route to mono-acylated precursors utilises mixed anhydrides.31 A very
mild method for the dehydrative ring closure of ortho-hydroxyarylamino-amides utilises typical Mitsunobu
conditions – triphenylphosphine and diethyl azodicarboxylate.55
A device that has been frequently used to produce an ortho-acylamino-phenol synthon is to carry out a
Beckmann rearrangement on an ortho-hydroxyaryl ketone, the Beckmann intermediate cyclising in situ, as
illustrated below.56
Microwave irradiation can be used to make oxazolo[4,5-b]pyridines57 and allows reaction with amides
in lieu of acids; when urea or thiourea are used, 2-ones (2-thiones) are obtained; carbon disulfide with
potassium hydroxide also leads to 2-thiones. The use of triphosgene and 2,3-diamino-pyridines can be
used to made the analogous imidazo[4,5-b]pyridin-2-ones.58 Reaction with cyanogen bromide gives
2-amino-benzimidazoles.16
Benzanellated Azoles: Reactions and Synthesis 509
26.9.1.2 Other Methods
Chief amongst alternative methods, and of importance in that it does not require an ortho-diheteroatom
starting material, is the oxidative ring closure of arylamine-thioamides giving benzothiazoles. Typically,59
potassium ferricyanide or bromine is utilized; DDQ60 or Dess–Martin periodinane,61 both at room temperature, also function to bring about oxidative ring closure. An oxidative ring closure giving benzimidazoles
results when N-aryl-amidines are reacted with iodobenzene diacetate.62
In substrates where a halogen is located ortho to nitrogen, ring closure to benzimidazoles can be achieved
by palladium(0)-catalysed63 or copper-catalysed64 sequences; similar formation of benzothiazoles from
ortho-haloarylamine-thioamides, does not require a metal catalyst.65
26.9.2 Ring Synthesis of Benzo-1,2-Azoles
26.9.2.1 Ring Synthesis of 1H-Indazoles, 1,2-Benzisothiazoles and 1,2-Benzisoxazoles
The earliest syntheses of 1,2-benzisoxazoles depended on the cyclisation of an ortho-haloaryl-ketone
oxime, typical conditions are shown below and involve an intramolecular nucleophilic substitution of the
halide.66 Only one geometrical isomer of the oxime will ring close. Applying this approach to amidoximes
is easier, because the two imine geometrical isomers in such compounds are easily interconvertible.67
Comparable reaction with hydrazones produces indazoles.68
A number of routes involve formation of the bond between the two heteroatoms: typical is the conversion of di(2-cyanophenyl) disulfide into 3-chlorobenzoisothiazole with chlorine69 and into 3-aminobenzoisothiazoles with magnesium amides, as shown, one ‘half ’ of the starting material is converted directly
into the heterocycle, the second ‘half ’ requiring oxidation.70
Generally speaking, one of the heteroatoms must carry a leaving group – the hydroxyl of oximes has
served this purpose either via protonation71 or acetylation.72 The generation of an aryl chlorosulfide serves
the purpose in the opposite sense.73
510
Heterocyclic Chemistry
An excellent protocol for the cyclisation of salicylaldehyde oximes (or ortho-hydroxyaryl-ketoximes) is
the application of Mitsunobu-type conditions;74 the combination triphenylphosphine/DDQ is also very
efficient.75 Phenyliodine(III) bis(trifluoroacetate) (PIFA) can be used to effect ring closure of ortho-aminoarylcarboxamides giving indazolin-3-ones76 or of ortho-thiol-arylcarboxamides, to give benzisothiazol3-ones.77
Salicylaldehydes react with hydrazine to give 1H-indazoles,78 and indazoles can also be formed from the
reaction of ortho-fluoro-benzaldehydes with hydrazine.79 Rather similar ring closures of N-aryl-N′-(orthobromobenzyl)-hydrazines require palladium catalysis.80
Electrophilic cyclisation onto the aromatic ring achieves the synthesis of 3-amino-indazoles when arylhydrazines are reacted with N-(dichloromethylene)-N,N-dimethylammonium chloride, as shown.81
A classical,82 but still used,6,83 route to indazoles involves N-nitrosation of an acetanilide, followed by
cyclisation onto an ortho-alkyl group – even unactivated methyl groups enter into reaction, though in the
example shown below the ortho-substituent carries an activating ester. The sequence may involve a diazoacetate as intermediate, as shown, with the acetate as leaving group. 3-Methylindazole can be obtained via
diazotisation of 2-ethylaniline, then ring closure with a mild base.84
Benzanellated Azoles: Reactions and Synthesis 511
Diazotisation of anthranilic acid and immediate reduction of the diazo group is a very simple route to
indazolin-3-one.2 Hydrolysis of the amide unit of isatin, then diazotisation and reduction produces indazole3-carboxylic acid;85 adding the diazonium salt solution to the reducing mixture minimizes the formation of
byproduct indazolin-3-ones.86
A route to 3-trimethylsilyl-indazoles involves the interaction of lithium trimethylsilyldiazomethane with
benzynes, generated in situ from a halo-benzene.87
26.9.2.2 Ring Synthesis of 2,1-Benzisothiazoles and 2,1-Benzisoxazoles
Appropriate oxidations of ortho-aminoaryl ketones88 or esters89 produce 2,1-benzisoxazoles; these ring
closures may involve the intermediate formation of a nitrene.
Involvement of a nitrene seems very likely in sequences where an ortho-azidoaryl ketone is decomposed
thermally producing 3-substituted 2,1-benzisoxazoles.90 In the opposite sense, reduction of ortho-nitroaraldehydes is a very efficient route to 3-unsubstituted 2,1-benzisoxazoles. Both the zinc and the 2-bromo2-nitropropane are essential components of the reducing mixture. Note the survival of the aromatic halogen
in the example shown.91
512
Heterocyclic Chemistry
ortho-Amino-toluenes can be converted into 2,1-benzisothiazoles by reaction with thionyl chloride92 or
with N-sulfinylmethanesulfonamide.93
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Snyder, H. R., Thompson, C. B. and Hinman, R. L., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1952, 74, 2009; Norman, M. H., Navas, F., Thompson, J. B. and Rigdon, G.
C., J. Med. Chem., 1996, 39, 4692.
Johnson, B. L. and Rodgers, J. D., Synth. Commun., 2005, 35, 2681.
Shoji, Y., Hari, Y. and Aoyama, T., Tetrahedon Lett., 2004, 45, 1769.
Prakarh, O., Saini, R. K., Singh, S. P. and Varma, R. S., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 3147.
Chauhan, M. S. and McKinnon, D. M., Can. J. Chem., 1975, 53, 1336.
Ning, R. Y., Chen, W. Y. and Sternbach, L. H., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1974, 11, 125; Smalley, R. K., Smith, R. H. and Suschitzky, H., Tetrahedron
Lett., 1978, 2309.
Kim, B. H., Jun, Y. M., Kim, T. K., Lee, Y. S., Baik, W. and Lee, B. M., Heterocycles, 1997, 45, 235.
Davis, M. and White, A. W., J. Org. Chem., 1969, 34, 2985.
Singerman, G. M., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1975, 12, 877.
27
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
Purines are of great interest for several reasons, but in particular, together with certain pyrimidine bases,
they are constituents of DNA and RNA, and consequently of fundamental importance in life processes (see
32.4). Additionally, as nucleosides and nucleotides they act as hormones and neurotransmitters and are
present in some co-enzymes. The interconversion of mono-, di- and triphosphate esters of nucleosides is
at the heart of energy transfer in many metabolic systems and is also involved in intracellular signalling.
This central biological importance, together with medicinal chemists’ search for anti-tumour and anti-viral
(particularly anti-AIDS) agents, have resulted in a rapid expansion of purine chemistry (33.6.3).
There are significant lessons to be learnt from the chemistry of purines since their reactions exemplify
the interplay of its constituent imidazole and pyrimidine rings, just as the properties of indole show
modified pyrrole and modified benzene chemistry. Thus purines can undergo both electrophilic and nucleophilic attack at carbon in the five-membered ring and mainly nucleophilic reactions at carbon in the sixmembered ring.
The numbering of the purine ring system is anomolous and reads as if purine were a pyrimidine derivative. There are, in principle, four possible tautomers of purine containing an N-hydrogen; in the crystalline
state, purine exists as the 7H-tautomer, however in solution both 7H- and 9H-tautomers are present in
approximately equal proportions; the 1H- and 3H-tautomers are not significant.1
The majority of reported purine chemistry pertains to the naturally occurring purines, which are amino
and/or oxygenated substances and, as a consequence, reactions of the simpler purines, such as in other
chapters are given as typical, have received limited attention. A nomenclature related to the natural purines
has evolved and is in general usage. A ‘nucleoside’ is an N-sugar derivative of a purine (generally 9(riboside) or 9-(2′-deoxyriboside)), for example adenosine is the 9-(riboside) of adenine, itself the generally
used trivial name for 6-aminopurine. A nucleotide is a 5′-phosphate (or di- or tri-phosphate) of a nucleoside
– adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) is an example. Note that there are comparable pyrimidine nucleosides
and nucleotides (32.4). (NOTE: In some diagrams, to save space, for β-d-2-deoxyribofuranosyl, β-dribofuranosyl and a generalized sugar, we use dR R S , respectively.)
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
516
27.1
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Reactions with Electrophilic Reagents
27.1.1 Addition at Nitrogen
27.1.1.1 Protonation
Purine is a weak base, pKaH 2.5. 13C NMR studies suggest that all three protonated forms are present in
solution, but the predominant cation is formed by N-1-protonation.2 In strong acid solution a dication is
formed by protonation at N-1 and on the five-membered ring.3
The presence of oxygen functionality does not seem to affect purine basicity to any great extent, thus
hypoxanthine has a pKaH of 2.0. Amino groups increase the basicity, as illustrated by the pKaH of adenine,
4.2, and oxo groups reduce the basicity of amino-purines, thus guanine has a pKaH of 3.3; the position of
protonation of guanine in the solid state has been established by X-ray analysis – it is on the five-membered
ring, which nicely illustrates the extremely subtle interplay of substituents and ring heteroatoms, for
although the 2-amino group increases the basicity of the purine to which it is attached, this does not necessarily mean that it is the associated N-3 that is protonated.
Purine itself slowly decomposes in aqueous acid, to the extent of about 10% in 1N sulfuric acid at
100 °C. The stability of oxy-purines to aqueous acid varies greatly, for example xanthine is stable to aqueous
1N sulfuric acid at 100 °C, whereas purin-2-one is converted into 5,6-diaminopyrimidin-2-one under the
same conditions.
27.1.1.2 Alkylation at Nitrogen
As would be expected from systems containing four nitrogen atoms, N-alkylation of purines is complex
and can take place on the neutral molecule or via an N-anion. Purine reacts with iodomethane to give a
7,9-dimethylpurinium salt.4
Adenine gives mainly 3-alkylated products under neutral conditions, but 7/9-substitution when there is
a base present. Adenosine derivatives on the other hand usually give 1-alkylated products, presumably due
to hindrance to N-3-attack by the peri-9-ribose substituent. That attack can still occur at C-3 is shown by
the intramolecular quaternisation of N-3, which is an important side reaction when 5′-halides are subjected
to displacement conditions.
An effective method for effectively alkylating the 6-amino group of adenosine is to bring about a Dimroth
rearrangement of a 1-alkyl-adenosinium salt, as illustrated below (see also 31.2.2).5,6
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
517
Alkylation of oxygenated purines in alkaline media, for example hypoxanthine, tends to occur both at
amidic nitrogen and also at a five-membered ring nitrogen, making selectivity a problem. Under neutral
conditions, xanthines give 7,9-dialkylated quaternary salts. The alkylation of 6-chloropurine illustrates the
complexity: in basic solution both 7- and 9-substitution occurs,7 whereas reaction with dihydrofuran under
acidic conditions is selective for N-9, perhaps as a thermodynamic product.8
An N-t-butyldimethylsilyloxymethyl is a useful protecting group for adenines as it confers good solubility
in organic solvents. It is introduced by stepwise conversion into the 9-hydroxymethyl derivative, by
reaction with formaldehyde and base, followed by O-silylation.9
The ratio of N-9 to N-7 alkylation is also influenced by the size of a 6-substituent, larger groups at C-6
lead to increased percentages of 9- versus 7-alkylation.10
In suitable cases, where N-7/N-9 selectivity is poor, alkylation can be directed to N-9 by a bulky protecting group installed on a C-6 substituent.11 Alternatively, a 6-amino can be converted into an azole leaving
group, such as a 1,2,4-triazol-4-yl (29.1.1.2), which is a very effective hindering group for N-7. Imidazoles
can also be used similarly12 – unsubstituted imidazole or a 2-butylimidazole are very effective, whereas the
apparently much bulkier 2,5-diphenylimidazole is much less so. This is explained by the simple imidazole
(or triazole) being coplanar with the purine ring (and therefore very close to N-7), but a diphenylimidazole
substituent is rotated away from the nitrogen.13
518
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The N-9:N-7 ratio of products varies with time when alkylations employ a Michael acceptor like methyl
acrylate, for here the alkylation is reversible and the concentration of thermodynamic product can build
up.14 Regiospecific 7-alkylations can be achieved via the quaternisation of a 9-riboside followed by hydrolytic removal of the sugar residue, as illustrated by a reaction with ethylene oxide.15 Alkylation on N-7
in nucleic acids is the mechanism of mutagenesis/carcinogenesis by some natural toxins, such as
aflatoxin.16
In the ribosylation of purines, in addition to the question of regioselectivity on the purine, there is the
possibility of forming epimeric products at the linking C-1′ of the ribose, and this is often the more difficult
to control. A great deal of work has been done and many different conditions shown to be effective in
specific cases, but conditions that are generally effective have not been defined.17 These alkylations usually
employ acylated or halo-ribosides in conjunction with a mercury,18 silicon18 or sodium19 derivative of the
purine, and stereoselective displacements of halide can sometimes be achieved.
Other methods of controlling stereochemistry include the use of the size of an isopropylidene protecting group to shield one face of the sugar20 or, as shown below, anchimeric assistance from a 2′benzoate.21
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
519
When base-sensitive alkylating agents are used, such as cycloalkyl derivatives for the preparation of
nucleoside analogues, the use of equilibrium bases, such as potassium carbonate, often give poor results.
Here, the outcome is improved by using pre-formed (neutral) salts, such as tetra-n-butylammonium,22 DBU
or phosphazenes.23
27.1.1.3 Acylation at Nitrogen
Purines react with acylating agents such as chloroformates or diethyl pyrocarbonate24 to give non-isolable
N+-acyl salts, which can suffer various fates following nucleophilic addition; products of cleavage of
either ring have been observed, as have recyclisation products.25
27.1.1.4 Oxidation at Nitrogen
Peracid N-oxidation of purines gives 1- and/or 3-oxides, depending on exact conditions.26 Adenine and
adenosine give 1-oxides, whereas guanine affords the 3-oxide.27 The 3-oxide of purine itself has been
obtained via oxidation of 6-cyanopurine (at N-3), then hydrolysis and decarboxylation,27 the relatively easy
loss of carbon dioxide echoing the analogous process discussed for pyridine α-acids (8.11). The N-7-oxide
of adenine can be prepared by oxidation of 3-benzyl-3H-adenine, followed by deprotection.28
27.1.2 Substitution at Carbon
Typical electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions have not been reported for purine or simple alkyl
derivatives, but oxy and amino derivatives generally react readily at C-8.
27.1.2.1 Halogenation
Purine itself simply forms an N+–halogen complex, but does not undergo C-substitution, however adenosine,29 hypoxanthine and xanthine derivatives30 undergo fluorination,31 chlorination and bromination at C-8.
However, there is the possibility that these substitution products arise via N-halo-purinium salts, nucleophilic addition of bromide anion to these at C-8, then elimination of hydrogen halide.
520
Heterocyclic Chemistry
27.1.2.2 Nitration
Xanthines undergo 8-nitration, though under fairly vigorous conditions.32
Nitration of 6-substituted purines at C-2, using a mixture of tetra-n-butylammonium nitrate and trifluoroacetic anhydride, is an exceptionally useful functionalisation of the purine ring system. The reaction
works for both electron-rich (adenosine), 6-alkoxypurines and electron-poor (6-chloropurine) substrates,
but full protection of all OH and NH groups is required. This is not a simple electrophilic substitution – the
mechanism has been shown, using 6-chloro-9-Boc purine, to involve sequential nitration of N-7, addition
of trifluoroacetoxy at C-8 and then migration of the nitro group to C-2. The final, re-aromatisation, step
involves elimination of trifluoroacetic acid.33 Displacement of a 2-nitro group, thus introduced, by fluoride
as nucleophile (see 27.5 for nucleophilic substitutions) can be made the means to synthesise
2-fluoroadenosine.34
27.1.2.3 Coupling with Diazonium Salts
Amino- and oxy-purines couple at their 8-position; a weakly alkaline medium is necessary, so it
seems likely that the reactive entity is an N-anion.35
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
27.2
521
Reactions with Radicals
Purines react readily with hydroxyl, alkyl, aryl and acyl radicals, usually at C-6,36 or at C-8 (or C-2) if the
6-position is blocked. Both reactivity and selectivity for C-8 are increased when the substitution is conducted at lower pH.37 In nucleosides, a radical generated at C-5′ cyclises rapidly onto C-8, but can be
trapped before cyclisation by using a large excess of acrylonitrile.38
27.3
Reactions with Oxidising Agents
There are few significant oxidations of purines apart from N-oxidations (27.1.1.4), but dimethyldioxirane
gives good yields of 8-oxo compounds, possibly via the intermediacy of a 9,8- or 7,8-oxaziridine.39 C-8Oxidation40 is an important process in vivo, for example with the oxomolybdoenzyme xanthine oxidase,
where oxygen is introduced at C-8 via a mechanism about which there is still debate.
27.4
Reactions with Reducing Agents
The reduction of substituted purines is very complex and ring-opened products are often obtained. 1,6Dihydropurine is formed by catalytic or electrochemical41 reduction of purine, but this is unstable. Stable
reduced compounds can be obtained by reduction in the presence of N-acylating agents.42 7/9-Quaternary
salts are easily reduced by borohydride, in the five-membered ring, producing 7,8-dihydro derivatives.43
27.5
Reactions with Nucleophilic Reagents
Nucleophilic displacement of leaving groups from C-2, C-6 and C-8 is the most common means of preparation of substituted purines. Halides are the most popular leaving groups, particularly chlorides, but fluorides
are generally the most reactive, although slightly less accessible. Bromides and iodides can be used similarly, but offer little advantage for simple nucleophilic substitutions. Sulfonates, sulfoxides, sulfones,
quaternary ammonium, diphenylphosphonyloxy44 and nitro33 are also highly reactive leaving groups.
Although fluoro is intrinsically more reactive than chloro, this does not overcome the natural bias of the
purine ring, so 6-chloro-2-fluoro-purines react selectively at C-6 with a number of nucleophiles.45
Relatively easy nucleophilic displacement, via the usual addition/elimination sequence, takes place at all
three positions with a wide range of nucleophiles, such as alkoxides,46 sulfides, amines, azide, cyanide
and malonate and related carbanions.47
522
Heterocyclic Chemistry
In 9-substituted purines, the relative reactivity of halides is 8 > 6 > 2, but strongly influenced by the
presence of other substituents. In 9H-purines this is modified to 6 > 8 > 2, the demotion of the 8-position
being associated with anion formation in the five-membered ring. Conversely, in acidic media the reactivity
to nucleophilic displacement at C-8 is enhanced: protonation of the five-membered ring facilitates the
nucleophilic addition step.47 The relative reactivities of the 2- and 6-positions are nicely illustrated by the
conditions required for the reaction of the respective chlorides with hydrazine, a relatively good nucleophile.48 It is worth noting the parallelism between the relative positional reactivity here with that in halopyrimidines where it is 4 > 2.
In 2,6-dichloropurine, reactivity at C-6 is enhanced relative to 6-chloropurine by the inductive effect of
the second halogen, whereas the presence of electron-releasing substituents, such as amino, somewhat
deactivates halogen to displacement, but, conversely, oxygenated purines, probably because of their carbonyl tautomeric structures, react easily.49
The generation of an N-anion by deprotonation in the five-membered ring is given as the reason why
8-chloropurine reacts with sodamide to give adenine: inhibition of attack at C-8 allows the alternative
addition to C-6 to lead eventually to the observed major product.50
Direct conversion of inosines into 6-amino derivatives, without the intermediacy of a halo-purine, can
be achieved by heating with a mixture of phosphorus pentoxide and the amine hydrochloride51 or using the
amine with p-toluenesulfonic acid and a silylating agent (HMDS),52 or the amine with iodine and
triphenylphosphine.53
Even where a nucleophilic displacement of halide is feasible, the use of transition-metal catalysis, such
as with copper (for iodides) or palladium, generally offers much milder conditions (4.2.10).54
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
523
Other useful leaving groups in purine chemistry include sulfoxide,55 triflate,56 and aryl- or alkylthio.57
Sulfones are highly reactive in some nucleophilic substitutions, and are also the reactive intermediates in
sulfinate-catalysed displacements of halide.58
Displacement of halides can be catalysed by amines – trimethylamine, pyridine59 and DABCO60 have
been used. Mechanistically, the catalysis involves formation of an intermediate quaternary ammonium salt
that is more reactive towards nucleophiles than the starting halide. The intermediate quaternary salts can
be isolated, if required. Trimethylamine gives the most reactive quaternary salt, but DABCO can be more
convenient. The relative reactivities for nucleophilic displacement at C-6 are: trimethylamine : DABCO :
chlorine = 100 : 10 : 1.61 Cyano62 and fluorine63 are amongst the groups that have been introduced in
this way.
Arylamines can be particularly unreactive as nucleophiles and for these, the use of fluorine64 or a sulfone53
as a leaving group, or palladium-assisted displacement (4.2.10) of bromine65 may be necessary. A 2chlorine, deactivated by the presence of a 6-amino substituent, can be efficiently displaced by arylamines
with trimethylsilyl chloride in butanol.66 The displacements of fluorine, chlorine and butyl sulfone by anilines are greatly accelerated by carrying out the reactions in 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol, with the addition of
excess trifluoroacetic acid.67
Amino groups can be converted into good leaving groups by incorporation into a 1,2,4-triazole.12,68
Imidazoles can be used similarly.53
524
27.6
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Reactions with Bases
27.6.1 Deprotonation of N-Hydrogen and Reactions of Purinyl Anions
Purine, with a pKa of 8.9, is slightly more acidic than phenol and much more acidic than imidazole or
benzimidazole (pKas 14.2 and 12.3, respectively). This relatively high acidity is probably a consequence
of extensive delocalisation of the negative charge over four nitrogens, however alkylation of the anion takes
place in the five-membered ring, since attack at N-1 or N-3 would generate less aromatic products.
Oxy-purines are even more acidic, due to more extensive delocalisation involving the carbonyl groups:
xanthine has a pKa of 7.5 and uric acid, 5.75.
27.7
C-Metallation and Reactions of C-Metallated Purines
27.7.1 Direct Ring C–H Metallation
The rapid deuteration of purine at C-869 in neutral water at 100 °C probably involves 8-deprotonation of a
concentration of purinium cation to give a transient ylide (cf. 1,3-azole 2-H-exchange, 24.1.2.1). 9Alkylated purines undergo a quite rapid exchange in basic solution involving direct deprotonation of the
free heterocycle.
Preparative lithiation of purines requires the protection of the 7/9-position; lithiation then takes place at
C-8.70 9-Blocked purines can be deprotonated at C-8 with strong bases, such as LDA, even in the presence
of N-hydrogen in the other ring.71 Good yields of 8-halo-purines can be obtained by reaction with a variety
of halogen donors; 8-lithiation of O-silyl-protected 9-ribofuranosyl-purines can be achieved using about
three mole equivalents of lithium diisopropylamide.72
After selective lithiation at C-8 in a 6-chloro-purine riboside, quenching with a stannyl or silyl chloride
leads to the isolation of the 2-substituted compound, via rearrangement of a 2-anion formed by a second
lithiation of the initial 8-substituted product, as illustrated below.73
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
525
27.7.2 Metal–Halogen Exchange
Purines lithiated at C-2 or C-6 can be generated by way of halogen exchange with alkyllithiums, but it is
important to maintain a very low temperature in order to avoid subsequent equilibration to the more stable
8-lithiated species.74 2-Chloro-6-iodo-9-alkyl- and 6-chloro-2-iodo-9-alkyl-purines each undergo exchange
selectively at the iodine position with iso-propylmagnesium chloride at −80 °C.75
Purine aminocuprates, formed either via direct magnesiation at C-8 with TMPMgCl.LiCl, or via
six-membered-ring lithio derivatives (formed from the iodides then transmetallated to the magnesio
derivatives), on oxidation undergo (reductive) elimination of copper to give amino-purines; comparable
processes also apply to pyrimidines.76
27.8
Oxy- and Amino-Purines
These are tautomeric compounds that exist predominantly as carbonyl and amino structures, thus falling
in line with the analogous pyrimidines and imidazoles.
526
Heterocyclic Chemistry
27.8.1 Oxy-Purines
27.8.1.1 Alkylation
The amide-like N-hydrogen in oxy-purines is relatively acidic; the acidity is readily understood in terms
of the phenolate-like resonance contributor to the anion. Alkylation of such anions takes place at nitrogen,
not oxygen.77
27.8.1.2 Acylation
In contrast to alkylation, acylation and sulfonylation frequently occur at oxygen; the resulting O-acylated
products are relatively unstable, but can be utilised, for example, conducting the acylation in pyridine, as
solvent, produces a pyridinium salt, resulting from displacement of acyloxy by pyridine. Both O-acylatedpurines, and the corresponding pyridinium salts, can in turn be reacted with a range of nucleophiles78 to
allow the overall replacement of the amide-like oxygen; this is an important alternative to activation of the
carbonyl by conversion into halogen (below).
A closely related conversion utilises a silylating agent, in the presence of the desired nucleophile, and
presumably involves O-silylation, then displacement of silyloxy.79
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
527
27.8.1.3 Replacement by Chlorine80
This is a very important reaction in purine chemistry and has been widely utilised to allow subsequent
introduction of nucleophiles (27.5), including replacement with hydrogen by chemical (HI) or catalytic
hydrogenolysis. Most commonly, phosphoryl chloride is used, neat, or in solution (especially when there
is a ribose present); thionyl chloride is an alternative reagent. 2-Deoxy compounds are more sensitive to
acid and with these, milder reagents (carbon tetrachloride with triphenylphosphine) must be used to convert
oxo into chloro.81
Syntheses of adenine and guanine from uric acid illustrate well the selective transformations to which
the halo-purines, prepared from a precursor oxy-purine,82 can be put.
27.8.1.4 Replacement by Sulfur
Replacement by sulfur83 can be achieved via a halo-purine, or directly using a phosphorus sulfide.
27.8.2 Amino-Purines
27.8.2.1 Alkylation
Alkylation under neutral conditions involves attack at a nuclear nitrogen; Dimroth rearrangement (27.1.1.2)
of these salts affords side-chain-alkylated purines. However, direct introduction of substituents onto a sidechain nitrogen can be achieved by reductive N-alkylation.84 A related method involves reduction of an
isolated benzotriazolyl intermediate, which allows more control over the process.85
528
Heterocyclic Chemistry
27.8.2.2 Acylation
Amino-purines behave just like anilines with anhydrides and acid chlorides, giving amides, but these are
somewhat more easily hydrolysed. Both mono- and diacylation can be utilised as a protecting-group
strategy.
27.8.2.3 Diazotisation
The reaction of 2- and 6-amino groups with nitrous acid is similar to that of 2-amino-pyridines, in that
diazonium salts are produced but, relative to phenyldiazonium salts, these are unstable. Despite this, they
can be utilised for the introduction of groups such as halide86 or, oxygen by reaction with water, with loss
of nitrogen. 8-Diazonium salts are considerably more stable.87 In 2-aminoadenosine, selective diazotisation
occurs at the 2-amino group.52
Diazotisation can also be carried out in basic solution and in this way acid-sensitive deoxyribosides can
be tolerated.88 A nucleophilic displacement of amino by hydroxy can be effected enzymatically using
adenosine deaminase; this is a useful practical method because it is a very selective transformation under
mild conditions.89 Chemical hydrolysis requires more vigorous conditions.
The related reaction with alkyl nitrites generates purinyl radicals, which will efficiently abstract halogen
from halogenated solvents, and this procedure is generally to be preferred for the transformation of an
amino-purine into a halo-purine.90 These reactions can be improved/enhanced by the addition of antimony
trichloride.91 Comparably, the use of dimethyl disulfide produces methylthio-purines,92 and trimethylsilyl
azide, azido-purines.93
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
529
27.8.3 Thio-Purines
Thio-purines are prepared from halo-purines or oxy-purines or by ring synthesis. One method for displacement of bromine with sulfur utilises TMS(CH2)2SH as a nucleophile, TBAF removal of the sulfur substituent then reveals the thione.94 In contrast with oxy-purines, in alkaline solution they readily alkylate on
sulfur, rather than nitrogen.95
Thiols are also useful sources of the corresponding bromo compounds, by reaction with bromine and
hydrobromic acid.96 Alkylthio substituents can be displaced by the usual range of nucleophiles, but
the corresponding sulfones are more reactive.59,97
A useful conversion of a nucleoside 2,6-dithione into a 6-methylamino-adenosine via oxidation
with dimethyldioxirane, illustrates several instructive points. The presumed intermediates are sulfinic
acids: the 2-sulfinic acid loses sulfur dioxide to leave hydrogen at C-2, and nucleophilic displacement
of the 6-sulfinic acid (or possibly the sulfonic acid after further oxidation) introduces the amino group.
Similar reactions can be carried out on pyrimidine thiones.98 The scheme shows intermediates derived
from a disulfinic acid – it is not clear in what order oxidations/loss of sulfur dioxide/displacements
take place.
530
Heterocyclic Chemistry
27.9 Alkyl-Purines
Comparatively little information is available concerning purine methyl groups, but it seems99,100 that their
reactivity is comparable to pyridine α- and γ-methyl substituents, undergoing base-catalysed condensations
and selenium dioxide oxidation to aldehydes.
27.10
Purine Carboxylic Acids
27.11
Synthesis of Purines
Here again, comparatively little systematic information is available, but in parallel with pyridine α-acids,
it can again be implied that purine acids undergo decarboxylation on heating – the 6-acid at 195 °C for
example.101
Because of the ready availability of nucleosides from natural sources, a frequently used route to substituted
purines is via the manipulation of one of these.
27.11.1 Ring Synthesis
There are two general approaches to the construction of the purine ring system. Additionally, a category
which can be defined as ‘one pot’ methods, are adaptations of the type of process that probably took place
in prebiotic times, when simple molecules, such as hydrogen cyanide and ammonia, are believed to have
combined to give the first purines.
27.11.1.1 From 4,5-Diamino-pyrimidines
4,5-Diamino-pyrimidines react with carboxylic acids, or derivatives, to give purines, the ‘carboxyl’ carbon
corresponding to C-8.
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
531
Traube Synthesis
8-Unsubstituted purines can be prepared simply by heating 4,5-diaminopyrimidines with formic acid,102
but formamide103 (or formamidine104) is better. The reaction proceeds via cyclising dehydration of an intermediate formamide; this usually takes place in situ using formamide, but generally requires a second, more
forcing step when formic acid is employed initially. Purine itself can be prepared by this route.105 Aldehydes
react with 5,6-diaminouracils in the presence of bromodimethylsulfonium bromide to give the 8-substituted
xanthines.106
8-Substituted purines are comparably prepared using acylating agents corresponding to higher acids; in
most cases the amide is isolated and separately cyclised.107 The diamino-pyrimidines required are usually
prepared by the coupling of a 4-aminopyrimidine with an aryldiazonium ion (or by nitrosation108), then
reduction, or by ring synthesis.109
Precursors to 9-substituted purines, therefore requiring a substituent on the pyrimidine-4-amino group,
are available from the reaction of a 4-chloropyrimidine with a primary amine.
When milder conditions are required for the cyclisation, perhaps because of the presence of a sugar
residue, an orthoester110 (often activated111 with acetic anhydride) or an acetal-ester112 (illustrated below)
can be used.
532
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A related reaction is the oxidative cyclisation of anils, originally under vigorous conditions such
as heating in nitrobenzene,113 but now achievable at lower temperatures using diethyl azodicarboxylate.114
The formation of 8-oxo- or 8-thio-purines requires one-carbon components at a higher oxidation level:
urea and thiourea are appropriate. The products of chloroformate-initiated five-membered ring cleavage of
purines (27.1.1.3) can be recyclised to produce 8-oxo-purines.115
27.11.1.2 From 5-Aminoimidazole-4-Carboxamide or -Nitrile116
5-Aminoimidazole-4-carboxamides (or -nitriles) interact with components at the carboxylic acid oxidation
level giving purines, the ‘carboxyl’ carbon becoming C-2.
Biosynthetically, purines are built up via formation of the imidazole ring first, from glycine and formate,
and thence to hypoxanthine and then the other natural purines. In the laboratory, most imidazole-based
purine syntheses start with 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxylic acid, particularly its amide (known by the
acronym AICA), which as well as its riboside, is commercially available from biological sources. The use
of 5-aminoimidazole-4-carbonitrile in this approach results in the formation of 6-amino-purines, as in a
synthesis of adenine itself.117
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
533
Conversion into 2-alkyl- or -aryl-purines requires the insertion of one carbon to create the six-membered
ring, and this is usually effected by condensation with esters in the presence of base,118 although amides119
are occasionally utilised. The use of an isothiocyanate leads to a 2-thiopurine.120
There are a few examples of purine ring syntheses which start from simpler imidazoles, for example a
5-aminoimidazole, generally prepared and utilised in situ.121
7-Substituted purines can be obtained from 4-aminoimidazole-5-carbaldehyde oximes after conversion
into imino ethers and reaction with ammonia, as shown below.122
27.11.1.3 By Cycloadditions
Triethyl 1,3,5-triazine-2,4,6-tricarboxylate serves as an azadiene in reaction with 5-aminopyrazoles to
produce purine isosteres, pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidines.123 In order to overcome the relative instability of
5-aminoimidazoles, required for analogous synthesis of purines, 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxylic acids
can be used, in situ decarboxylation producing the required dienophile.124 Exactly comparable reaction
with 2-amino-4-cyanopyrroles produces pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidines.125
534
Heterocyclic Chemistry
27.11.1.4 ‘One-step’ Syntheses
It is amazing that relatively complex molecules, such as purines, can be formed by the sequential condensation of very simple molecules, such as ammonia and hydrogen cyanide. That the intrinsic reactivity embodied in these simple molecules leads ‘naturally’ to purines must surely be relevant to the evolution of a
natural system that relies on these ‘complex’ molecules. In other words it seems highly likely that purines
existed before the evolution of life and were incorporated into its mechanism because they were there and,
of course, because they have appropriate chemical properties.
Adenine, C5H5N5, is formally a pentamer of hydrogen cyanide and indeed can be produced in the laboratory by the reaction of ammonia and hydrogen cyanide, although not with great efficiency. A related and
more practical method involves the dehydration of formamide.126 Purine itself can also be obtained from
formamide.127
Methods derived from this fundamental process involve the condensation of one-, two- and three-carbon
units such as amidines, amino-nitriles and carboxamides, which represent intermediate stages of the
ammonia/hydrogen cyanide reaction. Pyrimidines or imidazoles are usually intermediates.128
27.11.2 Examples of Notable Syntheses Involving Purines
27.11.2.1 Aristeromycin
A synthesis of the antibiotic aristeromycin129 makes use of the displacement of a pyrimidine 4-chloride to
allow introduction of the amine and the generation of the 4,5-diamino-pyrimidine for subsequent closure
of the five-membered ring.
27.11.2.2 Adenosine
Adenosine130 has also been synthesised using the pyrimidine → purine strategy. In this synthesis the sugar
was also introduced at an early stage, but here via condensation with a 4-amino group.
Purines: Reactions and Synthesis
535
27.11.2.3 Sildenafil (Viagra™)
A synthesis of sildenafil, which contains a bicyclic system (a 1H-pyrazolo[4,3-d]pyrimidine) isomeric with
that of a purine, starts with a routine synthesis of a pyrazole (cf. 25.12.1.1) followed by N-methylation and
ring nitration. Functional group manipulation provides a pyrazole equivalent to AICA (27.11.1.2) from
which the pyrimidone ring is formed via reaction with an aromatic acid chloride.
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapter 27):
(a) What are the structures of the purine bases involved in DNA and RNA?
(b) How does the Dimroth rearrangement allow the synthesis of 6-alkylamino-purines from
6-amino-purines?
536
Heterocyclic Chemistry
(c) What is the order of reactivity towards nucleophilic displacement of the 2-, 6- and 8-halo-purines?
How does the inclusion of a tertiary amine in such nucleophilic displacements facilitate them?
(d) At what position does strong base deprotonation of 9-substituted purines take place?
(e) Name three types of compound which will react with 4,5-diamino-pyrimidines to produce purines.
(f) How could one synthesise a 2-thiopurine from 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide?
More advanced exercises:
1. What are the structures of the intermediates and final product of the following sequence: guanosine
2′,3′,5′-triacetate reacted with POCl3 → C16H18ClN5O7, then this with t-BuONO/CH2I2 → C16H16ClIN4O7,
this product with NH3/MeOH → C10H12IN5O4 and finally this compound with PhB(OH)2/Pd(PPh3)4/
Na2CO3, giving C16H17N5O4. How could this same purine be prepared from AICA-riboside in four steps?
2. Suggest a sequence for the transformation of adenosine into 8-phenyladenosine.
3. Give structures and explain the following: adenosine with Me2SO4 → C11H15N5O4, this with aq. HCl
produces C6H7N5 and finally aq. NH3 on this last compound gives an isomer, C6H7N5.
4. Write structures for the purines produced by the following reactions: (i) heating 4,5,6-triaminopyrimidine with formamide; (ii) treating 2-methyl-4,5-diaminopyrimidin-6-one with sodium dithioformate,
then heating in quinoline.
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28
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction
Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds)
In addition to the biologically important purines and pteridines, and the major benzo-fused heterocycles,
such as indole, many other aromatic, fused heterocyclic ring systems are known, and of these, the most
important are those containing a ring-junction nitrogen – that is, where a nitrogen is common to two rings.1
The vast majority of these systems do not occur naturally, but they have been the subject of many studies
from the theoretical viewpoint, for the preparation of potentially biologically active analogues, and for other
industrial uses. For reasons of space, only combinations of five- and six-membered rings are considered
here, and only some of these possibilities, though other combinations are possible and are known.
Of the parent systems that have the ring-junction nitrogen as the only heteroatom, only indolizine (often
‘pyrrocoline’ in the older literature) has a neutral, fully conjugated 10-electron π-system, comprising four
pairs of electrons from the four double bonds and a pair from nitrogen, much as in indole. 4H-Quinolizine
is not aromatic – there is a saturated atom interrupting the conjugation – but the cation, quinolizinium,
formed formally by loss of hydride from quinolizine, does have an aromatic 10-π-electron system: it is
completely isoelectronic with naphthalene, the positive charge resulting from the higher nuclear charge of
nitrogen versus carbon. Similarly, pyrrolizine, which is already aromatic in being a pyrrole (with an α-vinyl
substituent), on conversion into its conjugate anion, attains a 10-electron π-system.
28.1
Indolizines2
The aromatic character of indolizine is expressed by three main mesomeric contributors, two of which
incorporate a pyridinium moiety; other structures (not shown) incorporating neither a complete pyrrole nor
a pyridinium are less important.
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
540
Heterocyclic Chemistry
28.1.1 Reactions of Indolizines
Indolizine is an electron-rich system and its reactions are mainly electrophilic substitutions, which occur
about as readily as for indole, and go preferentially at C-3, but may also take place at C-1. Consistent with
their similarity to pyrroles, rather than pyridines, indolizines are not attacked by nucleophiles, nor are there
examples of nucleophilic displacement of halide.
Indolizine, pKaH 3.9,3 is much more basic than indole (pKaH −3.5) and the implied relative stability of
the cation makes it less reactive, and thus indolizines are resistant to acid-catalysed polymerisation (cf.
20.1.1.9). Indolizine protonates at C-3, but 3-methylindolizine protonates mainly (79%) at C-1; the delicacy
of the balance is further illustrated by 1,2,3-trimethyl- and 3,5-dimethylindolizines, each of which protonate
exclusively at C-3. Electrophilic substitutions such as acylation,4 Vilsmeier formylation5 and diazocoupling6 all take place at C-3.
Nitration of 2-methylindolizine under mild conditions results in substitution at C-3,7 but under strongly
acidic conditions it takes place at C-1,8 presumably via attack on the indolizinium cation.
Indolizine and its simple alkyl derivatives are sensitive to light and to aerial oxidation, which lead to
destruction of the ring system. Catalytic reduction in acidic solution (reduction of the indolizinium cation)
selectively saturates the pyrrole ring, giving a pyridinium salt;9 complete saturation, affording indolizidines,
results from reductions over platinum.10
Despite its 10-electron aromatic π-system, indolizine apparently participates as an 8-electron system in
its reaction with diethyl acetylenedicarboxylate, though the process may be stepwise and not concerted. By
carrying out the reaction in the presence of a noble metal as catalyst, the initial adduct is converted into
an aromatic cyclazine (28.5).11
Indolizines normally lithiate at C-5,4 but 5-methylindolizine undergoes lithiation at the side-chain
methyl.12
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 541
Of its functional derivatives, worth noting is the easy cleavage of carboxyl and acyl groups on heating
with aqueous acid, and the instability of amino derivatives, which cannot be diazotised, but which can be
converted into stable acetamides.
28.1.2 Ring Synthesis of Indolizines13
The traditional route to indolizines is the Chichibabin synthesis,14 which involves quaternisation of a
2-alkyl-pyridine with an α-halo-ketone, followed by base-catalysed cyclisation via deprotonation of the
pyridinium α-methyl,15 rendered easy by the quaternisation, then intramolecular attack on the carbonyl
group.16
A variation of the classical procedure utilizes 2-methoxy-6-methylpyridine as a starting material and
leads eventually to 5-aminoindolizines; the intermediate oxazolo[3,2-a]pyridinium salts are isolated as
perchlorate salts (CAUTION).17
Another useful method involves the intermediacy of a pyridinium ylide as a 1,3-dipole in a
cycloaddition.18
An important feature of this type of reaction (which can also be used in an analogous fashion to prepare
aza-indolizines) is that although a dihydroindolizine is the logical product from a mechanistic viewpoint,
the fully aromatic compound is usually obtained. The mechanism of aromatisation is not clear: it could be
by air oxidation during work-up, or via hydride transfer to some other component in the reaction mixture.
When dihydro compounds are isolated they can be easily aromatised using the usual reagents – palladium/
charcoal or quinones. An extension of this analysis is the production of aromatic indolizines from reaction
of an ylide with an alkene (which would be expected to give the tetrahydro product) in the presence of a
suitable oxidant such as the cobalt chromate complex19 shown below.20
542
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Aromatisation can alternatively occur by loss of HX (HCN in the example shown) when a leaving group
is present in one of the reactants.21
In several variants, pyridines carrying either a 2-alkynylmethyl or a 2-alkenylmethyl substituent can be
ring closed to indolizines. Iodine22 and silver tetrafluoroborate23 have been used to close precursors available conveniently using the 2-lithiated pyridine. As in several situations in this chapter, comparably
substituted imine units in other starting materials, can be ring closed by this route, for example
2-alkynylmethylquinoxalines give pyrrolo[1,2-a]quinoxalines and 2-alkynylmethylthiazoles give
pyrrolo[2,1-b]thiazoles.23
In a one-pot three-component sequence, a 2-alkynylmethylpyridine intermediate is generated in situ,
pyridine-2-carbaldehyde being the starting material and 1-aminoindolizines the products.24
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 543
28.2 Aza-Indolizines
Note: as can be seen from the examples above, numbering sequences vary with the number and disposition
of the nitrogen atoms.
Seven monoaza- and many more polyaza-indolizines (some are shown above) are possible, indeed compounds with up to six nitrogen atoms have been reported. Despite the rarity of such systems in nature, there
is much interest in aza-indolizines stemming from their structural similarity to both indoles and purines.
Apart from pyrrolo[1,2-b]pyridazine, all the monoaza-indolizines protonate on the second (non-ringjunction) nitrogen, rather than on carbon.3,25 Alkylation similarly goes on nitrogen, however other electrophilic reagents attack with regioselectivity similar to indolizine itself – they effect substitution of the
five-membered ring at positions 1 and 3 (where these are carbon).
28.2.1 Imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines
Electrophilic substitutions such as halogenation, nitration etc. go at C-3, or at C-5 if position 3 is blocked.26
Acylation does not require a catalyst.27
Of all the positional chloro isomers, nucleophilic displacement reactions are known only for the 5-isomer;
7-chloroimidazolo[1,2-a]pyridine, where one might have anticipated similar activation, is not reactive in
this sense,28 but, of course, transition-metal-catalysed replacement of halogen (4.2) can be carried out at
any position.29
Base-catalysed deuterium exchange proceeds at C-3 and C-5;30 preparative lithiation occurs at C-3, or
if C-3 is blocked, at C-5 or C-8 depending on other substituents,31 but the 2,6-dichloro compound reacts
selectively at C-5, even in the presence of hydrogen at C-3.32
544
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Amino-imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines exist as amino tautomers, but are even more unstable than aminoindolizines. 2- and 5-oxo compounds are in the carbonyl tautomeric form and react with phosphoryl chloride
yielding chloro compounds.20
The traditional ring synthesis of imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines is based on the Chichibabin route to indolizines
(28.1.2), but using 2-aminopyridines instead of 2-alkyl-pyridines. The initial reaction with the halo-ketone
is regioselective for the ring nitrogen, so isomerically pure products are obtained.33,34 2-Oxo-imidazo[1,2-a]
pyridines are the products when an α-bromo-ester is used instead of a ketone.35
The 1,2-bis-electrophiles generated from glyoxal, benzotriazole and an amine can be used to produce imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines as illustrated below, but also imidazo[1,2-a]pyrimidines, and imidazo[1,2-c]
pyrimidines.36
2-Aminopyridines can be used in other ways: copper-catalysed interaction with diazo-ketones37 and
three-component reactions38,39,40 involving an isonitrile and an aldehyde also give imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines;
such condensations can be promoted using an ionic liquid41 or scandium triflate with microwave heating.42
In the former route, 2-substituted products result and from the latter, 3-aminoimidazo[1,2-a]pyridines are
formed.
Here again other starting materials having an amidine sub-unit, as in 2-aminopyridine, react comparably:
2-aminothiazoles give imidazo[2,1-b]thiazoles,40 2-aminopyrazines generate imidazo[1,2-a]pyrazines,38
4-aminopyrimidines lead to imidazo[1,2-c]pyrimidines43 and 2-aminopyrimidines afford imidazo[1,2-a]
pyrimidines (illustrated below).44
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 545
28.2.2 Imidazo[1,5-a]pyridines
Electrophilic substitution in this system again occurs in the five-membered ring, at C-1, or at C-3 if the
former position is occupied.45,46 Reaction with bromine gives a 1,3-dibromo product.47
Benzoylation provides an instructive example: under normal conditions C-substitution occurs at C-1,
however in the presence of triethylamine, 3-benzoylimidazo[1,5-a]pyridine is the product.48 This can be
explained by assuming the intermediacy of an ylide formed by deprotonation of an initial N+-benzoyl salt
(cf. 24.1.2.5).
Five-membered ring cleavage occurs relatively easily: hot aqueous acid converts these heterocycles into
2-aminomethyl-pyridines.
Lithiation, by direct analogy with imidazole, involves the 3-proton,5 but 5-lithiation occurs on comparable treatment of its 3-ethylthio derivative, the substituent both blocking attack at C-3 and assisting lithiation at the peri-position; the ethylthio group can, of course, be subsequently easily removed.49
Imidazo[1,5-a]pyridines are synthesised by the dehydrative cyclisation of N-acyl-2-aminomethyl-pyridines46 or of thioamides,50 which can be prepared and ring closed under very mild conditions.51 3-Amino52
-oxy53 and -thio54 derivatives are available via related cyclisations.
546
Heterocyclic Chemistry
28.2.3
Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridines
In this system, electrophilic substitution occurs at C-355 and lithiation takes place at C-7.56
Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridines can be prepared by cycloaddition of pyridinium N-imides (produced by
N-deprotonation of N-amino-pyridinium salts with base57) with alkynes58 or N-amination of 2-alkynylpyridines.59 The cycloaddition of 3-benzyloxypyridinium N-imide involves preferentially the more
hindered C-2.60
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 547
28.2.4 Triazolo-61 and Tetrazolo-Pyridines
1,2,3-Triazolo[1,5-a]pyridine could theoretically be in equilibrium with its ring-opened diazo tautomer62
and, although it actually exists in the closed form, its reactions tend to reflect this potential equilibrium:
reaction with electrophiles can take two courses. Acylation and nitration occur normally, at C-1, but
reagents such as bromine lead to a very easy ring cleavage.63 Aqueous acid similarly brings about ring
cleavage and the formation of 2-hydroxymethylpyridine.
2-Azido-azines are in equilibrium with fused tetrazoles, the position of the equilibrium being very sensitive to substituent influence, for example for tetrazolo[1,5-a]pyridine, the equilibrium lies predominantly
towards the closed form, whereas the analogous 5-chloro compound is predominantly open.64
Direct lithiation of 1,2,3-triazolo[1,5-a]pyridines occurs with ease, at C-7, subsequent reaction with
electrophiles being unexceptional, for example conversion into the 7-bromo derivative then allows nucleophiles to be introduced via displacement of bromide, thus providing, overall, a route to 2,6-disubstituted
pyridines.65
1,2,4-Triazolo[1,5-a]pyridine seems to be resistant to electrophilic attack, but can be lithiated at C-5; in
contrast, 1,2,4-triazolo[4,3-a]pyridine readily undergoes electrophilic substitution at C-3.66
548
Heterocyclic Chemistry
1,2,3-Triazolo[1,5-a]pyridines can be synthesised by oxidation of pyridine 2-carboxaldehyde hydrazones, presumably by way of the diazo species,67 or via diazo-transfer reactions (tosyl azide presents a
significant explosion hazard – safer alternatives are available (5.4)).68
The 1,2,4-triazolo[4,3-a]pyridine nucleus can be accessed by cyclocondensation of 2-hydrazinopyridines; the synthesis of the antidepressant trazodone, shown below, is an example.69 Condensation of
2-hydrazinopyridines with carboxylic acids, promoted by polymer-supported triphenylphosphine with trichloroacetonitrile and heated with microwave irradiation, is also efficient.70
Oxidative closure of pyridin-2-yl hydrazones also produces 1,2,4-triazolo[4,3-a]pyridines.71
1,2,4-Triazolo[1,5-a]pyridines can be prepared via oxidative cyclisation of amidines72 or acid-catalysed
cyclisation of amidoximes,73 including formamidoximes, which give rise to 2–unsubstituted compounds74
– each of these is illustrated below.
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 549
28.2.5 Compounds with an Additional Nitrogen in the Six-Membered Ring
In addition to the propensity for electrophilic substitution at C-1/C-3 (see above), the main feature of this
class of heterocycle is that they undergo relatively easy nucleophilic attack in the six-membered ring,75
which is now distinctly electron-deficient through the incorporation of imine units – the analogy with the
ease of nucleophilic addition to diazines versus pyridines, is obvious. Some are so susceptible to nucleophilic addition that they form ‘hydrates’ even on exposure to moist air.62 Preparative lithiations can,
however, be carried out using less nucleophilic bases.
Ring synthesis of such molecules can proceed from diazines using methods analogous to those described
for the synthesis of azolo-pyridines from pyridines, for example the dipolar cycloaddition of an N-imide
to an alkyne,76 or the bromine-promoted ring closure of hydrazones of 2-hydrazino-pyridines, -pyridazines
(shown) or -pyrimidines.77
Various routes from the five-membered ring component are also possible – some representative chemistry
involving pyrroles78,79 is shown below.
550
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Using pyrazoles or imidazoles naturally leads to bicyclic systems with more than one nitrogen in
each ring: 5-amino-pyrazoles80 (in condensations with 1,3-dicarbonyl synthons; cf. 14.13.2.1), 1amino-imidazoles,81 and 4-amino-imidazoles82 have been used as shown below. 3-Amino-pyrazoles83 and
3-amino-1,2,4-triazoles84 have been elaborated into purine analogues with four or five nitrogen atoms in
the systems.
Condensation of 3,6-dichloropyridazine with hydrazides, best with microwave heating, produces [1,2,4]
triazolo[4,3-b]pyridazines, in which the remaining chlorine can be displaced with amines.85
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 551
28.3
Quinolizinium86 and Related Systems
Practically all the reactions of quinolizinium ions are similar to those of pyridinium salts, thus they are
resistant to electrophilic attack, but readily undergo nucleophilic addition, the initial adducts undergoing
spontaneous electrocyclic ring opening to afford, finally, 2-substituted pyridines;87 however the susceptibility of the cations to nucleophiles is not extreme – like simpler pyridinium salts they are stable to boiling
water.
Quinolizine derivatives are usually prepared by cyclisations onto the nitrogen in a precursor pyridine.88
Quinazolones can be made to undergo electrophilic substitution, at C-1/C-3,89 there being a clear analogy
with the reactivity of pyridones.
28.4
Pyrrolizine and Related Systems
The relatively high pKa of 29 for deprotonation of 3H-pyrrolizine (cf. indene pKa 18.5) indicates that formation of the 10π-electron pyrrolizine anion adds only minor stabilisation relative to the simple pyrrole
originally present. Its reactions are those of a highly reactive carbanion, for example benzophenone condenses to generate a fulvene-like product.90
552
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Isoelectronic replacement of a carbanionic carbon by a heteroatom gives much more stable compounds,
and such 5,5-bicyclic aromatic systems have received considerable attention. In these compounds, sulfur,
nitrogen and oxygen can also be incorporated into fully conjugated systems, unlike the 5,6-compounds,
where only nitrogen can be used. Because of the variety of such systems, it is difficult to generalise about
reactivity, but electrophilic substitution, which can take place in either ring, has been most widely reported
with occasional examples of nucleophilic displacements and lithiations. Some representative reactions and
self-explanatory syntheses are shown below.91,92
28.5
Cyclazines
The cyclazines (a trivial name) are tricyclic fused molecules containing a central nitrogen and a
peripheral π-system. The definition of aromaticity in these compounds is not as straightforward as for the
simple bicyclic molecules discussed above, and a more detailed analysis of the molecular orbitals may be
required.
(3.2.2)Cyclazine is a stable aromatic system with a ring current, has a 10-electron annular π-system
(excluding nitrogen), and is stable to light and air but, unlike its close analogue indolizine, is non-basic
indicating the much weaker interaction between the nitrogen lone pair and the peripheral π-system. It does,
however, react as an electron-rich aromatic, undergoing electrophilic substitution readily.
In contrast, (3.3.3)cyclazine has no aromatic resonance stabilisation and is unstable and highly reactive,
displaying some diradical character. However, its hexa-aza analogue is extremely stable, this stabilisation
being attributed to perturbation of the molecular orbitals by the electronegative atoms leading to a much
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 553
larger separation of the HOMO and LUMO.93 The double-bridgehead nitrogen system, (2.2.2)azacyclazine
is isoelectronic with (3.2.2)cyclazine and is similarly a stable system.
Cyclazines can be prepared by cyclisation of bicyclic precursors, for example (3.2.2)cyclazine is prepared
via a cycloaddition reaction on indolizine (28.1), or by cyclocondensation.94
Exercises
Straightforward revision exercises (consult Chapter 28):
(a) At what position(s) does indolizine undergo electrophilic substitution? Why that position(s)?
(b) At what position does indolizine undergo strong base deprotonation?
(c) How could 2-methylpyridine be converted into 3-methylindolizine?
(d) What would be the product of reacting 2-aminopyridine with methyl bromoacetate?
(e) Draw resonance contributors to the quinolizinium cation to rationalise the position at which nucleophiles add to it.
(f) Is pyrrolizine aromatic? If so, how many electrons are there in the aromatic π-system?
More advanced exercises:
1. Suggest a structure for the final, monocyclic product of the following sequence: quinolizinium bromide
with LiAlH4 and then H2/Pd giving C9H13N.
2. Write down the structures of the intermediates in the following synthesis of the quinolizinium cation:
2-methylpyridine was reacted with LDA, then EtO(CH2)2CH=O to give C11H17NO2, which was heated
with HI (→ C9H12NO+ I−); this salt was then heated with Ac2O (→ C9H10N+ I−) and this finally heated
with Pd–C to afford quinolizinium iodide.
3. Which indolizines would be formed from the following combinations: (i) 2-picoline with:
(a) BrCH2COMe/NaHCO3, (b) MeCHBrCHO/NaHCO3? (ii) What would be the products if the 2picoline was replaced by 2-aminopyridine?
4. Deduce the structures of intermediates and final product in the following sequence: 5-methoxy-2methylpyridine reacted with KNH2/i-AmONO → C7H8N2O2, then this with Zn/AcOH → C7H10N2O and
finally this with HCO2Me/PPE (polyphosphate ester) → C8H8N2O.
5. Imidazo[1,5-a]pyridine, on reaction with aqueous HNO2 gave 3-(pyridin-2-yl)-1,2,4-oxadiazole. Suggest
a mechanism. What product would be obtained by reaction of indolizine with nitrous acid?
6. Give the structures of the bicyclic compounds formed by the following reactions: (i) 2-hydrazinothiazole
with nitrous acid → C3H2N4S; (ii) 2-aminothiazole with BrCH2COPh → C11H8N2S.
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Abarca, B., Ballesteros, R., Jones, G. and Mojarrad, F., Tetrahedron Lett., 1986, 27, 3543.
Finkelstein, B. L., J. Org. Chem., 1992, 57, 5538.
Bower, J. D. and Ramage, G. R., J. Chem. Soc., 1957, 4506.
Regitz, M., Chem. Ber., 1966, 99, 2918.
Kauffman, T., Vogt, K., Barck, S. and Schulz, J., Chem. Ber., 1966, 99, 2593.
Wand, Y., Sarris, K., Sauer, D. R. and Djuric, S. W., Tetrahedron Lett., 2007, 48, 2237.
Bourgeois, P., Cantegril, R., Chene, A., Gelin, J., Mortier, J. and Moyroud, J., Synth. Commun., 1993, 23, 3195.
Grenda, V. J., Jones, R. E., Gal, G. and Sletzinger, M., J. Org. Chem., 1965, 30, 259.
Polanc, S., Vercek, B., Sek, B., Stanovnik, B. and Tisler, M., J. Org. Chem., 1974, 39, 2143.
Heterocycles Containing a Ring-Junction Nitrogen (Bridgehead Compounds) 555
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
Huntsman, E. and Balsells, J., Eur. J. Org. Chem., 2005, 3761.
Paudler, W. W., Chao, C. I. P. and Helmick, L. S., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1972, 9, 1157.
Rees, C. W., Stephenson, R. W. and Storr, R. C., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1974, 941; Beswick, P., Bingham, S., Bountra, C., Brown, T.,
Browning, K., Campbell, I., Chessell, I., Clayton, N., Collins, S., Corfield, J., Guntrip, S., Haslam, P. C., Lambeth, P., Lucas, F., Mathews, N., Murkit,
G., Naylor, A., Pegg, N., Pickup, E. and Player, H., Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett., 2004, 14, 5445; Whitehead, A. J., Ward, R. A. and Jones, M. F.,
Tetrahedron Lett., 2007, 48, 911.
Svete, J., Stanovnik, B. and Tisler, M., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1994, 31, 1259; Turk, C., Golobic, A., Golic, L. and Stanovnik, B., ibid., 1998, 35, 513.
Minguez, J. M., Castellote, M. I., Vaquero, J. J., Garcia-Navio, J. L., Alvarez-Builla, J. and Castano, O., J. Org. Chem., 1996, 61, 4655.
Minguez, J. M., Vaquero, J. J., Garcia-Navio, J. L. and Alvarez-Builla, J., Tetrahedron Lett., 1996, 37, 4263.
Frey, R. R., Curtin, M. L., Albert, D. H., Glaser, K. B., Pease, L. J., Soni, N. B., Bouska, J. J., Reuter, D., Stewart, K. D., Marcotte, P., Bukofzer,
G., Li, J., Davidsen, D. K. and Michealides, M. R., J. Med. Chem., 2008, 51, 3777.
Heim-Riether, A. and Healy, J., J. Org. Chem., 2005, 70, 7331.
Wang, Z., Huynh, H. K., Han, B., Krishnamurthy, R. and Eschenmoser, A., Org. Lett., 2003, 5, 2067.
Dolzhenko, A. V., Dolzhenko, A. V. and Chui, W.-K., Heterocycles, 2008, 75, 1575.
‘1,2,4-Triazolo[1,5-a][1,3,5]triazines (5-azapurines): synthesis and biological activity’, Dolzhenko, A. V., Dolzhenko, A. V. and Chui, W.-K., Heterocycles, 2006, 68, 1723.
Aldrich, L. N., Lebois, E. P., Lewis, L. M., Naywajko, N. T., Niswender, C. M., Weaver, C. D., Conn, P. J. and Lindsley, C. W., Tetrahedron Lett.,
2009, 50, 212.
‘Aromatic quinolizines’, Thyagarajan, B. S., Adv. Heterocycl. Chem., 1965, 5, 291; ‘Aromatic quinolizines’, Jones, G., ibid., 1982, 31, 1.
Miyadera, T., Ohki, E. and Iwai, I., Chem. Pharm. Bull., 1964, 12, 1344; Kröhnke, F. and Mörler, D., Tetrahedron Lett., 1969, 3441.
Boekelheide, V. and Lodge, J. P., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1951, 73, 3681; Glover, E. E. and Jones, G., J. Chem. Soc., 1958, 3021.
Thyagarajan, B. S. and Gopalakrishnan, P. V., Tetrahedron, 1964, 20, 1051 and 1965, 21, 945; Forti, L., Gelmi, M. L., Pocar, D. and Varallo, M.,
Heterocycles, 1986, 24, 1401.
Okamura, W. H. and Katz, T. J., Tetrahedron, 1967, 23, 2941.
Jones, G., Ollivierre, H., Fuller, L. S. and Young, J. H., Tetrahedron, 1991, 47, 2851 and 2861.
Mekonnen, B., Crank, G. and Craig, D., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 1997, 34, 589; Mekonnen, B. and Crank, G., Tetrahedron, 1997, 53, 6959.
Farquhar, D., Gough, T. T. and Leaver, D., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1976, 341.
Windgassen, R. J., Saunders, W. H. and Boekelheide, V., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1959, 81, 1459.
29
Heterocycles Containing More
Than Two Heteroatoms
In systems that contain more than two heteroatoms in the same ring, the trends in properties that this book
describes are taken to further extremes. In particular, the additional heteroatoms, in both six- and fivemembered systems, lead to a suppression of electrophilic substitution and a slowing of electrophilic addition
to nitrogen. On the other hand, further increases in tendencies for nucleophilic substitution and addition,
and in the five-membered compounds further increases in acidities of N-hydrogen, are found.
Multi-heteroatom heterocycles are comparatively rare in nature, however in medicinal chemistry they
are of very considerable significance, for example analogues of the pyrimidine and purine nucleosides have
been extensively studied (see examples in Chapter 33).
29.1
Five-Membered Rings
29.1.1 Azoles
The triazoles are numbered to indicate the relative positions of the nitrogen atoms; tetrazole and pentazole
are unambiguous names. In considering the chemistry of systems containing three or more nitrogens, stability and therefore safety must always be a consideration, particularly for tetrazoles. 1,2,3-Triazoles are,
however, surprisingly stable, when one considers that they contain three directly linked nitrogen atoms,
though on flash vacuum pyrolysis at 500 °C, they do lose nitrogen to give 2H-azirines, probably via the
1H-isomer.1 Benzotriazole is similarly relatively stable and has been distilled in vacuo at 200 °C, though
explosions have been reported during this process. Although many tetrazoles are relatively stable, some
are explosive, often designed as such. The pentazole ring system is only known in a few aryl derivatives
that generally decompose (possibly explosively) at or below room temperature,2 the most stable being
4-dimethylaminophenylpentazole. The pentazolate anion has been detected by mass spectrometry.3
The additional heteroatoms make these systems less basic, but more acidic than comparable 1,2- and
1,3-azoles. Each is subject to the same kind of tautomerism as discussed for the 1,2- and 1,3-azoles (Chapter
25 Introduction and 24.1.1.1), in which the tautomers are equivalent. Also, in these systems, tautomerism
generates different arrangements of imine nitrogen and N-hydrogen components.
There is a far from complete set of comparisons of relative reactivities4 in nucleophilic displacement of
halide. From a study of reactions of bromo-N-methyl-tetrazoles, -triazoles and -imidazoles with piperidine,
it seems that the presence of two doubly bonded nitrogens is necessary to overcome electron release from
the singly bonded nitrogen to approach the reactivity of 2-bromopyridine.5
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
558
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Relative rates of reaction with piperidine in ethanol
29.1.1.1 1,2,3-Triazole6
1,2,3-Triazole is fairly resistant to N-alkylation under neutral conditions, however both acylations and
alkylations involving N-anions occur readily, but mixtures of 1- and 2-substituted products are often
obtained.7,8 Trimethylsilylation produces 2-trimethylsilyl-1,2,3-triazole, and this can be alkylated unambiguously at N-1, with concomitant loss of silicon.9 An equilibrium mixture of N-acetyl-1,2,3-triazoles
contains predominantly the 2-acetyl isomer. The 2H-tautomer is also dominant in 1,2,3-triazole itself,10
which may reflect unfavourable adjacent imine lone-pair/lone-pair interactions in the 1H-isomer and is
in agreement with calculations that suggest that the 2H-isomer is more aromatic.11 Heating in sulfolane at
150 °C converts the N-acyl compounds into oxazoles in a synthetically useful transformation.12
1,2,3-Triazole itself forms a 4,5-dibromo derivative in high yield with bromine at 50 °C.13 1-Methyl1,2,3-triazole can be mono-brominated at C-4, but the 2-methyl isomer is less reactive, requiring the use
of an iron catalyst;14 the lower reactivity of the latter is probably related to the presence of two imine units.
Nitration of 2-phenyl-1,2,3-triazole proceeds first on the benzene ring, but then does bring about hetero-ring
substitution.15
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
559
The ring system is relatively resistant to both oxidation and reduction, as exemplified below.16
N-Substituted 1,2,3-triazoles can be lithiated directly at carbon, but low temperatures must be maintained
to avoid ring cleavage by cycloreversion.17,18
4,5-Dibromo-1-methoxymethyl-1,2,3-triazole forms the 5-lithio compound with n-butyllithium at −80 °C
and 4,5-dibromo-2-methoxymethyl-1,2,3-triazole undergoes a comparable exchange.15 1-Phenyl-1,2,3triazoles participate in Diels–Alder cycloadditions with dimethyl acetylenedicarboxylate using aluminium
chloride catalysis, producing 1-phenylpyrazoles.19
29.1.1.2 1,2,4-Triazole20
N-Alkylations and -acylations generally occur at N-1, reflecting the higher nucleophilicity of N–N systems
(cf. 14.1.1.2), however 4-alkyl derivatives can be prepared via quaternisation of 1-acetyl-1,2,4-triazole21 or
the acrylonitrile or crotononitrile adducts22 (note that N-1 and N-2 are equivalent until substitution occurs).
In alkylations of 1,2,4-triazole, generally a ratio of 9 : 1, N-1:N-3 isomers is present in the crude product,
but the minor product is very easily removed; even simple distillation completely separates the isomers,
illustrating the very large difference in physical properties between isomers.23 Direct hydroxymethylation
of 3,4-disubstituted 1,2,4-triazoles occurs at C-5 by heating with formalin or paraformaldehyde.24
Bromination occurs readily in alkaline solution giving 3,5-dibromo-1,2,4-triazole;25 the 3-monochloro
derivative can be obtained by thermal rearrangement of the N-chloro isomer;26 an analogous N→C 1,5sigmatropic shift followed by tautomerisation converts the 1- into the 3-nitro compound.27
560
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Secondary radical Minisci alkylations of 1-alkyl-1,2,4-triazoles take place at C-5; primary radical substitutions are known in an intramolecular sense.28
C-Lithiations can be easily effected on N-1-protected 1,2,4-triazoles, the resulting 5-lithio derivatives
being much more stable than C-lithiated 1,2,3-triazoles.29 5-Silylation can even be achieved using triethylamine with trimethylsilyl bromide – deprotonation of an N+-trimethylsilyl triazolium cation is presumably
involved.30 Exactly comparable silylations can be achieved with 2-aryl-1,3,4-oxa- and -thia-diazoles; application of this regime to 1-phenyltetrazole produced phenyl trimethylsilyl carbodiimide in 90% yield!
3-Amino-1,2,4-triazole can be diazotised normally: the resulting diazonium salt has been used for the
production of azo dyes, and also loses nitrogen with easy replacement by nucleophiles. The bromo- and
nitro-triazoles, which can be thus prepared are themselves substrates for nucleophilic displacement reactions.21,31 5-Bromo and 5-nitro32 groups are good leaving groups in 1-alkyl-1,2,4-triazoles for hetero nucleophiles; for carbon nucleophiles, methylsulfone is a better leaving group.33
The oxidative desulfurisation of 1,2,4-triazole thiones is a type of reaction common to other electrondeficient nitrogen heterocycles; nitric acid is the oxidant in the example below. The process involves loss
of sulfur dioxide from an intermediate sulfinic acid.34
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
561
4-Phenyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione (often PTAD or ‘Cookson’s reagent’) is a highly reactive dienophile;35 it has often been used to trap unstable dienes or characterize dienes as adducts. Two examples of
its reactivity are shown below.36,37
29.1.1.3 Tetrazoles38
Noting the similarity of (NH) tetrazole pKas to those of carboxylic acids, tetrazoles have often been used
as bioequivalent replacements for CO2H, and as general variants, in pharmacologically active compounds
(Chapter 33). The acid replacement extends to the tetrazole analogue of proline (p. 567), which is more
soluble than proline itself, but retains its catalytic properties for condensation reactions.
Stability
Tetrazoles are generally surprisingly stable, although tetrazole itself (mp 158 °C, decomposes > 180 °C)
is classified as an explosive, at least for shipping purposes. Chloro- and alkylthio-tetrazoles decompose at
somewhat lower temperatures. The decomposition and explosive properties of certain tetrazole derivatives
are very important from an applications and safety viewpoint, although, as noted above, tetrazoles are also
important (and stable) components of drugs.
Tetrazole and 5-aminotetrazole are components of mixtures (with oxidants) used as high-speed inflators
in car air bags, via a controlled explosive liberation of nitrogen and other gases. Other tetrazole derivatives
are definitely explosives – ‘Tetrazene’ (a commercial name, not to be confused with the tetrazine ring
system) has been used as a primer for percussion caps. Salts of 5-nitrotetrazole are promising safer (less
sensitive) and less toxic replacements for lead azide primers – they are described as ‘green explosives’
because they generate non-toxic products!39
Certain intermediates, such as diazotized 5-aminotetrazole (see below) present a serious risk of explosion.
Introduction of large substituents generally reduces, but may not eliminate, explosive hazards, therefore
caution must always be used. Unexpected hazardous by-products may also turn up, for example 5-azidotetrazole was inadvertently formed in an attempt to repeat a literature preparation of 1,5-diaminotetrazole via
nitrosation of diaminoguanidine, resulting, on work-up, in an explosion that injured two chemists.40 5Azidotetrazole is highly sensitive to friction, shock and electrostatic discharge; the 1-phenyl derivative is
significantly less sensitive, but explodes violently on rapid heating.41
562
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Reactions
Tetrazoles alkylate and acylate on N-1(4) and/or N-2(3), the regioselectivity depending, in part, on the
substituent at C-5. The formation of mixtures is the usual outcome for alkylation and this is a significant
problem in medicinal chemistry. Although a range of specifically N-1-substituted tetrazoles are available
by ring synthesis, the direct synthesis of N-2-substituted compounds is more problematic.
In some cases, highly regioselective N-1-alkylation can be carried out by first introducing a bulky labile
group at N-2, then quaternisation followed by cleavage of the 2-substituent. Both tri-n-butylstanyl42 and
t-butyl43 have been used for this purpose.
In addition to steric effects, the presence of an electron-withdrawing group at C-5 favours N-2alkylation. The best directing substituents are 4-nitrophenyl (ratio 5.8:1) and cyano (5.4:1).44 Out of a
number of 5-thio-substituted tetrazoles, the 4-nitrophenylsulfone is the only one to give highly selective
2-alkylation.45
The use of a benzyl dithiocarbonate alkylating agent gives only the 2-benzyl isomer, in very high yield,46
while the methyl analogue gives a mixture, although still with very good N-2 selectivity (7:1).47
The difference in physical and chemical properties between 1- and 2-substituted tetrazoles can be large.
The preparation of pure 2-methyltetrazole via alkylation (below) and the lithiation properties described
later in this section, nicely demonstrate this differential reactivity, which can be put to good preparative
use.
The relatively selective methylation (85:15, N-2:N-1) of 5-cyanotetrazole can be used to prepare
pure 2-methyltetrazole by utilising the very large difference in stabilities of 1- and 2-methyl-tetrazole-5carboxylic acids. The mixture of methylated nitriles can be hydrolysed to the carboxylate salts and, upon
acidification, the 1-methyl acid decarboxylates spontaneously. The resulting 1-methyltetrazole and
2-methyltetrazole-5-carboxylic acid can be easily separated, then the latter decarboxylated at 200 °C to
give pure 2-methyl tetrazole.48
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
563
Remarkably, some C-electrophilic substitutions such as bromination, mercuration and even Mannich
reactions, but not nitration, can be achieved, though the mechanisms for these substitutions may not be of
the conventional type.
5-Halide and sulfonyl groups in 1-substituted tetrazoles are readily displaced by nucleophiles, methylsulfonyl being more reactive than chlorine.49 5-Bromo-1-methyltetrazole is considerably more reactive than
the 2-methyl isomer due to more effective delocalization of the negative charge in the intermediate adduct.50
Metallation
C-Lithiation of 1-substituted tetrazoles occurs readily and the resulting lithio derivatives can be trapped
with electrophiles, but there is a strong tendency for decomposition of the lithio compounds, which depends
on the 1-substituent. 5-Lithiated 2-substituted tetrazoles appear to be significantly more stable than the
1-isomers, as shown below, by a comparison of the two N-benzyloxymethyl (BOM)-protected isomers.51
p-Methoxybenzyl can be removed finally by hydrogenation or oxidation with cerium(IV) ammonium
nitrate.
5-Alkyl groups in 1-substituted tetrazoles can be lithiated, but in a 5-alkyl-2-methyl-tetrazole it is the
N-methyl that is metallated; 5-methyl-2-trityltetrazole lithiates normally at the C-methyl. The methylene
group in 5-(benzotriazolylmethyl)tetrazole is sufficiently activated that N-protection is unnecessary – the
benzotriazole can then act as a leaving group for displacement by Grignard reagents (29.3), as shown
below.52
A tetrazole can also act as an ortho-directing group, as in the lithiation of 5-phenyltetrazole.53,54 A
tetrazol-5-yl ether similarly directs ortho-metallation, but here the tetrazole migrates from the oxygen to
the lithiated carbon.55
564
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Flash vacuum pyrolysis of 5-aryl-tetrazoles generates aryl-carbenes,56 but heating the pyrimidinylphenyltetrazole shown below in refluxing decalin (180 °C) results in the formation of an intermediate
nitrene, which then cyclises onto the pyrimidine nitrogen, forming a [1,2,4]triazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine.57
Hypobromite oxidation of 5-benzylaminotetrazole provides a useful preparation of benzylisonitrile.58
1,3,4-Oxadiazoles are formed on heating tetrazoles with acylating agents, via rearrangement of firstformed 2-acyl derivatives.59
Diazotization of 5-Aminotetrazole
This is a useful, but very hazardous preparative procedure for a number of 5-substituted tetrazoles60 and
also, upon treatment with base, diazotetrazole,61 a source of atomic carbon. It cannot be overemphasized
how dangerous this diazotisation reaction is! The low limit for possible spontaneous detonation in water
is between 1 and 5%! Even under very well-controlled conditions, during the synthesis of 5-nitrotetrazole
by diazotization in the presence of excess nitrite, microdetonations occur in splashes on the walls of the
vessel and often cause significant damage. However, the use of micro flow reactors (cf. 5.3) allow the
reaction to be carried out safely.62
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
565
29.1.1.4 Pentazoles
The only known pentazoles are N-aryl derivatives, the most stable being those bearing an electron-releasing
group on the aryl ring, although the pentazolate anion has been detected by mass spectrometry and NMR
(see below). 1-(4-Dimethylaminophenyl)pentazole is stable at room temperature for several hours and its
structure was determined by X-ray crystallography at 128 K.63 N-Aryl-pentazoles are prepared by the reaction of aryl diazoniums with azide anion.
An experimental and theoretical study was based on the preparation and degradation of the tetra-nbutylammonium phenolate salt of 1-(4-hydroxyphenyl)pentazole, using 15N-labelled compounds. Attempted
removal of the aryl ‘protecting group’ by ozonolysis only resulted in degradation of the pentazole ring.64
1-(4-chlorophenyl)pentazole was observed (by 15N NMR) as an unstable intermediate in the reaction of the
aryl diazonium salt with azide to give the aryl azide.65 Pentazole (as the zinc derivative) is observed by
NMR following ceric ion oxidation of 1-anisylpentazole at −40 °C.66
29.1.1.5 Ring Synthesis of Azoles
1,2,3-Triazoles
1,2,3-Triazoles are generally prepared by the cycloaddition of an alkyne with an azide, which can be promoted thermally or by metal catalysis.67 This cycloaddition reaction of an azide and an alkyne is a typical
‘Click’ reaction,68 that is, a highly efficient and reliable general reaction that can be used for linking moieties
for various purposes, such as in combinatorial chemistry. Opinion is divided on whether ‘Click’ is a useful
or necessary concept69 but it seems to have become associated, almost synonymously, but incorrectly, solely
with this triazole synthesis.
The hazardous nature (see ‘Tetrazoles’ below) of some alkyl azides limits the method in these cases,
however N-alkyl- (benzyl) -1,2,3-triazoles can be obtained by preparing the azide in situ, for example using
a mixture of sodium azide, the alkyne and a benzyl halide;70 in situ preparation of aryl azides is also feasible.71 An alternative method in which the alkyl azide is also generated in situ, is to use a diazo transfer
to a primary amine; the diazo transfer requires Cu(II) and the cycloaddition needs Cu(I) so a reducing agent
is added together with the alkyne following the first phase.72
A convenient synthesis, which leads to N-hydrogen-1,2,3-triazoles, utilises the stable (and relatively safe)
trimethylsilyl azide.73 Alternatively, by conducting a cycloaddition in the presence of formaldehyde,
N-hydroxymethyl-triazoles are formed (mainly the 2-isomer from isomerisation of initially formed
1-hydroxymethyl-triazole) from which N-unsubstituted heterocycles can be easily obtained using base;
azidomethanol is formed in situ and is the entity that adds to the alkyne.74
For C-unsubstituted 1,2,3-triazoles, rather than using gaseous ethyne, it is much more convenient to use
vinyl acetate as starting material; or in general, an enamine, an enol ether75 or a vinyl sulfone76 as alkyne
equivalents.
566
Heterocyclic Chemistry
It is now usual to promote these cycloadditions by catalysts:77 for example, reaction with N-tosylynamides, using ruthenium78 or copper79 catalysts, giving 1-substituted 5- and 4-amino triazoles, respectively; the formation of the 1,4-substitution pattern with copper catalysis77 and 1,5-pattern with ruthenium
catalysis80 seems to be general. The latter metal will also promote addition to internal alkynes.81
Another variation in which the interaction is between an acetylenic Grignard reagent and the azide, and
is probably a stepwise sequence, is shown below, the immediate organometallic product being available
for subsequent reaction with an electrophile.82
Other useful syntheses of 1,2,3-triazoles include diazo-transfer to enamino-ketones from either sulfonyl
azides83 or 3-diazo-oxindole,84 and reaction of dichloroacetaldehyde tosylhydrazone with amines, and each
of these is illustrated below.85
1,2,4-Triazoles
1,2,4-Triazoles are available via cyclodehydration reactions of N,N′-diacyl-hydrazines with amines,
although the conditions are often quite vigorous.86 An interesting variant utilises sym-triazine (1,3,5triazine) as an equivalent of HN(CHO)2.87 Condensations of aminoguanidine with esters, or an orthoformate,88 give 3-amino-1,2,4-triazoles.89
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
567
1,2,3-Triazolin-3-ones can be formed from primary amines in reaction with methyl (E)-N-(ethoxymethylene)
hydrazinecarboxylate,90 and the synthesis of the much-used 4-phenyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione also starts
from methyl carbazate, a final oxidation of 4-phenylurazole giving the carmine red crystalline product.91
Acyl-hydrazides react with S-methyl-isothioureas producing 3-amino-1,2,4-triazoles,92 or with imidoyl
chlorides93 forming, 1,2,4-triazoles.
Tetrazoles
CAUTION: Sodium azide is highly toxic and environmentally damaging. There is also a possibility of
forming sensitive explosive azides when certain metals – copper, mercury and, possibly, zinc – are used
to catalyse some of the following reactions, and also if they are flushed into drains where they can react
with metal pipes.
A procedure for destroying residual sodium azide has been described, as part of a detailed preparation
(80 mmol scale) of (S)-5-pyrrolidin-2-yltetrazole, a useful enantio-catalyst.94
Tetrazoles are usually prepared by the reaction of an azide with a nitrile, or an activated amide; tri-nbutyltin azide and trimethylsilyl azide are more convenient and safer reagents than azide anion in some
cases; copper(I) oxide catalysis in the trimethylsilyl azide protocol is very efficient for the production of
N-unsubstituted tetrazoles,95 and arylsulfonyl cyanides react with organic azides very efficiently giving rise
to 1-substituted 5-arylsulfonyl-tetrazoles.96 Zinc bromide can be used to catalyse the reaction between
sodium azide and nitriles in hot water.97 Intramolecular examples involving cyanamides proceed in hot
DMF.98 In additions to nitriles, one can include triethylammonium chloride (instead of ammonium chloride)
568
Heterocyclic Chemistry
to avoid the possible sublimation of potentially explosive azides;99 micelles can also be employed as reaction media.100
For reaction with azides, amides can be activated with trifluoromethanesulfonic anhydride101 or benzotriazole,102 or via formation of the thioamide,103 or by the use of triphenylphosphine with diethyl azodicarboxylate. Alternatively, imidochlorides can be used under phase-transfer conditions.104
Related methods can be used to prepare 5-hetero-substituted compounds: isonitriles with N-halosuccinimides and azide give halo derivatives,105 aryl isothiocyanates with azide give the 5-thiols,106 which
can be converted into 5-unsubstituted tetrazoles by oxidation with hydrogen peroxide107 or chromium
trioxide.108
N-Nitrosation of amidrazones is a method that avoids the use of azide and also offers a regiocontrolled
synthesis of 1-substituted109 or 2,5-diaryl-tetrazoles.110
The synthesis of 5-amino-tetrazoles can be achieved via the reaction of azide anion with benzotriazolylimines.111 Another route utilizes N-aryl-cyanamides generated in situ, from 1-aryl-tetrazoles, with sodium
azide.112
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
569
29.1.2 Oxadiazoles and Thiadiazoles
Only one divalent heteroatom can be incorporated into a simple five-membered, aromatic heterocycle.
These systems are named with the non-nitrogen atom numbered as 1, and the positions of the nitrogen
atoms shown with reference to the divalent atom.
1,2,4-Oxadiazoles,113 1,3,4-oxadiazoles114 and 1,2,5-oxadiazoles are well known, but the 1,2,3-oxadiazole
system, which calculations indicate to be unstable relative to its ring-open diazo-ketone tautomer,115 is
known only as a benzo-fused derivative (in solution) and in mesoionic substances, known as ‘sydnones’,116
which have been well investigated. ‘Furoxans’,117 which are formed by the dimerisation of nitrile oxides,
have also been extensively studied. 1,2,3-Thiadiazoles, 1,2,4-thiadiazoles,118 1,3,4-thiadiazoles119 and
1,2,5-thiadiazoles120 are all represented by well-characterised compounds. Estimates of aromaticity, based
on bonds lengths and NMR data produce the following relative order.121
As with the azoles, oxa- and thiadiazoles are very weak bases due to the inductive effects of the extra
heteroatoms, although N-quaternisation reactions can be carried out. For similar reasons, electrophilic
substitutions on carbon are practically unknown, apart from a few halogenations and mercurations122 – it
is an intriguing paradox that mercurations, with what is generally thought of as a weak electrophile, are
often successful in electron-poor heterocycles. Another important difference from other azoles is of course
the absence of N-hydrogen, so that N-anion-mediated reactions are not available.
All these systems are susceptible to nucleophilic attack, particularly the oxadiazoles, which often undergo
ring cleavage with aqueous acid or base unless both carbon positions are substituted. Similarly, leaving
groups are generally displaced easily; there is substantial differential positional reactivity: in both 1,2,4oxa- and -thiadiazoles a 5-chlorine is displaced much more easily than a 3-chlorine, no doubt due to the
more effective stabilisation of the intermediate anionic adduct in the former situation.
Base-catalysed proton exchange occurs readily, but decomposition via cycloreversion or β-elimination
in the anion often competes,123 for example a 4-aryl-1,2,3-thiadiazole is deprotonated at C-5 by carbonate
570
Heterocyclic Chemistry
as base, leading firstly, via loss of nitrogen, to an arylalkynyl-thiolate,124 this being a preferred route for
their synthesis.125 Direct lithiations at carbon are generally easy,126 but the resulting lithio derivatives vary
greatly in stability.127
Hydrogens on side-chain alkyl groups are acidified by delocalisation of the charge in the deprotonated
species onto ring nitrogens. There is an interesting difference between 1,2,5-oxa- and 1,2,5-thiadiazoles in
this context: in the former, smooth metallation of a 3-methyl occurs with n-butyllithium, but for the latter,
lithium diisopropylamide must be used to avoid competing nucleophilic addition to the sulfur, leading then
to ring decomposition.128
4-Substituted 5-chloro-1,2,3-thiadiazoles react with simple hetero nucleophiles by displacement of the
chlorine, but reaction with aryl- and alkyllithiums gives alkynyl-thioethers via attack at sulfur and then ring
cleavage with loss of nitrogen. A similar ring cleavage occurs, but by a different mechanism, when the
5-unsubstituted analogue is treated with base.129
Generally, amines can be diazotised and converted, for example, into halides, but in some cases the
intermediate, N-nitroso compound is stable, and only then subsequently converted into a diazonium salt by
treatment with strong acid – this may reflect the lower stability of a positively charged group attached to
an electron-deficient ring.130
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
571
An interesting and fairly general type of reaction in ring systems such as these is ring interconversion
via intramolecular attack on nitrogen (cf. 25.8).131
1,2,4-Oxadiazoles are useful as masked amidines, where such strongly basic groups would be incompatible with reaction conditions – the amidine is easily liberated by hydrogenation, as illustrated below.132
29.1.2.1 Ring Synthesis of Oxadiazoles and Thiadiazoles
1,2,4-Oxadiazoles
1,2,4-Oxadiazoles can be prepared by reaction of amidoximes with activated acids,135,136 acid chlorides or
anhydrides,137 esters138 or β-keto-esters.139
1,2,4-Oxadiazoles can also be prepared from amides via acylamidines,140 or via the cycloaddition of
nitrile oxides to nitriles, as illustrated.141 3-Alkylamino-1,2,4-oxadiazoles result from the reaction of Nacyl-1-benzotriazolyl-1-carboximidamides with hydroxylamine.142
572
Heterocyclic Chemistry
1,3,4-Oxadiazoles
1,3,4-Oxadiazoles are available by cyclodehydration of N,N′-diacyl-hydrazines or their equivalents,143,144
for example closure of N-acyl-thiosemicarbazides generates 2-amino-1,3,4-oxadiazoles.145 It is possible to
conduct the preparation of the N,N′-diacyl-hydrazine and the ring closure in one pot, thus reaction of a
hydrazide with a trialkyl orthoalkanoate produces 1,3,4-oxadiazoles (2-unsubstituted 1,3,4-oxadiazoles
using triethyl orthoformate; 1,3,4-thiadiazoles using P4S10/Al2O3 to effect ring closure)146 or by treating a
hydrazide with an acid with microwave heating and a dehydrating agent,147 or by a peptide coupling followed by a cyclising dehydration with triphenylphosphine with carbon tetrabromide.148 Starting from a
lower oxidation level, aldehyde N-acyl-hydrazones give the aromatic heterocycles on treatment with
cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate.149
These heterocycles are also available from tetrazoles (29.1.1.3) or by oxidative cyclisation of
N-acyl-hydrazones.150
1,2,5-Oxadiazoles
1,2,5-Oxadiazoles result from the dehydration of 1,2-bisoximes.
Sydnones
Sydnones are normally prepared by the dehydration of N-nitroso α-amino acids.151
1,2,3-Thiadiazoles
1,2,3-Thiadiazoles are prepared by reaction of a hydrazone, containing an acidic methylene group, with
thionyl chloride.124,152 The 5-thiol can be prepared by reaction of chloral tosylhydrazone with polysulfide,
as indicated below.153
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
573
Benzotriazolyl is a useful leaving group for nucleophilic substitutions in 1,2,3-thiadiazoles.154
1,2,4-Thiadiazoles
1,2,4-Thiadiazoles carrying identical groups at the 3- and 5-positions are obtained by the oxidation
of thioamides;155 5-chloro-1,2,4-thiadiazoles result from the reaction of amidines with perchloromethyl
mercaptan.156 5-Amino-1,2,4-thiadiazoles can be produced by heterocyclisation of thioacylguanidines,
using diisopropyl azodicarboxylate, and generated in the same pot from amidines and an
isothiocyanate.157
1,3,4-Thiadiazoles
1,3,4-Thiadiazoles are available by a number of convenient general routes including cyclisation of N,N′diacyl-hydrazines, or 1,3,4-oxadiazoles, with phosphorus sulfides.158 2-Amino-1,3,4-thiadiazoles are prepared via acylation of thiosemicarbazides159 and the parent compound is easily obtained from hydrogen
sulfide and dimethylformamide azine.160
1,2,5-Thiadiazoles
1,2,5-Thiadiazoles can be prepared by the oxidative cyclisation of 1,2-diamines or aminocarboxamides.161
Condensation of sulfamide (SO2(NH2)2) with 1,2-diketones gives 1,2,5-thiadiazole 1,1-dioxides.162 A good
general method is the reaction of trithiazyl trichloride with activated alkenes and alkynes; this method is
also useful for the fusion of a 1,2,5-thiadiazole onto other heterocycles, such as pyrroles. The reaction
possibly proceeds via cycloaddition to an N–S–N unit in the trithiazine ring.163
574
Heterocyclic Chemistry
29.1.3 Other Systems
Of the higher aza-compounds, only derivatives of 1,2,3,4-thiatriazole133 are well defined, but even here
alkyl derivatives decompose at or below 0 °C, though 5-aryl and amino derivatives are generally fairly
stable. Many other derivatives are, however, dangerously explosive, for example the 5-chloro and 5-thiolate
derivatives. The controlled decomposition of 5-alkoxy-1,2,3,4-thiatriazoles (for example the 5-ethoxy
derivative in ether at 20 °C) has been recommended as the best preparation of pure alkyl cyanates; thermal
decomposition of 5-aryl compounds gives the corresponding nitrile.134
A one-pot conversion of amines into 1,2,3,4-thiatriazoles, via reaction with thiocarbonyldiimidazole
and azide, works well for both primary and secondary amines. With simple amines, the intermediate thioimidazolide requires quaternisation with methyl iodide for the final azide reaction, but with amino-acid
derivatives, this additional activation is not always necessary.164
29.2
Six-Membered Rings
29.2.1 Azines
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
575
Simple uncharged six-membered aromatic heterocycles cannot contain a divalent heteroatom. The azines
are numbered to indicate the relative positions of the nitrogen atoms. 1,2,3,4-Tetrazine, pentazine and
hexazine are unknown, however, a number of fused 1,2,3,4-tetrazines, primarily N-oxides and N-aryl quaternary salts, are known,165 but of monocyclic compounds, only a few di-N-oxides have been prepared.166
Of the other systems, 1,2,3,5-tetrazine is unknown, although theoretically it could be moderately stable,
but fused derivatives include the drug temozolomide (see 33.7). Derivatives of 1,3,5-triazine are very well
known and available in large quantities, indeed they are amongst the oldest known heterocycles: the trioxycompound (‘cyanuric acid’) was first prepared in 1776 by Scheele by the pyrolysis of uric acid.
The thermal stabilities of the parent systems vary from 1,2,3-triazine, which decomposes at about 200 °C,
to 1,3,5-triazine, which is stable to over 600 °C – at this temperature it decomposes to give hydrogen
cyanide, of which it is formally a trimer. Melamine (2,4,6-triamino-1,3,5-triazine) is an important industrial
intermediate (34.6.2). Its high nitrogen content has led to its illegal misuse in foodstuffs to achieve higher
nitrogen analyses.
In comparison with the diazines, the inductive effects of the ‘extra’ nitrogen(s) leads to an even greater
susceptibility to nucleophilic attack and, as a result, all the parent systems and many derivatives react with
water, in acidic or basic solution. Similarly, simple electrophilic substitutions do not occur; some apparent
electrophilic substitutions, such as the bromination of 1,3,5-triazine, probably take place via bromide
nucleophilic addition to an N+–Br triazinium salt.167 Attempted direct N-oxidation of simple tetrazines with
the usual reagents generally results in ring cleavage, however it can be achieved satisfactorily with
methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane.168
The examples shown are illustrative of the many easy nucleophilic additions to the polyaza-azines: both
3-phenyl-1,2,4,5-tetrazine169 and 1,3,5-triazine itself170 add ammonia and simple amines (contrast the
requirement for hot sodamide (Chichibabin reaction) for pyridine (8.3.1.2)) and thus amino and alkyamino
derivatives can be obtained via oxidative trapping with permanganate.
The easy addition at C-5 of 1,2,4-triazines171 is shown by the VNS (3.3.3) reaction of the 3-methylthio
derivatives in the absence of activating groups; a closely related addition of nitro-alkanes represents a very
useful nucleophilic acylation.172 The ready displacement of methylthio from the same compound is also
significant.173
576
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Nucleophilic displacement of methylthio in 1,2,4-triazines and 1,2,4,5-tetrazines by alkoxide and amines
is very easy. Mono-displacement can be carried out on 3,6-bis(methylthio)-1,2,4,5-tetrazine, but the reaction using methoxide requires careful control of reaction conditions to avoid formation of the dimethoxy
derivative.174,175
In triazine chemistry, sulfone is a better leaving group than halide for displacement with
carbanions.176
The susceptibility of 1,3,5-triazine to nucleophilic attack with ring opening makes it a synthetically
useful equivalent of formate, or formamide, particularly for the synthesis of other heterocycles, such as
imidazoles and triazoles177 (see above). Despite the high susceptibility of 1,2,4-triazines to nucleophilic
addition, 3-substituted-6-methoxy-1,2,4-triazines can be successfully lithiated.178
Reaction of 1,2,3-triazine with nucleophiles usually leads to ring opening via attack at C-4. However,
silyl enol ethers react with chloroformate/1,2,3-triazine salts to give 5-substituted 2,5-dihydro-1,2,3triazines, which can be re-aromatised using cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate. In this case, initial addition of
the electrophile takes place at N-2, leading to the specific activation of C-5.179
An interesting variant of the Minisci reaction has been reported for 1,2,3-triazine, which is unstable to
the usual acidic conditions: here, activation of the heterocycle to attack by the nucleophilic radical is brought
about by the agency of a dicyanomethine ylide.180
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
577
The reductive removal of hydrazine substituents under oxidising conditions from azines and some azoles
is conceptually related to oxidative removal of thiols (e.g. 29.1.1.2). In this case, the intermediacy of a
diimide seems likely, as illustrated below.181
Probably the most useful and general reaction of all these systems182 is the inverse-electron-demand
Diels–Alder reaction with acetylenes (or equivalents) to produce either pyridines or diazines via elimination
of hydrogen cyanide, a nitrile or nitrogen.183
Enamines have most often been used as acetylene equivalents, the amine fragment being lost at a
late stage to generate the aromatic heterocycle. Prior synthesis of the enamine is unnecessary: these processes can also be achieved by heating together a ketone, a secondary amine and the heterocycle.184
The best equivalent of ethyne itself for these reactions is norbornadiene, cyclopentadiene being lost in
the final stage.185
578
Heterocyclic Chemistry
In reactions of 1,2,4,5-tetrazines, sulfoxide substituents convey a greater reactivity to these inverseelectron-demand process than the corresponding sulfides;186 similarly, ester groupings increase the
reactivity.187
The high regioselectivity of addition to sulfoxide-bearing 1,2,4,5-tetrazines is not, however, what one
might anticipate, on the basis of the polarity of the components.
29.2.1.1 Ring Syntheses
1,2,3-Triazines
Using various reagents, 1,2,3-triazines, including 1,2,3-triazine itself, can be prepared by the oxidation of
1-aminopyrazoles with NiO2188 or periodate.189
1,2,4-Triazines
1,2,4-Triazines can be prepared by the condensation of amidrazones with diketones190,191,192 or of hydrazides
with 2-halo-ketones.185 It is convenient to oxidize 2-hydroxy-ketones to the dicarbonyl component with
manganese(IV) oxide, in the presence of the amidrazone, to produce the heterocycles.193 Hydrazides can
also be utilized with 1,2-diketones, by including an ammonia source in the reagent mix.194,195
1,3,5-Triazines
1,3,5-Triazines are usually most easily obtained by substitution reactions on 2,4,6-trichloro-1,3,5-triazine,196
but the ring system can also be synthesised by cyclocondensation reactions. Trimerisation of nitriles197 (a
common industrial method) or imidates198 gives symmetrically substituted compounds; mono-substituted1,3,5-triazines can be obtained via reaction of imidates with 1,3,5-triazine itself.199
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
579
A route that allows the synthesis of 1,3,5-triazines with different substituents at each carbon is exemplified below – an N′-acyl-N,N-dimethylamidine reacts with an amidine (shown) or guanidine to form a
1,3,5-triazine.200
1,2,4,5-Tetrazines
1,2,4,5-Tetrazines can be produced by condensation of hydrazine with carbonyl compounds at acid oxidation level, followed by oxidation of the dihydro products: this generally produces 3,6-identically substituted
derivatives, crossed condensation reactions being inefficient.160,201
The much-used dimethyl 1,2,4,5-tetrazine-3,6-dicarboxylate is generated by the dimerisation of
ethyl diazoacetate, then oxidation.202
29.3
Benzotriazoles
The chemistry of benzotriazole has been developed to the point where it now finds extensive use for heterocyclic203 and general synthesis.204,205,206,207 A useful set of properties give it this role: (i) α-carbanions are
stabilised to the same extent as at the benzylic position of a benzene compound; (ii) α-carbocations are
also stabilised; (iii) the benzotriazolyl anion is a good leaving group with a combination of good reactivity
and stability/ease of handling of the benzotriazole starting materials. Sequential combinations of these
reactivities have been applied to the synthesis of a wide variety of molecules – some illustrative examples
are shown below.
The starting benzotriazole derivatives are usually prepared from benzotriazole itself by N-alkylation
with a halide, N-acylation with an acid or acid chloride, or via reaction with aldehydes or acetals;
in each case, these can lead to mixtures of 1- and 2-substituted benzotriazoles; however, the reactivities
of the two isomers are similar. For clarity, only reactions of 1-substituted compounds are shown
here.
N-Acyl-benzotriazoles, which are stable and easily handled (cf. acid chlorides or anhydrides) and
can be prepared from a large variety of acids, including N-protected α-amino acids, have been widely
used as N-, O-, S- and C-acylating agents, for example to make acyl azides.208 The benzotriazole
derivatives of N-protected-α-amino acids have been extensively developed as agents for peptide
coupling.209
580
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Alkylation of lithiated 1-(1-ethoxyprop-2-enyl)benzotriazole leads to enones after hydrolytic removal of
the heterocycle; addition of the lithiated species to cyclohexenone then hydrolytic cleavage of the heterocycle produces an unsaturated 1,4-diketone.210 Addition of the same anion to methyl but-2-enoate generates
an anion in which the benzotriazole is displaced intramolecularly and a cyclopropane results.211
In the next example, the benzotriazole unit facilitates benzylic lithiation and in the final step acts as a
leaving group.212
The ability of benzotriazole to stabilise a cation allows 1-hydroxymethylbenzotriazole to alkylate indole;
the product can then be lithiated to allow substitution by an electrophile and then finally the benzotriazole
unit can be displaced by a Grignard nucleophile.213
Tris(benzotriazol-1-yl)methane anion will add to nitrobenzene in a VNS process in which the benzotriazole unit is both the anion-stabilising unit and also the leaving group;214 another use for this compound is
illustrated by alkylation of its anion, then hydrolysis, forming an acid.215
Heterocycles Containing More Than Two Heteroatoms
581
Benzotriazoles also have interesting reactivity in their own right and can be used to form other heterocyclic compounds via various ring cleavage reactions, leading to reactive intermediates, such as benzynes,216
aryllithiums,217 diradicals218 and arylhydrazones,219 some illustrated below.
Exercises
1. What are the products of the following (Diels–Alder) reactions: (i) 1-pyrrolidinylcyclopentene with: (a)
1,3,5-triazine, (b) 1,2,4-triazine; (ii) 3-phenyl-1,2,4,5-tetrazine with 1,1-diethoxyethene?
2. Thiophosgene (S=CCl2) reacts at low temperature with sodium azide to give a product which contains
no azide group; on subsequent reaction with methylamine this compound is converted into C2H4N4S –
suggest structures.
3. What are the products of the reaction of PhCONH2 with DMFDMA then: (a) N2H4 and (b) H2NOH?
4. 1,3,5-Triazine reacts with: (i) aminoguanidine to give 2-amino-1,3,4-triazole and with (ii) diethyl malonate to give ethyl 4-hydroxypyrimidine 5-carboxylate. Write mechanisms for these transformations.
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30
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated
Heterocyclic Compounds:
Reactions and Synthesis
This book is principally concerned with the chemistry of aromatic heterocycles, however mention must be
made of the large body of remaining heterocycles, including those with small rings1 (three- and fourmembered). Most of the reactions of saturated and partially unsaturated heterocyclic compounds are so
closely similar to those of acyclic or non-heterocyclic analogues that a full discussion is not appropriate in
this book, however in this chapter we discuss briefly those aspects in which they do differ – perhaps the
most obvious aspect in which they differ from aromatic heterocycles is in having sp3 hybridised atoms,
and consequently the possible exhibition of stereoisomerism.2 They exhibit differences from ‘normal’ saturated compounds because they are cyclic, which opens up various possibilities for reactivity, particularly
where ring opening is involved, and this is seen mainly in the smaller rings, where strain (energy) is more
likely to induce such reactivity.
Tetrahydrofuran (THF) and dioxane are well-known solvents for organic reactions. N-Methylpyrrolidone
(NMP) and sulfolane are useful dipolar aprotic solvents, with characteristics like those of dimethylformamide (DMF) and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Saturated and partially unsaturated heterocycles occur
widely as components of natural products (Chapter 32).
The four-membered β-lactam ring is the essential biologically active component of the penicillin and
cephalosporin antibiotics (see 33.6.2). Epoxides (three-membered saturated oxygen-containing rings) are
components of epoxy resins and occur in some natural products. Epoxides, because of their alkylating
properties, can be carcinogenic – the biologically active metabolites of carcinogenic hydrocarbons are
examples. Aziridines (three-membered saturated nitrogen-containing rings) are found, for example, in the
mitomycins, anti-tumour agents from Streptomyces lavendulae. Thiiranes (three-membered saturated sulfur-containing rings) also occur naturally, as plant products, such as thiirane-2-carboxylic acid, isolated
from asparagus.
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
588
Heterocyclic Chemistry
30.1
30.1.1
Five- and Six-Membered Rings
Pyrrolidines and Piperidines
The main chemical aspect in which compounds with a nitrogen in a five- or six-membered ring differ from
their acyclic counterparts is that they can be dehydrogenated to the corresponding aromatic system.
Dihydro-aromatic systems naturally show the greatest tendency to aromatise, indeed one of the important
reducing coenzymes, NADPH (a 1,4-dihydropyridine), makes use of this tendency – it is a ‘hydride donor ’
(32.2.1).
Dihydro compounds are often useful synthetic intermediates showing different reactivity patterns to the
parent, aromatic heterocycle. For example, indolines (2,3-dihydroindoles) can be used to prepare indoles
with substituents in the carbocyclic ring, via electrophilic substitution then aromatisation (20.16.1.17), and
similarly, electrophilic substitutions of dihydropyridines, very difficult in simple pyridines, followed by
aromatisation, can give substituted pyridines. Dehydrogenation of tetra- and hexahydro-derivatives requires
more vigorous conditions.
Pyrrolidine and piperidine are better nucleophiles than diethylamine, principally because the lone pair
is less hindered – in the heterocycles the two alkyl ‘substituents’, i.e. the ring carbons, are constrained back
and away from the nitrogen lone pair, and approach by an electrophile is thus rendered easier than in
diethylamine, where rotations of the C–N and C–C bonds interfere. The pKaH values of pyrrolidine (11.27)
and piperidine (11.29) are typical of amine bases; they are slightly stronger bases than diethylamine (10.98).
Morpholine (8.3) is a somewhat weaker base than piperidine.
Piperidines, like cyclohexanes, adopt a preferred chair conformation, where both N-hydrogen and Nalkyls take up equatorial conformations, though in the former case the equatorial isomer is favoured by
only a small margin.3 However, alkylations at nitrogen do not necessarily reflect these ground-state conformational populations.
In the days before spectroscopy, structure determination of natural products involved degradative
methods. Many alkaloids incorporate saturated nitrogen rings, so degradations were used that gave information about the environment of the basic nitrogen atom. The classical method for doing this was the
‘Hofmann exhaustive methylation’ procedure. This is illustrated below as it would be applied to piperidine.
What the method does is to cleave N–C bonds and eventually remove the nitrogen. If one cycle removes
the nitrogen then it can be concluded that it was originally not part of a ring; if two cycles are required, as
in the piperidine example, then the nitrogen must originally have been part of a ring. A third cycle would
be necessary if the nitrogen had been originally a component of two rings. At the end of the process a
nitrogen-free fragment is left, for study to determine the carbon skeleton.
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
589
30.1.2 Piperideines and Pyrrolines
Generally speaking, piperideines and pyrrolines exist predominantly in the imine form and not in the tautomeric enamine form. These cyclic imines are resistant to hydrolytic fission of the C=N bond, in strong
contrast with acyclic imines, but nonetheless they are susceptible to nucleophilic addition at the azomethine
carbon. An example of this is that both piperideine and pyrroline exist as trimers formed by the nucleophilic
addition of nitrogen of one molecule to the azomethine carbon of a second molecule, etc. The trimerisation
of pyrroline can be prevented by forming a complex, (C4H7N)2ZnI2, from which the imine can be regenerated using ammonia.4
The presence of some enamine, at equilibrium, is demonstrated by the conversion of piperideine into a
dimer, indeed, the ability of these two systems to serve as both imines and enamines in such condensations
is at the basis of their roles in alkaloid biosynthesis. Formed in nature by the oxidative deamination and
decarboxylation of ornithine and lysine, they become incorporated into alkaloid structures by condensation
with other precursor units.5 Hygrine is a simple example in which the pyrroline has condensed with acetoacetate, or its equivalent.
Controlled oxidation of N-acyl-piperidines and -pyrrolidines can be used to prepare 2-alkoxy derivatives
or the equivalent enamides, which are useful general synthetic intermediates.6 The former are susceptible
to nucleophilic substitution under Lewis-acid catalysis, via Mannich-type intermediates, and the latter can
undergo electrophilic substitution at C-3 or addition to the double bond.
590
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Enol phosphates derived from N-acyl-piperidin-2-one (or 2-oxoazepane) can be utilized in cross-coupling
processes.7
Various oxidants have been used to convert pyrrolidine and piperidine into nitrones (imine oxides), of
value for 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions; in one method hydrogen peroxide is the oxidant in the presence of a
catalyst.8
30.1.3
Pyrans and Reduced Furans
3,4-Dihydro-2H-pyran and 2,3-dihydrofuran behave as enol ethers, the former being widely used to protect
alcohols,9 with which it reacts readily under acidic catalysis, producing acetals that are stable to even
strongly basic conditions, but easily hydrolysed back to the alcohol under mildly acidic aqueous conditions.
Each can also serve as equivalents of 5-(4-)-hydroxy-aldehydes (see below).
A great deal is known about hydroxylated tetrahydrofurans and tetrahydropyrans because such ring
systems occur in sugars and sugar-containing compounds – sucrose and RNA (32.4) are examples.10
Tetrahydropyran, like piperidine, adopts a chair conformation. One of the interesting aspects to emerge
from studies of alkoxy-substituted tetrahydropyrans is that when located at C-2, alkoxyl groups prefer an
axial orientation (the ‘anomeric effect’11). The reason for this is that in an equatorial orientation there are
unfavourable dipole–dipole interactions between lone pairs on the two oxygen atoms, and the energy gain
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
591
when these are relieved in a conformation with the C-2-substituent axial, more than offsets the unfavourable 1,3-diaxial interactions that are introduced at the same time.
Glucose is an equilibrium mixture of cyclic forms (hemiacetals containing a tetrahydropyran), and a
small concentration of acyclic polyhydroxyaldehyde, which is responsible for many of the observed chemical reactions. This illustrates the inherent stability of chair conformers of saturated six-membered systems.
The propensity for cyclisation is a general one: 5-hydroxy-aldehydes, -ketones and -acids all easily form
six-membered oxygen-containing rings – lactols and lactones respectively.
Five-membered rings, too, are relatively easy to form: depending on conditions, glucose derivatives can
easily be formed in the furanose form, i.e. based on tetrahydrofuran. The polyfunctional and stereo-defined
sugars can be used to prepare sterochemically related nitrogen heterocycles.12
Saturated five- and six-membered cyclic ethers are, like acyclic ethers, rather inert, requiring strong
conditions for C–O bond cleavage;13 this contrasts strongly with oxetanes and oxiranes (30.2 and 30.3).
S-Alkylthiolanium compounds, even S-methylthiolanium salts, react with nucleophiles mainly at C-2,
leading to ring-opened products.14
592
Heterocyclic Chemistry
30.2 Three-Membered Rings
30.2.1 Three-Membered Rings with One Heteroatom
Δ-2-Unsaturated three-membered systems are unknown as stable molecules because they would have a
four-electron π-system, and thus be antiaromatic.15 1H-Azirines occur as reactive intermediates and there
is evidence for the existence of 2-thiirene in a low-temperature matrix.16 Azirines,17 by contrast, are wellknown stable compounds. Thiirene S,S-dioxides are also stable molecules, probably best likened to
cyclopropenones.18 The chemistry of saturated three-membered heterocycles is, however, very extensive
– epoxides (oxiranes), and to a lesser extent, aziridines are important intermediates in general synthesis.
A major advance was the development of an efficient synthesis of epoxides of high optical purity from
allylic alcohols and related systems (the Sharpless epoxidation) (below); such epoxides have been used
extensively for the synthesis of complex natural products in homochiral form.
The pKaH of aziridine (7.98) shows it to be an appreciably weaker base than azetidine (11.29), the fourmembered analogue, which has a value ‘normal’ for acyclic amines and for five- and six-membered saturated amines. The low basicity is mirrored in the oxygen series, as measured by the ability of oxiranes to
form hydrogen bonds. The explanation is probably associated with the strain in the three-membered compounds, meaning that the lone pair is in an orbital with less p-character than a ‘normal’ sp3 nitrogen or
oxygen orbital, and is therefore held more tightly. The rate of pyramidal inversion of the saturated nitrogen
in azirines is very slow compared with simpler amines. This is because there is a further increase in angle
strain when the nitrogen rehybridises (→ sp2) in the transition state for inversion.
The chemical reactions of three-membered heterocycles are a direct consequence of the strain inherent
in such small rings, which, combined with the ability of the heteroatom to act as a leaving group, means
that most of the chemical properties involve ring-opening reactions. Most epoxide ring-openings occur
by SN2 nucleophilic displacements at carbon, and a very wide range of carbanion and heteroatom
nucleophiles have been shown to react in this way, including amines,19 alcohols, thiols, hydride (LiAlH4),
malonate anions,20 etc. Assistance by protic solvents or O-coordinating metal cations (Lewis acids) that
help to further weaken the C–O bond can dramatically increase the rate of reaction. Additives such as
alumina,21 titanium alkoxides22 and lithium perchlorate,23 and reagents such as tributyltin azide,24 which is
itself a Lewis acid (coordination to ‘Bu3Sn+’), but also contains a nucleophilic function ( N 3− ), are useful in
this respect.
‘Harder ’ organometallic nucleophiles such as alkyllithiums often give rise to side reactions, but their use
with boron trifluoride at −78 °C gives very clean and efficient ring-opening reactions.25
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
593
The regiochemistry of ring opening is determined mainly by steric, and, to a lesser extent, by inductive
and electronic effects. Where strong Lewis acids are used or where a highly stabilised (incipient) carbonium
ion can be formed, such as when an α-aryl substituent is present, reaction can occur mainly at the most
substituted position, an extreme case being the solvolysis of 2-furyloxirane in neutral methanol;26 however,
selective substitution at the most highly substituted position of even simple, alkyl epoxides can be achieved
with an allyl-titanium reagent.27
Regioselective opening of Sharpless epoxides, that is those (enantio-enriched) derived from allylic alcohols, has major synthetic significance. The usual outcome is opening at C-3, but the reaction with nucleophiles such as azide, cyanide and thiophenoxide, in the presence of trialkyl borates, can be highly selective
for attack at C-2.28
The Payne rearrangement of epoxy-alcohols is a special case of an intramolecular nucleophilic opening
of epoxides and is of particular synthetic utility when it is applied to epoxides from the Sharpless
procedure.29
Ring-opening of epoxides by β-elimination, on reaction with strong bases, such as lithium amides, or
combinations of trimethylsilyl triflate with diazabicycloundecane,30 is a useful synthetic method to prepare
allylic alcohols, particularly as it can be carried out enantioselectively.31
594
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The relative stereochemistry of epoxides can be inverted by equilibration with cyanate anion.32
Acid-catalysed opening of aziridines is usually quite rapid, but simple nucleophilic reactions, without
acid catalysis, are very slow, due to the much poorer leaving ability of negatively charged nitrogen, however
N-acyl- or N-sulfonyl-aziridines have reactivity similar to epoxides.33
A number of catalysts have been used to promote ring opening of N-tosyl-aziridines, such as phosphomolybdic acid and silica gel, for azide, cyanide and alcohols34 and tri-n-butylphosphine for thiols and
amines.35 Opening with ‘iodide’ occurs at room temperature with iodine and thiophenol in the presence of
air.36 In the nucleophilic ring opening of N-tosyl-aziridines, silver ion catalysis facilitates reactions with
electron-rich arenes or hetarenes.37
N-Tosyl-aziridines (and N-tosyl-azetidines) react with cyclic enol ethers and enamides, under Lewis acid
catalysis to give synthetically useful bicycles.38
Methylene aziridines have some use as multi-functional synthons. They can be metallated on the ring
carbon or ring opened with nucleophiles, giving enaminates that can be further transformed.39
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
595
Thiiranes similarly undergo ring-opening reactions with nucleophiles, such as amines,40 but attack at
sulfur can also occur with lithium reagents.41
The heteroatom in a three-membered heterocycle can be eliminated via various cycloreversion reactions,
for example by nitrosation of aziridines,42 or by the reaction of thiiranes with trivalent phosphorus
compounds.
A related elimination of sulfur dioxide occurs during the Ramberg–Bäcklund synthesis43 of alkenes,
which generates an episulfone as a transient intermediate, although episulfones are isolable under controlled
conditions.44
Substituted derivatives of all three systems are able to undergo a highly stereospecific concerted thermal
ring opening, generating ylides that can be utilised (trapped) in [3 + 2] cycloaddition reactions, for example
using aziridines provides a route to pyrrolidines.45
Azirines with an ester group on the imine carbon, will take part in cycloadditions, with the imine unit
as the dienophile, as illustrated below.46
596
Heterocyclic Chemistry
30.2.2 Three-Membered Rings with Two Heteroatoms
Diaziridines, diazirines and dioxiranes are all relatively stable, isolable systems, although some dioxiranes
are explosive.
Three-membered rings with two heteroatoms are usually encountered only as reagents. Diazirines are
useful carbene precursors47 – they are generally more stable than the equivalent isomeric diazo compounds,
though they are sometimes explosive in the pure state. They can be prepared by oxidation of diaziridines
that, in turn, are available via the condensation of a ketone or aldehyde with ammonia and chloramine.48
Chloro-diazirines, from the reaction of amidines with hypochlorite, will undergo SN2 or SN2′ displacement
reactions.49
Dimethyldioxirane is a relatively strong oxidant, but can show good selectivity: its reactivity is
similar to that of a peracid, but it has the advantage of producing a neutral byproduct (acetone).
Methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane is a more powerful oxidant that can insert oxygen into C–H bonds with
retention of configuration, as shown below.50 Dioxiranes are obtained by reaction of ketones with OXONE®
(2KHSO5.KHSO4.K2SO4).51 (NOTE: Dioxiranes are explosive and are usually handled in dilute
solution.)
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
597
Oxaziridines, prepared by the oxidation of imines,52 are selective oxygen-transfer reagents.53 In particular,
the camphor-derived reagent is widely used for enantioselective oxygenation of enolates54 and other
nucleophiles.
30.3
Four-Membered Rings
Derivatives of azete are only known as unstable reaction intermediates. Oxetane and azetidine are considerably less reactive than their three-membered counterparts (oxetane reacts with hydroxide anion 103 times
more slowly than does oxirane), but nonetheless do undergo similar ring-opening reactions, for example
oxetane reacts with organolithium reagents25 in the presence of boron trifluoride, or with cuprates,55 and
azetidine is opened on heating with concentrated hydrochloric acid. Azetidinium ions react much more
easily with nucleophiles.56
598
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The most important four-membered system is undoubtedly the β-lactam ring57 that is present in, and
essential for the biological activity of, the penicillin and cephalosporin antibiotics. β-Lactams are very
susceptible to ring-opening via attack at the carbonyl carbon – in stark contrast to the five-membered analogues (pyrrolidones) or acyclic amides, which are relatively resistant to nucleophilic attack at carbonyl
carbon. In addition, β-lactams are hydrolysed by a specific enzyme, β-lactamase, the production of which
enzyme is a mechanism by which bacteria become resistant to such antibiotics. Although the β-lactam ring
is easily cleaved by nucleophiles, both N- and C-alkylation (α to carbonyl) can be achieved using bases to
deprotonate; it is even possible to carry out Wittig reactions at the ‘amide’ carbonyl without ring opening.58
Substitution of the acetoxy group in a 4-acetoxy-azetidinone by nucleophiles is an important synthetic
method; the reaction proceeds via an imine or an iminium intermediate, rather than by direct
displacement.59
1-Tosyloxyazetidin-2-ones undergo an interesting nucleophilic substitution at C-3, the mechanism being
thought to involve an allylic-type 1,3-displacement via an enolised intermediate.60
β-Lactones (propiolactones)61 too are readily attacked at the carbonyl carbon, for example they are particularly easily hydrolysed, but a second mode of nucleophilic attack – SN2 displacement of carboxylate
via attack at C-4 – occurs with many nucleophiles.62 The example shows the use of a homochiral β-lactone,
available from serine.
30.4
Metallation
3,4-Dihydro-2H-pyran and 2,3-dihydrofuran can be metallated in the same way as their acyclic analogues,
i.e. at the enol-ether carbon adjacent to the oxygen. Tetrahydrofuran can also be lithiated adjacent to the
oxygen, by warming with n-butyllithium, but the lithio derivative produced then undergoes a cycloreversion, generating ethene and the lithium enolate of ethanal.63 This process represents a convenient preparation
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
599
of this enolate, but can also be a significant, unwanted side-reaction during lithiation reactions using tetrahydrofuran as solvent.
Three-membered rings have not been metallated directly in the absence of anion-stabilising substituents
but simple lithio derivatives of aziridines can be prepared by exchange from the corresponding stannane.64
N-t-Butylsulfonyl-aziridines can be substituted, via non-stabilised lithio intermediates, by reaction with
LiTMP, usually in the presence of the electrophile.65
2-Trifluoromethyloxirane can be lithiated at C-2 using n-butyllithium at −102 °C, the product after reaction with electrophiles retaining configuration.66
30.5
Ring Synthesis
Five- and six-membered saturated rings can be prepared by reduction of the corresponding aromatic compounds, but the most general method for making all ring sizes is by cyclisation of an ω-substituted amine,
alcohol or thiol via an intramolecular nucleophilic displacement. As an illustration, the rate of cyclisation
of ω-halo-amines goes through a minimum at the four-membered ring size; the five and six-membered
rings are by far the easiest to make. The relative rates for formation of 3-, 4-, 5- and 6-membered rings
respectively are 72 : 1 : 6000 : 1000.67 A factor which influences the rate of 3-exo-tet-cyclisations is the
degree of substitution at the carbon carrying the heteroatom: increasing substitution increases the rate of
cyclisation, because in the small ring product there is some relief of steric crowding for the substituents
compared with the acyclic starting material.68
600
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Related cyclisations involving heteroatom attachment to an alkene via π-complexes with cations, such
as Br+, I+, Hg+ and Pd+, are useful methods because they give products with functionalised side-chains for
further transformations.
30.5.1 Aziridines and Azirines
The main routes to aziridine include alkali-catalysed cyclisation of 2-halo-amines or of a 2-hydroxyamine
sulfonate ester, as illustrated,69 or by additions to alkenes or imines.
Various homochiral aziridines can be easily obtained from serine;70 such substances can be transformed
into a range of polyfunctional homochiral intermediates and products.
Reversing the sense of cyclisation, N-chloro-amines, with a suitable C–H-acidifying substitutent, can be
ring closed efficiently producing N-alkyl-aziridines.71
Aziridines can be obtained from alkenes using iodine isocyanate72 or iodine azide.73 The product from
the latter reaction can be converted into the aziridine via reduction, or into an azirine via elimination of
hydrogen iodide and pyrolysis.74
N-Tosyl-aziridines can be obtained directly from alkenes by reaction with Chloramine T (TsN(Cl)Na),75
or directly from sulfonamides using t-butyl hypochlorite with sodium iodide76 or with iodosylbenzene and
CuI.77
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
601
Aziridines can also be prepared by addition of nitrenes to alkenes,78 or by the use of nitrogen-transfer
agents analogous to epoxidising agents.79
Addition to imines is a further obvious way in which to construct an aziridine, as illustrated
below.80
Azirines can be synthesised, enantioselectively if required, using a natural alkaloid as base, from the
O-tosyl derivatives of the oximes of 1,3-keto-esters; in this synthesis the carbon is the nucleophilic centre
and it is the nitrogen that is attacked, with departure of tosylate.81
A related reaction using α-benzotriazolyl-oximes is particularly useful because the benzotriazolyl unit
in the product can be displaced by nucleophiles.82
Intramolecular addition, catalysed by copper, produces bicyclic aziridines effectively from
sulfonamides.83
602
Heterocyclic Chemistry
30.5.2 Azetidines and β-Lactams
Azetidines can be obtained by cyclisations of 3-halo-amines, but yields are generally not as good as those
for the formation of aziridines. The generation of the bifunctional precursors for cyclisation to azetidines
has been achieved in a number of ways.84
Synthesis of 1-azabicyclo[1.1.0]butane, which contains both a four-membered and two three-membered
nitrogen-containing rings (!), follows the general route described above.85 As one would anticipate, ringopening reactions, one of which is illustrated, lead to products with an azetidine unit, rather than an aziridine
unit.
Many methods have been developed for β-lactam synthesis,57,86 including cyclisation of the corresponding amino acids. The most widely used methods are two-component couplings,47,87 which occur via concerted cycloaddition or two-step mechanisms. Another simple route to 3-functionalised azetidinones is the
reaction of aziridine-2-carboxylic acid sodium salt with oxalyl chloride or thionyl chloride.88
30.5.3 Pyrrolidines
A very neat method for the synthesis of pyrrolidines does not require a difunctionalised starting material,
but relies on the Hofmann–Löffler–Freytag reaction89 – which is a radical process – to introduce the second
functional group. The six-membered size of the cyclic transition state leads selectively to a 1,4-halo-amine,
and thence to pyrrolidines.
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
603
The cycloaddition of azomethine ylides to alkenes is another elegant entry to pyrrolidines. The required
1,3-dipoles can be produced in a number of ways; the example below is one of the most simple, wherein
a trimethylsilylmethylamine, an aldehyde and the alkene are simply heated in tetrahydrofuran.90
Normally, 5-endo-trig-cyclisations are disfavoured geometrically (Baldwin’s rules), however formation
of pyrrolidines does take place with tosylamide anion as nucleophile in a situation where 5-exo-tet-attack
at a trihalomethyl group is inhibited electrostatically.91
In another example, 5-endo-trig-cyclisation of a 2-(2-tosylaminoethyl)acrylate occurs with a phenyl
ester, but 5-exo-trig with an ethyl ester: the relative leaving abilities of groups from the 5-exo-trigintermediate allows the 5-endo-trig-pathway to dominate (TsN− > EtO− but PhO− > TsN−) rationalizes this
dichotomy.
30.5.4 Piperidines92
Closure of 5-halo-amines by nucleophilic displacements of halogen, is complemented by the conversion
of N-chloro-pent-4-enylamines into 3-chloropiperidines by exposure to tetra-n-butylammonium iodide.93
The process is believed to involve conversion to an N-iodo-amine, which serves as an electrophilic source
of iodine, cyclisation to a 2-(iodomethyl)-pyrrolidine, ring closure to a bicyclic aziridinium ion and ring
opening via attack by chloride to produce the six-membered heterocycle.
604
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A construction of functionalised glutarimides relies on the doubly nucleophilic dianion that can be generated by C- and N-deprotonation, from a 2-tosyl-acetamide.94 Regioselective reduction to a piperidone can
be achieved via formation of the stabilized enolate.
A particularly useful general method for the synthesis of saturated nitrogen- and oxygen-containing
partially unsaturated heterocycles, from 5-membered to medium ring-sized,95 is the Grubbs olefin metathesis96 applied, for example, to acyclic dialkenyl-amines, as illustrated by syntheses of a dihydropyrrole97
and a tetrahydropyridine.98
The superacid HF-SbF5 can also bring about cyclisation of N-protected bis(allyl)-amines, producing
4-fluoropiperidines.99
30.5.5 Saturated Oxygen Heterocycles
The most widely used method for the preparation of epoxides involves oxidation of an alkene by a
peracid,100 via a direct one-step transfer of an oxygen atom. More highly (alkyl) substituted alkenes react
fastest showing that electronic effects are more important than steric effects in this reaction. Steric effects
do, however, control the facial selectivity of epoxidation; conversely hydrogen-bonding groups, such as
OH and NH, can direct the reaction to the syn face.
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
605
Several other direct oxygen-transfer reagents have been developed of which by far the most important
is Sharpless’ reagent – a mixture of a hydroperoxide with titanium isopropoxide and a dialkyl tartrate.101
The structure of the reagent is complex, but it reacts readily with alkenes containing polar groups, for
example allylic alcohols, which can coordinate the metal. The most important feature of this process is that
when homochiral tartrate esters are used, a highly ordered asymmetric reactive site results, leading in turn
to high optical induction in the product.
Epoxides and oxetanes can also be prepared by cyclisation of 1,2-halohydrins and 1,3-haloalcohols.102
Oxetanes have often been prepared by the Paternò–Büchi reaction,103 in which a compound containing
a carbon–carbon double bond cycloadds to an aldehyde or ketone under the influence of light.104
30.5.6 Saturated Sulfur Heterocycles
Thiiranes can be prepared by cyclisation of 2-halo-thiols, but the most common method is via reaction of
an epoxide with thiocyanate,105 thiourea,106 a phosphine sulfide or with dimethylthioformamide.107
Thietanes, tetrahydrothiophenes and tetrahydrothiapyrans can all be prepared by the reaction of the
appropriate 1,ω-dihalide with sulfide anion.
606
Heterocyclic Chemistry
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Jankowski, K. and Daigle, J.-Y., Can. J. Chem., 1971, 49, 2594.
Kozikowski, A. P., Ishida, H. and Isobe, K., J. Org. Chem., 1979, 44, 2788; Stamm, H. and Weiss, R., Synthesis, 1986, 392 and 395; Lehmann, J.
and Wamhoff, H., Synthesis, 1973, 546.
Kishore Kumar, G. D. and Baskaran, S., Synlett, 2004, 1719.
Hou, X.-L., Fan, R.-H. and Dai, L.-X., J. Org. Chem., 2002, 5295.
Wu, J., Sun, X., Sun, W. and Ye, S., Synlett, 2006, 2489.
Bera, M. and Roy, S., Tetrahedron Lett., 2007, 48, 7144.
Ungureanu, I., Klotz, P., Schoenfelder, A. and Mann, A., Tetrahedron Lett., 2001, 42, 6087.
‘Methyleneaziridines: unusual vehicles for organic synthesis’, Shipman, M., Synlett, 2006, 3205.
Snyder, H. R., Stewart, J. M. and Ziegler, J. B., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1947, 69, 2672.
Trost, B. M. and Ziman, S. D., J. Org. Chem., 1973, 38, 932.
Clark, R. D. and Helmkamp, G. K., J. Org. Chem., 1964, 29, 1316; Lee, K. and Kim, Y. H., Synth. Commun., 1999, 29, 1241.
‘The Ramberg-Bäcklund reaction’, Taylor, R. J. K. and Casy, G., Org. React., 2003, 62, 357.
Ewin, R. A., Loughlin, W. A., Pyke, S. M., Morales, J. C. and Taylor, R. J. K., Synlett, 1993, 660.
De Shong, P., Kell, D. A. and Sidler, D. R., J. Org. Chem., 1985, 50, 2309; De Shong, P., Sidler, D. R., Kell, D. A. and Aronson, N. N., Tetrahedron
Lett., 1985, 26, 3747.
Bhuller, P., Gilchrist, T. L. and Maddocks, P., Synthesis, 1997, 271.
Bonneau, R., Liu, M. T. H. and Lapouyade, R., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1989, 1547.
Schmitz, E. and Ohme, R., Chem. Ber., 1962, 95, 795.
Padwa, A. and Eastman, D., J. Org. Chem., 1969, 34, 2728.
Adam, W., Asensio, G., Curci, R., González-Núñez, M. E. and Mello, R., J. Org. Chem., 1992, 57, 953.
Murray, R. W. and Jeyaraman, R., J. Org. Chem., 1985, 50, 2847.
Towson, J. C., Weismiller, M. C., Lal, G. S., Sheppard, A. C. and Davis, F. A., Org. Synth., 1990, 69, 158.
‘Applications of oxaziridines in organic synthesis’, Davis, F. A. and Sheppard, A. C., Tetrahedron, 1989, 45, 5703; ‘Asymmetric hydroxylation of
enolates with N-sulfonyloxaziridines’, Davis, F. A. and Chen, B.-C., Chem. Rev., 1992, 9, 919.
Davis, F. A., Sheppard, A. C., Chen, B.-C. and Haque, M. S., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1990, 112, 6679.
Saturated and Partially Unsaturated Heterocyclic Compounds Reactions and Synthesis
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
607
Huynh, C., Derguini-Boumechal, F. and Linstrumelle, G., Tetrahedron Lett., 1979, 20, 1503.
Couty, F., David, O. and Drouillat, B., Tetrahedron Lett., 2007, 48, 9180.
‘The organic chemistry of β-lactams’, Georg, G. I., Ed., VCH, New York, 1993.
Baldwin, J. E., Edwards, A. J., Farthing, C. N. and Russell, A. T., Synlett, 1993, 49; Baldwin, J. E., Adlington, R. M., Godfrey, C. R. A., Gollins,
D. W., Smith, M. L. and Russel, A. T., ibid., 51.
Clauss, K., Grimm, D. and Prossel, G., Justus Liebigs Ann. Chem., 1974, 539.
Durham, T. B. and Miller, M. J., J. Org. Chem., 2003, 68, 27.
‘Recent advances in β-lactone chemistry’, Pommur, A. and Pons, J.-M., Synthesis, 1993, 441.
Arnold, L. D., Kalantar, T. H. and Vederas, J. C., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1985, 107, 7105.
Jung, M. E. and Blum, R. B., Tetrahedron Lett., 1977, 3791.
Vedejs, E. and Moss, W. O., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1993, 115, 1607.
Hodgson, D. M., Humphreys, P. G. and Ward, J. G., Org. Lett., 2005, 7, 1153.
Yamauchi, Y., Katagiri, T. and Uneyama, K., Org. Lett., 2002, 4, 173.
Galli, C., Illuminati, G., Mandolini, L. and Tamborra, P., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1977, 99, 2591.
‘Effective molarities for intramolecular reactions’, Kirby, A. J., Adv. Phys. Org. Chem., 1980, 17, 183.
Allen, C. F. H., Spangler, F. W. and Webster, E. R., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. IV, 1963, 433.
‘Serine derivatives in organic synthesis’, Kulkarni, Y. S., Aldrichimica Acta, 1999, 32, 18.
Bew, S. P., Hughes, D. L., Palmer, N. J., Savic, V., Soapi, K. M. and Wilson, M. A., Chem. Commun., 2006, 4338.
Hassner, A., Lorber, M. E. and Heathcock, C., J. Org. Chem., 1967, 32, 540.
Fowler, F. W., Hassner, A. and Levy, L. A., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1967, 89, 2077; Hassner, A. and Fowler, F. W., J. Org. Chem., 1968, 33, 2686.
Smolinsky, G., J. Org. Chem., 1962, 27, 3557.
Jeong, J. U., Tao, B., Sagasser, I., Henninges, H. and Sharpless, K. B., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1998, 120, 6844; Minakata, S., Kano, D., Fukuoka, R.,
Oderaotoshi, Y. and Komatsu, M., Heterocycles, 2003, 60, 289.
Minakata, S., Morino, Y., Oderaotoshi, Y. and Komatsu, M., Chem. Commun., 2006, 3337.
Chang, J. W. W., Ton, T. M. U., Zhang, Z., Xu, Y. and Chan, P. W. H., Tetrahedron Lett., 2009, 50, 161.
‘Nitrenes’, Ed. Lwowski, W., Interscience, 1970.
Atkinson, R. S., Coogan, M. P. and Cornell, C. L., J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1993, 1215.
Li, A.-H., Dai, L.-X. and Hou, X.-L., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1996, 2725; Zhou, Y.-G., Li, A.-H., Hou, X.-L. and Dai, L.-X., Tetrahedron
Lett., 1997, 38, 7225.
Verstappen, M. M. H., Ariaans, G. J. A. and Zwannenburg, B., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1996, 118, 8491.
Katritzky, A. R., Wang, M., Wilkerson, C. R. and Yang, H., J. Org. Chem., 2003, 68, 9105.
Dauban, P. and Dodd, R. H., Org. Lett., 2000, 2, 2327.
Wadsworth, D. H., Org. Synth., Coll. Vol. VI, 1988, 75; Freeman, J. P. and Mondron, P. J., Synthesis, 1974, 894; Szmuszkovicz, J., Kane, M. P.,
Laurian, L. G., Chidester, C. G. and Scahill, T. A., J. Org. Chem., 1981, 46, 3562.
Dave, P. R., J. Org. Chem., 1996, 61, 5453; Hayashi, K., Sato, C., Kumagai, T., Tamai, S., Abe, T. and Nagao, Y., Tetrahedron Lett., 1999, 40,
3761.
‘Synthesis of B-lactams’, Mukerjee, A. K. and Srivastava, R. C., Synthesis, 1973, 327.
Gluchowski, C., Cooper, L., Bergbreiter, D. E. and Newcomb, M., J. Org. Chem., 1980, 45, 3413.
Sharma, S. D., Kanwar, S. and Rajpoot, S., J. Heterocycl. Chem., 2006, 43, 11.
‘Cyclisation of N-halogenated amines. (The Hofmann–Loffler reaction)’, Wolff, M. E., Chem. Rev., 1963, 63, 55.
Torii, S., Okumoto, H. and Genba, A., Chem. Lett., 1996, 747.
Ichikawa, J., Lapointe, G. and Iwai, Y., Chem. Commun., 2007, 2698.
‘Stereoselective synthesis of piperidines’, Laschat, S. and Dickner, T., Synthesis, 2000, 1781.
Noack, M. and Göttlich, R., Eur. J. Org. Chem., 2002, 3171.
Tsai, M.-R., Hung, R.-C., Chen, B.-F., Cheng, C.-C. and Chang, N.-C., Tetrahedron, 2004, 60, 10637.
‘Formation of medium-ring heterocycles by diene and enyne metathesis’, Chattopadhyaya, S. K., Karmakar, S., Biswas, T., Majumdar, K. C.,
Rahaman, H. and Roy, B., Tetrahedron, 2007, 63, 3919.
‘Evolution and applications of second-generation ruthenium olefin metathesis cartalysts’, Schrodi, Y. and Pederson, R. L., Aldrichimica Acta, 2007,
40, 45.
Ferguson, M. L., O’Leary, D. J. and Grubbs, R. H., Org.Synth., 2003, 80, 85.
Rutjes, F. P. J. T. and Schoemaker, H. E., Tetrahedron Lett., 1997, 38, 677.
Vardelle, E., Gamba-Sanchez, D., Martin-Mingot, A., Jouannetaud, M.-P., Thibaudeau, S. and Marrot, J., Chem. Commun., 2008, 1473.
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McManis, J. and Wolak, R., J. Org. Chem., 1986, 51, 1649.
Katsuki, T. and Sharpless, K. B., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1980, 102, 5974; ‘Asymmetric epoxidation of allylic alcohols: the Sharpless reaction’,
Pfenninger, A., Synthesis, 1986, 89; ‘Mechanism of asymmetric epoxidation; 1. Kinetics’, Woodward, S. S., Finn, M. G. and Sharpless, K. B.,
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1991, 113, 106; ‘2. Catalyst structure’, Finn, M. G. and Sharpless, K. B., ibid., 113.
Searles, S. and Gortatowski, M. J., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1953, 75, 3030.
Paternò, E. and Chieffi, G., Gazz. Chim. Ital., 1909, 39, 341; Büchi, G., Inman, C. G. and Lipinski, E. S., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1954, 76, 4327; ‘Stereoselective intermolecular [2 + 2]-photocycloaddition reactions and their application in synthesis’, Bach, T., Synthesis, 1998, 683.
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Bouda, H., Borredon, M. E., Delmas, M. and Gaset, A., Synth. Commun., 1987, 17, 943; Iranpoor, N. and Kazemi, F., Synthesis, 1996, 821.
Bouda, H., Borredon, M. E., Delmas, M. and Gaset, A., Synth. Commun., 1989, 19, 491.
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Y. and Itabashi, K., Synthesis, 1986, 779.
31
Special Topics
31.1
Synthesis of Ring-Fluorinated Heterocycles
This section deals only with compounds where fluorine is attached to the heterocyclic ring. Compounds
with fluorine in a benzo-fused ring or in side-chains, for example as trifluoromethyl, are usually prepared
by methods similar to those used for standard analogues and thus do not require special treatment.1 Several
general reviews of organofluorine chemistry are available.2
The syntheses of ring-fluorinated heterocycles are collected together in this section as a ‘special topic’
as they are significantly different to those of other halo-heterocycles. Fluorine substituents are also much
more important than the other halogens as stable modifying groups in drugs and are also of interest in other
areas such as PET (31.2.3) and as very good leaving groups for nucleophilic substitutions in azoles and
azines (3.3.2). Such fluorine-containing compounds are only occasionally prepared by the standard methods
for the other halides, i.e. direct halogenation or replacement of oxy groups, in fact the latter is almost
unknown for fluorine.
(Direct fluorinations with elemental fluorine and other powerful fluorinating agents can be carried out,
but they are, to say the least, inconvenient. They are also potentially very hazardous for the inexperienced
chemist and are best left to a fluorine specialist. Such reactions are, of course, carried out industrially, but
using dedicated special equipment with rigorous safety control.)
31.1.1 Electrophilic Fluorination
CAUTION: Both fluorine gas and some other electrophilic fluorinating agents are highly toxic and may
react violently with organic materials. Hydrogen fluoride, a common by-product of electrophilic fluorinations, is highly corrosive.
The reaction of organic materials with neat fluorine gas is very vigorous and can result in explosions.
Fluorine diluted with an inert gas (nitrogen or helium) is much safer, although even this can, for example,
ignite paper, even at very low concentrations.
Other powerful fluorinating agents, such as trifluoromethyl hypofluorite, perchloryl fluoride and acetyl
hypofluorite (CF3OF, FClO3, AcOF) have been used successfully, but are not easy to obtain, are toxic and
the last two are intrinsically explosive. Some newer, milder, but more limited, fluorinating agents are discussed later in this section.
Direct reaction with fluorine, can be carried out successfully and selectively on robust electron-rich ring
systems and has been used commercially for the synthesis of 5-fluorouracil, an important anti-cancer drug.
This reaction proceeds via 5,6-addition of F and the solvent, elimination of the 6-substituent occurring on
heating the reaction mixture.3
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
Similarly, direct fluorination is a useful method for oxy- and amino-purines,4 but yields are often only
modest.
With other electron-rich systems, such as pyrrole and thiophene, the reaction may be difficult to control
and polyfluorinated and/or non-aromatic products are often formed.
Pyridines react with fluorine by formation of N-fluoropyridinium fluorides, which are unstable above
0 °C. These can be converted, by exchange with sodium salts, into more stable salts, such as tetrafluoroborates, some of which are commercially available as mild electrophilic fluorinating agents for highly reactive
substrates, such as enolates.5 Addition of N-fluoropyridinium tetrafluoroborates to excess triethylamine
results in the formation of the 2-fluoropyridine(s), via a carbene intermediate.6
Reaction of pyridine with iodine fluoride (a mixture of F2 and I2) gives 2-fluoropyridine directly, but this
involves an addition-elimination mechanism on N-iodopyridinium fluoride, rather than electrophilic
fluorination.7
Several milder electrophilic fluorinating agents are commercially available, the most notable being
various N-fluoro-amides or N-fluoro quaternary salts, examples being NFSI and Selectfluor™.
These can be used for direct C-fluorination8 or reaction with lithio-heterocycles or other organometallic
derivatives. In a process for the synthesis of a 5-fluorothiazole using a lithio derivative, although the yield
was moderate, the reaction could be carried out on a large scale.9
Special Topics
611
Cesium fluoroxysulfate (CsSO4F) is moderately stable, although potentially explosive, and is particularly
useful for ipso-fluorination of stannanes and boronic acids.10
Ipso-replacement of a carboxylic acid group can also be carried out.11
Electrochemical (anodic) fluorinations can be carried out, but may be difficult to control and overfluorination and/or fluorination of substituents often results. The mechanism involves conversion of the
substrates into radical cations, which are then trapped by fluoride, rather than electrophilic fluorination.12
Again, the method is more suited to robust systems such as pyrimidinones and purines.
31.1.2 The Balz–Schiemann Reaction
The Balz–Schiemann reaction, the classic synthesis of fluoro-aromatic compounds, involves diazotisation
of an aromatic amine, isolation of the diazonium fluoroborate or hexafluorophosphate, then thermal decomposition of the dry salt, usually diluted with sand for safety. It is a useful method, with application to a
number of heterocyclic systems, for example methyl 3-aminothiophene-2-carboxylate.13
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
An industrial method involves diazotisation in anhydrous HF. This hazardous method has advantages
for large-scale production, but is not suitable for normal laboratory-scale work!
A variation on the standard reaction avoids isolation of the diazonium salt by its generation, under
anhydrous conditions, at its decomposition temperature. The only heterocyclic example so far described is
the preparation of 3-fluoroquinoline,14 but the method could no doubt be applied to other systems.
A method using polyvinylpyridinium hydrofluoride (PVPHF), as fluoride source, at low temperature was
suitable for the relatively sensitive 2-deoxy-nucleosides.15 This low temperature reaction was probably
successful due to the instability, i.e. high reactivity, of diazonium salts at the α-position of azines, and may
not be general for other heterocycles.
31.1.3 Halogen Exchange (Halex) Reactions
These reactions, involving nucleophilic displacement of other halogens by fluoride anion are important
industrially and of some use in the laboratory for electron-deficient rings. The exchange/equilibrium of 19F
with 18F is of use in PET (see 31.2.3). Nitro is also a good leaving group for this process in a number of
systems: purines (27.5), pyridines (8.3.2) and 1,2,4-triazoles (29.1.1.2).
31.1.4 Ring Synthesis Incorporating Fluorinated Starting Materials
The most promising approach for the efficient preparation of fluoro-heterocycles is by ring synthesis from
fluorine-containing starting materials and intermediates.
CAUTION: Monofluoroacetates are intermediates for some literature syntheses of fluorinated
heterocycles. Fluoroacetic acid and its derivatives, such as fluoroacetamide and ethyl fluoroacetate, and
compounds which could be metabolically converted into fluoroacetate, such as 2-fluoroethanol, are
extremely toxic and have no antidote. A lethal dose of the acid in humans may be as low as 100 mg. They
should be avoided if at all possible, but if their use is essential, they must only be used under rigorous
control.
There are, perhaps surprisingly, many complex polyfluorinated starting materials available commercially
and some apparently quite exotic reagents and intermediates can be easily (and often cheaply) prepared
from these. These intermediates may simply be the fluorinated analogues of standard intermediates,
for example, 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds or their equivalents, such as an iminium salt synthon for
fluoromalonaldehyde.16
Special Topics
613
A related method giving oxy compounds involves displacement of the ‘activated’ fluorine in
2,3-difluoroacrylates.17
The other approach, with great potential, involves cyclisation reactions of polyfluoro compounds, with
in situ aromatisation via loss of one or more fluorines. The reaction mode involves nucleophilic addition
to gem-difluoro-methylidene intermediates. This moiety is highly susceptible to nucleophilic addition to
the fluorine-bearing carbon, even in the absence of other activation. A transient intermediate anion is
thought to be stabilised by hyperconjugation and inductive effects from the two β-fluorines, this being a
much more favourable situation than an anion α to the fluorines.18
Reactions involving quinone methide intermediates do not need this special activation, but the aromatisation follows a comparable route. The synthesis of 4-fluoroquinolines via reaction of 2-trifluoromethylaniline
with enolates illustrates, in part, the gem-difluoromethylidene concept. Here elimination of hydrogen fluoride by the enolate acting as a base, initiates the sequence, generating a highly reactive quinone methide.19
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Heterocyclic Chemistry
Intramolecular addition of carbon nucleophiles can also be used. In this case a benzylic anion brings
about the first fluoride elimination.20
5-Endo-trig-cyclisations, which are normally difficult, are successful with assistance from ‘difluoro
activation’ as demonstrated by the synthesis of the 2-fluoroindole shown below. The corresponding 3-unsubstituted 2-fluoroindole, benzofurans and benzothiophenes can also be prepared in similar yields.21 The
versatile, intermediate aniline, can also be converted into the corresponding isonitrile, which, in turn, can
be used to generate a lithio-quinoline, which reacts well with a variety of electrophiles.22 The isonitrile can
also be reacted with Grignard reagents to give 2-alkyl-quinolines and a similar addition to the corresponding nitrile leads to isoquinolines.23
Special Topics
615
It is worth noting that these (5-endo-trig) cyclisations also occur readily in simple aliphatic systems,
giving dihydro-heterocycles.21
Another cyclisation of this type gives a dihydroisoquinoline, which aromatises in situ, by elimination of
sulfinate, if potassium hydride is used as base. The intermediate dihydroisoquinoline can be isolated if NaH
is used as base.24
Difluoromethylene moieties can be incorporated into stable reagents and intermediates where, eventually,
loss of one of the fluorines results from a key aromatisation step.25
gem-Difluoro-dihydro-heterocycles can be isolated in some cases, such as in the iodosilyl-ketone reaction
shown below.26
Dipolar additions onto perfluoro-alkenes is followed by aromatisation via two fluoride/halide
eliminations.27
616
31.2
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Isotopically Labelled Heterocycles28
The preparation of heterocycles containing isotopically labelled atoms, either in the ring or as substituents,
may be required for a number of purposes, for example mechanistic studies of reactions or biosynthesis,
spectroscopic studies or for medical research and diagnosis.
[NOTE: The correct term for an individual isotope of an element, for example 13C, is ‘nuclide’, but the
word ‘isotope’ is in loose common usage. The use of ‘isotope’, without further qualification, is equivalent
to saying that ‘1-butene is an isomer ’, without saying of what.]
The nuclides that are commonly used in heterocyclic systems are:
1. Stable: 2H (D), 13C, 15N
2. Relatively long-lived, beta-emitting, radionuclides: 3H (T) (t½ 12.3 years), 14C (t½ 5,700 years)
3. Short-lived, positron-emitting, radionuclides: 18F (t½ 110 min), 11C (t½ 20.4 min).
31.2.1 Hazards Due to Radionuclides
3
H and 14C present a relatively low external risk, as the beta radiation is very easy to shield, so normal laboratory techniques can be used, with appropriate containment. However, ingestion or inhalation of any
radioactive material, even the weak beta emitters, is very hazardous. The short-lived positron-emitting
nuclides generate intense gamma radiation, which requires heavy shielding with automated remote
handling.
31.2.2 Synthesis
The syntheses used for labelled compounds are often not those that would be considered the best from a
purely chemical point of view, but those that use the expensive, and possibly hazardous, nuclide most
efficiently and safely.
[NOTE: Quoting yields in this area is more complex than usual. Normal chemical yields can be given,
but for radionuclides, the radiochemical yield, which shows the efficiency of incorporation of the nuclide
into the final product, is more meaningful. The situation is more complex for the very short-lived (PET)
nuclides, where the yields have to be corrected for the very substantial decay that occurs throughout the
whole process.]
Deuterium and tritium can be introduced at certain positions of heterocyclic rings by acid- or base-catalysed exchange of hydrogen, or protonolysis of organometallics, and this has long been used in mechanistic
studies.
Incorporation of labelled atoms into and onto heterocyclic rings can also be carried out via standard
heterocyclic ring syntheses using commercially available labelled organic building blocks, but the range is
limited and prices generally high. More commonly, a synthesis is devised that uses simple, and relatively
cheap, labelled inorganic components. Common 13C or 14C sources are cyanide and carbon dioxide (as, for
example, from barium carbonate) and 15N from ammonium salts and nitrite.
A common approach is to take a final product or key intermediate and degrade it to a compound that
can be built up again by insertion of the labelled atom. The chemical yield of the degradation is not important, the most important factor being the efficient use of the replacement nuclide. A nice example of this
is a synthesis of 14C-2 sumatriptan.29
Special Topics
617
The synthesis of 15N-3 uridine triacetate was carried out by direct exchange of the nitrogen isotopes, via
nitration of N-3, then reaction with 15NH3, via a double nucleophilic replacement of nitramide (NH2NO2)
(14.9.2.2). Note the modified conditions for efficient use of the labelled reagent.30
A modified Dimroth rearrangement (27.1.1.2) allowed an efficient labelling of N-1 of adenosine, via
initial exocyclic introduction of the labelled nitrogen by nucleophilic substitution at C-6.31
31.2.3 PET (Positron Emission Tomography)32
One of the most significant medical applications of radiolabelled compounds is for PET scans. These are
important diagnostic and research tools that can be used to study the distribution of drugs or biomolecules
in the body, and for imaging of organs.
Positrons are the antimatter counterparts of electrons and are emitted from a number of low-atomicnumber radionuclides. The procedure begins with administration of a compound containing a very
618
Heterocyclic Chemistry
short-lived, positron-emitting, nuclide to the patient. The emitted positron undergoes matter–antimatter
annihilation with an electron, which happens within a very short distance, generating two gamma photons
at 180 ° to one another, which can be detected synchronously outside the body. An array of gamma detectors gives a 3D image of the distribution of the labelled compound. The dose of radiation to the patient is
very small – about the same as an X-ray. The chemist is more at risk than the patient!
The nuclides 18F and 11C are by far the most commonly used positron emitters for complex organic
molecules. Unfortunately, from the heterocyclic point of view, 13N has a half-life that is just too short
(10 min) for sensible organic chemistry.
31.2.3.1 Synthesis of Compounds for PET
This is a challenging area for heterocyclic synthesis, as the very short half-lives of these nuclides give rise
to two problems – the need for very rapid synthesis and purification, and the high gamma emission, which
requires the use of remote handling. The amounts of radioactive materials produced are minute (submicrogram quantities); it should be borne in mind that one nanogram of 11C is about as radioactive as one
gram of radium.
Another unique requirement is that the radionuclides themselves must be prepared by nuclear reactions,
brought about by bombardment of a target of 14N or 18O, usually in the presence of a co-reactant, with high
energy (18 MeV) protons in a cyclotron. Some very simple reagents can then be prepared from the initial
products.
Because of the very short half-lives, all the work, including the nuclear synthesis, must be done close
enough to the patient – often in the same building – that sufficient activity to carry out the procedure remains
in the sample when it is used. This is a more acute requirement for 11C than for 18F. In the former case,
87% of the material is lost in one hour, and 98% in two hours.
The development of an efficient synthesis of labelled phosgene was the main determinant in a synthesis
of 11C-2 thymine.33
Simple reactions are best, but the complex conversion carried out using sequential enzymic transformations for the synthesis of labelled 5-hydroxytryptophan, for use in neuroendocrine tumour imaging, is
notable.34
Special Topics
619
The nuclide 18F can be introduced using a number of standard methods using fluorine, HF or fluoride
anion. In contrast to normal chemistry, 18F2 (as a dilute mixture in argon or neon) is a convenient reagent
in the PET context, being prepared directly by proton bombardment of 18O2 in argon, or deuteron bombardment of neon. An example of its use is the preparation of labelled 5-fluorouracil and its ribosides by direct
electrophilic fluorination.35
18
F is often introduced by nucleophilic displacement using potassium fluoride with the cryptand Kryptofix
2.2.2. The substrates can be halides, but nitro and quaternary ammonium are the preferred leaving groups
in azines and purines.36 Such reactions are standard, but apparently un-activated substrates, such as the
nitro-oxindole shown below, have also been used successfully.37
31.3
Bioprocesses in Heterocyclic Chemistry38
The use of biological methods has a small, but significant niche in synthetic heterocyclic chemistry, being
used both on a research scale and for fine-chemicals production. The processes may use isolated enzymes
or whole microorganisms, the main reactions being oxidations of a heterocyclic nucleus or of side-chains,
but other reaction types are also used, for example enzymatic catalysis has been used to ribosylate purines
and related bases by reaction with a 7-alkylated nucleoside.39
A particular advantage of biological methods is their potential regio-, stereo- and enantioselectivity,
which may not be attainable using chemical reagents. On the other hand, non-selective reactions have their
uses: for example, the subjection of natural products to non-selective oxidations will generate a series of
starting materials for the preparation of a wider range of analogues for biological evaluation.
620
Heterocyclic Chemistry
The oxidation of pyridines to pyridones40 and the selective oxidation of a side-chain in alkyl-pyridines
and other azines, have been well studied.41
The enantioselective cis-dihydroxylation42 of benzothiophenes and benzofurans in the heterocyclic ring,
by Pseudomonas putida, is analogous to well-known conversions of simple benzenoid compounds,43 but
in the heterocyclic context, hydroxyl groups introduced at an α-carbon easily epimerise. Indole gives
indoxyl probably via dehydration of an intermediate 2,3-diol. In contrast, cis-dihydroxylation of quinolines,
or of 2-phenylpyridines, takes place selectively in the benzene ring.44
The introduction of an amino acid side-chain onto 4-, 5-, 6- and 7-azaindoles by an enzyme-catalysed
alkylation with serine is an impressive demonstration of the power of biological methods.45
31.4
Green Chemistry
‘Green chemistry’ is currently a fashionable topic, and a variation – ‘sustainable chemistry’ – is also in
vogue. However, although its aims are laudable, the term has been overused and frequently abused, often
as a tag to aid publication and grant applications. Green chemistry can be simply and accurately, but
broadly, defined as chemistry that can be carried out in a relatively environmentally friendly or benign
manner; alternatively, carrying out a chemical process in the most environmentally friendly way that is
reasonably achievable, as no chemical reaction or process can be totally ‘green’. ‘Official’ checklist definitions have been stated and may include aspects of reaction safety, which is actually separate and more
important,46 but common sense is more useful than a clipboard in this area.
Atom economy47 – the incorporation of as much of the starting materials as possible into the product
– is a useful concept, but it should not overshadow the whole.
No reaction can be green in its own right until all the aspects of the process in which it is involved have
been analysed, which includes complete analysis of the ‘green-ness’ of the origin of starting materials and
reagents.
Many aspects of green chemistry have been in use for years, because efficient chemical processes with
minimum waste are also economically preferable, and in industry are also confined by legal controls on
polluting practices, at least in some countries.
31.5
Ionic Liquids48
The development of ionic liquids (ILs) was a significant addition to the range of chemical tools and is of
particular interest here because many of them are heterocycles.49 The name is self-explanatory and can
include a vast range of types, but is usually taken to mean salts that are liquid at or slightly above room
Special Topics
621
temperature and are thus sometimes referred to as ‘room temperature ionic liquids’ (RTILs). They are either
protic or, more usually quaternary, salts of organic bases, most prominently 1,3-dialkyl-imidazolium salts,
although pyridinium and higher azolium salts are also used. More diverse types are used industrially.
Somewhat surprisingly, some types can be distilled in vacuo.50
Their normal laboratory applications are as specific solvents, catalysts and phase tags (5.1.5.2).
Typical heterocyclic ionic liquids
Their abbreviations, for use in reaction schemes, are not universally defined, but amongst the common
styles are, for example, 1-n-butyl-3-methylimidazolium chloride = [BMIM][Cl] or [bmim][Cl].
The particular advantages of ILs are that they are good, but selective, solvents with very low vapour
pressures, low flammability and high temperature stability, although the latter two features depend on the
anion. Significantly, their properties can be fine-tuned by variations of the core, alkyl groups and anions.
The anion is chemically significant – halides, which are good complex-forming anions with Lewis acids,
and the triflimide (Tf2N−), which is very poorly coordinating, are extremes and can have a major effect on
reactivity.51
ILs have, unfortunately, become strongly associated with green chemistry to such an extent that merely
using an IL as solvent is often claimed to make a reaction ‘green’, even when the work-up involves dilution
with water and extraction with large amounts of normal solvents! The main claim to green-ness for ILs is
their low volatility, in contrast to common solvents. However, although this gives scope for them to be
used in green processes, they can have some very ‘un-green’ features. The fact that they are more complex
structures than the usual solvents means that significant chemistry is required for their preparation, and
therefore they start with a green deficit, which has to be counterbalanced by significant gains in other areas,
particularly efficient recycling/re-use. When certain counter ions, such as nitrate, are present, they can
present a significant fire hazard52 and many ionic liquids have significant water solubility and significant
toxicity to aquatic organisms.53
While it can be questioned how green ILs are, they are certainly useful chemically. They have
numerous uses as Lewis or protic acid catalysts, for example aluminium chloride in [emim][Cl] is a
superior catalyst for the Friedel–Crafts acylation of indoles bearing electron-withdrawing groups and of
azaindoles.54
Ionic liquid bisulfate salts are good catalysts for the esterification of acids with neopentanol, where the
starting materials are soluble in the ionic liquid, but the ester insoluble, allowing an easy isolation of the
product.55
Both pyridinium and imidazolium ionic liquids have been used as solvents for palladium-catalysed
reactions, such as the Suzuki coupling, but only the use of 1-(3-cyanopropyl)pyridinium triflimide salt
(mp −64.5 °C) allows very efficient retention and recycling of the palladium catalyst.56
31.6 Applications and Occurrences of Heterocycles
Apart from their academic interest and occurrences in natural substances (Chapter 32), heterocycles find
extensive applications in industrial and fine chemicals, medicines (Chapter 33), analysis, agriculture, and
in many day-to-day activities and in many technological fields.57
622
Heterocyclic Chemistry
31.6.1 Toxicity
This not really an ‘application’ of heterocycles, but is essential knowledge for the practical chemist. The
occurrence of explosive hazards is also of major importance (see 5.4 and 29.1.1.5).
The hazards of all common solvents and reagents are well known and those of new materials can
often be inferred from structural properties and similarities. For example, toxic effects are to be
expected from certain classes of heterocycle, particularly those that are subject to easy nucleophilic
replacement of halogen and therefore are alkylating agents in their effect on biomolecules. For example,the
fungicide davicil (2,3,5,6-tetrachloro-4-methylsulfonylpyridine) and the useful intermediate 5-bromo-2,4dichloropyrimidine, are allergenic substances, the latter very strongly so.
However, structures do not always warn of toxicity, so vigilance must always be exercised – as in drugs,
minor structural variations may lead to large changes in biological activity. These unexpected toxic effects
are usually discovered by their actions being observed on the chemists who have first made them! An
example is the apparently innocuous-looking heterocycle (related to the anti-psychotic drug loxapine) ‘CR
gas’, a powerful lachrymator, and a severe and very unpleasant skin irritant. It has been developed, controversially, as a riot control agent. (It is not, of course, a ‘gas’.)
The group of fused triazoles shown below were implicated, although the precise agent was not established, as chloracnegens, with similar effects to the notorious (heterocyclic) pollutant tetrachlorodioxin.58
This type of effect does not relate to any chemical reactivity, as they exert their effect by physical binding
to DNA, and they may produce severe effects when present as only minor impurities.
‘PhPI’59 is one of a number of related (potential) carcinogens, known vaguely as ‘heterocyclic amines’
(HCAs), which are formed during cooking, particularly frying, of meat.60 Interestingly, pre-microwave
treatment of beef burgers before frying dramatically reduces the formation of these HCAs by removing
their precursors – ‘creatine, creatinine, amino acids (sic), and glucose’, together with water and fat!61
31.6.2 Plastics and Polymers
Melamine condenses with formaldehyde to give a widely used plastic with good heat resistance, most
familiar in laminates for kitchen worktops and as housewares, and known as Formica.
Polybenzimidazole fibre forms one of the most fire-resistant textiles (mp 760 °C; usable to 540 °C) and,
although very expensive, is used for high-tech applications, such as protective clothing for fire fighters,
astronauts and motor-racing drivers.
Special Topics
623
31.6.3 Fungicides and Herbicides
Heterocycles are contained in a large number of ‘agrochemicals’. Triazoles, such as cyproconazole, are
effective plant fungicides and have mechanisms of action – inhibition of steroid synthesis – similar to those
used medicinally. Other triazoles have limited antifungal activity, but are useful plant-growth regulators,
for example paclobutrazol. Another widely used fungicide is davicil.
Useful selective herbicides include paraquat, pyridate, maleic hydrazide and atrazine, the last being
somewhat controversial as it is widely used in the US, but banned in the EU.
31.6.4 Dyes and Pigments
(A pigment can be any colouring material but is often, particularly when synthetic, an insoluble substance,
whereas a dye is a soluble colorant applied to a substrate for which it has an affinity. Many dyes are also
used as specific stains for biological tissues for use in microscopy, for example methylene blue. Pigments
and dyes absorb certain wavelengths of white light, the non-absorbed (reflected or transmitted) wavelengths
being the colour. This is a contrast with fluorescent substances, which emit specific wavelengths (see
below).
Heterocycles are very important plant pigments, for example porphyrins and anthocyanins (32.3 and
32.5.6), but are also the basis of numerous synthetic pigments and dyes. Naturally derived dyes include
substances such as indigo (20.13.2), and synthetic pigments include the very important copper phthalocyanins (22.3), which are used for many purposes, including in ‘cyan’ inks.
The process of dying can involve carrying out heterocyclic chemistry, when using ‘reactive dyes’, which
form a strong chemical bond to substrates that contain nucleophilic groups, for example cellulose-based
materials. Reactive dyes are composed of a standard dye attached to a reactive linker containing leaving
groups. The most common linkers are halo-azines, a typical example being Reactive Blue 4.
624
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Other potential organic pigments are those that show metallic ‘colours’, such as the dithienyl pyrroles
above, which form high melting (>300 °C) golden lustrous crystals.62
31.6.5 Fluorescence-Based Applications
Fluorescence – the absorption of a photon, followed very rapidly by emission of a photon at longer wavelength – has many practical applications. The intrinsic fluorescent properties of a molecule can be utilised,
or fluorescent tags can be attached.
Fluorescein is probably the best known fluorescent compound and is used for many purposes, such as
tracking water leaks. A more specific fluorescent reagent (for use in fluorescence microscopy) is DAPI,
which binds selectively to DNA, giving characteristic changes in its emission spectra. (Note that this strong
binding to DNA results, not surprisingly, in its being mutagenic.)
31.6.5.1 Sensors
Fluorescent sensors have been widely investigated for the detection of many types of compounds and a
particularly fruitful field is the selective detection of metal ions: for example, a series (Zinpyr) of zinc
sensors, based on fluorescein-containing attached chelating ligands, which can be used for quantitative
determination of Zn or imaging of zinc-containing biological structures.63
31.6.5.2 Scintillators
Scintillators for detection of ionizing radiation (usually beta) can be incorporated into plastic blocks, or
used in solution for liquid scintillation counting for the determination of 3H and 14C. In the latter case, they
are often used as a ‘scintillation cocktail’ – a mixture of an organic solvent, such as toluene, a primary
scintillator (fluor), such as PBD or PPO, and a wavelength shifter, such as POPOP. The majority of the
radiation is absorbed by the solvent, which transfers the energy to the primary scintillator (fluor), which
then emits UV light. The function of the wavelength shifter is to absorb this UV light and re-emit at a more
efficient wavelength (blue) for a photomultiplier to convert into an electronic signal.
31.6.5.3 Optical Brighteners
These are added to paper, plastics and detergents to increase the ‘whiteness’ by absorbing UV light and
emitting blue light. Many optical brighteners are stilbene derivatives, but a number of heterocyclic ring
types are also important, for example the oxazole and triazole derivatives shown below, 1,3,5-triazines and
coumarins.64
Special Topics
625
31.6.6 Electronic Applications65
An important area where technology and heterocyclic chemistry combine is that of electroactive organic
materials. The potential applications of these materials are based mainly on their properties as conductors
and semiconductors. Here they have potential advantages over conventional metal conductors and inorganic
semiconductors, being available in essentially unlimited quantities and free from problems (political,
geographic and environmental) associated with the supply of (often rare) inorganic materials. They also
have very desirable fabrication properties, such as flexibility and the ability to build electronic circuits
by printing. Although there has been a large amount of research and specialist applications, large-scale
commercialisation has proved to be relatively slow, but still has great promise and is developing.
The mechanism of electronic conduction involves charge transfer through and between long or medium
chains of conjugated molecules and/or π-stacked structures. A detailed discussion of the theory of conduction is beyond the scope of this book; this section is restricted to demonstrating the range of applications
of heterocycles in this area.
The types of compound used in organic conductors cover a wide range of unsaturated molecules,
such as poly(acetylene) and poly(aniline), but of particular significance from the heterocyclic viewpoint
are poly(pyrrole), poly- and oligo(thiophene) and π-stacked structures derived from tetrathiafulvalenes.
An advantage of using heterocycles is that a wide range of electron-rich, electron-poor and mixed
systems can be easily prepared, allowing for tuning of the electronic and electrical properties of such
materials.
31.6.6.1 Poly(pyrrole) and Poly(thiophene)66
Pyrrole, thiophene and their derivatives can be oxidatively polymerised, either electrochemically or chemically, for example using iron(III) chloride, to give mainly 2,5-coupled polymers. The initial neutral polymers are non-conducting, but on further oxidation are converted partially into cation radicals or dications,
with incorporation of counter ions from the reaction medium – a process known as ‘doping’ – giving
conducting materials. Reductive doping is also possible in other systems.
The conducting and physical properties can be modified by the use of 3-/4-substituents, or N-substituents
in the case of pyrrole. The counter-ions can be incorporated into a side-chain (self-doping), as in the polymer
of 3-(thien-3-yl)propanesulfonic acid. Oligo(thiophenes) are also useful in these applications and have been
specifically synthesised up to 27 units long by palladium(0)-catalysed couplings or via the diacetylene
synthesis (17.12.1.1).67
626
Heterocyclic Chemistry
A number of polythiophenes, such as the Clevios series and Plexcore are commercially available in
quantity. Monomeric ethylenedioxythiophene can be polymerized in situ by Fe(III) salts.
In addition to the straightforward application of conductors and semi-conductors, there are some interesting examples of other uses. Polymers derived from 3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene are produced commercially
as anti-static agents and substituted compounds have found particular application in electrochromic devices
– substances that change colour on application of an electric current.
31.6.6.2 Tetrathiafulvalenes68
These unusual heterocycles and their analogues, such as with selenium and tellurium replacing sulfur, have
been intensively studied since the discovery that single crystals of TTF.TCNQ (tetrathiafulvalene.tetracyanoquinodimethane) show electrical conductivity. The bis(ethylenedithio) analogue of TTF, usually known
as BEDT-TTF, is particularly useful. Incidentally, the electron-donating ability of TTF allows its use as a
radical initiator for diazonium salts.69
Tetrathiafulvalenes can be prepared in a number of ways, for example via 1,3-dithiole-2-thione-4,5dithiolate70 – the simple salts of this dianion are not very stable, but can be stored as a zinc complex, or as
the dithiobenzoate71 shown below.
Most chemical transformations of TTF are based on lithiations – even a tetralithio derivative is easily
formed. Palladium(0)-catalysed couplings utilising trialkyltin derivatives can also be carried out without
difficulty.72
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and Perepichka, D. F., Chem. Rev., 2004, 104, 4891; ‘The organic chemistry of 1.3-dithiole-2-thione-4,5-dithiolate (DMIT)’, Svenstrup, N. and Becher,
J., Synthesis, 1995, 215.
Fletcher, R. J., Lampard, C., Murphy, J. A. and Lewis, N., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1995, 623.
Meline, E. L. and Elsenbaumer, R. L., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1998, 2467.
Hansen, T. K., Becher, J., Jorgensen J. T., Varma, K. S., Khedekar, R. and Cava, M. P., Org. Synth. Col. Vol. 9, 203.
Iyoda, M., Fukuda, M., Yoshida, M. and Sasaki, S., Chem. Lett., 1994, 2369; Lovell, J. M. and Joule, J. A., J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1, 1996,
2391.
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Heterocyclic Natural Products
32.1
Heterocyclic Amino Acids and Related Substances
There are four amino acids, amongst the 20 that make up proteins, that have an aromatic side-chain, and
of these, two have a heteroaromatic side-chain – histidine, with an imidazole, and tryptophan, with an
indole. Both of these are amongst the ‘essential amino acids’, i.e. they need to be part of the diet since they
cannot be biosynthesised by human beings. Decarboxylation of histidine produces the hormone histamine.
Proline is the only heterocyclic DNA-coded α-amino acid – it is based on pyrrolidine; hydroxyproline is
an essential component of collagen, the fibrous structural protein that supports tissues and is the main
component of cartilage.
Decarboxylated tryptophan is called tryptamine. The phenol, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT or serotonin)
and histamine are important neurotransmitters (33.2). N-Acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine, known as melatonin,
is produced by the pineal gland, a pea-sized gland at the base of the brain. It is involved in controlling the
natural daily cycle of hormone release in the body – the circadian rhythm. The secretion of melatonin is
triggered by the dark and is suppressed by natural daylight, therefore controlling periods of sleepiness and
wakefulness. Indol-3-ylacetic acid (IAA) is an auxin – a plant growth stimulant. Brassinin, isolated from
turnips, is a phytoalexin – one of a group of compounds produced by plants as a defense mechanism against
attack by microorganisms.
The ability of an imidazole (24.1.1.1 and 24.4.1) to act as both an acid (N-hydrogen) and a base (the
imine nitrogen) is put to good use in the active sites of several enzymes in which the imidazole rings of
appropriately placed histidines effectively ‘shuffle’ protons from one place to another. One example is the
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
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digestive enzyme chymotrypsin, which brings about the hydrolysis of protein amide groups in the small
intestine: the enzyme provides a ‘proton’ at one site, while it accepts a ‘proton’ at another, making use of
the ambiphilic character of the imidazole ring to achieve this. Effectively, the imidazole activates a serine
alcoholic hydroxyl by removing the proton as the oxygen attacks the amide bond. Subsequently, that same
proton is delivered to the cleaving amide nitrogen as the tetrahedral intermediate breaks down.
The role of histidine in chymotrypsin hydrolysis of peptides
32.2
Enzyme Co-Factors; Heterocyclic Vitamins; Co-Enzymes1
Many enzymes require a component, other than the protein portion, for their catalytic activity – a co-factor.
If the co-factor is removed, the remaining protein (apoenzyme) has no catalytic activity. A co-factor that
is firmly bound to the apoenzyme is termed a prosthetic group and most contain a metal centre. A co-factor
that is bound loosely to the apoenzyme and can be readily separated from it is called a co-enzyme. Coenzymes play a critical role in the catalysis.
Vitamins are substances essential for a healthy life; humans must ingest vitamins via their diet because
there is no mechanism for their biosynthesis in the body. There are 14 vitamins – the name was coined
when the first vitamin chemically identified (vitamin B1 in 1910) turned out to be an amine – a vital amine.
A typical vitamin is folic acid, a complex molecule in which the functionally important unit is the bicyclic
pyrazino[2,3-d]pyrimidine (pteridine) ring system, and its arylaminomethyl substituent. Folic acid is converted in the body into tetrahydrofolic acid (FH4) which is crucial in carrying one-carbon units, at various
oxidation levels, for example in the biosynthesis of purines, and is mandatory for healthy development of
the foetus during pregnancy. Other essential co-factors that contain pteridine units must and can be biosynthesised in humans – without them we cannot survive – and are incorporated into oxygen-transfer
enzymes based on molybdenum, in which the metal is liganded by a complex ene-dithiolate.
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Several highly significant vitamins are water-soluble and heterocyclic in nature and further, their utility
in the co-enzymes into which they are incorporated, can only be understood on the basis of their intrinsic
heterocyclic reactivity. We consider in detail firstly the two important pyridine-containing vitamins –
vitamin B3 (niacin or nicotinamide) and vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) and then the thiazole-containing thiamin
(vitamin B1).
32.2.1 Niacin (Vitamin B3) and Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate (NADP+)
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+) is a large complicated co-enzyme, but the significant part for its role in oxidation/reduction processes is the pyridinium ring – to understand the mechanism
one can think of it as simply an N-alkyl pyridinium salt of nicotinamide. The positively charged nitrogen
acts as an electron sink and allows this co-enzyme to accept two electrons and a proton, i.e. effectively,
hydride. In line with typical pyridinium reactivity (8.12) the hydride adds at a γ-position, thus producing a 1,4-dihydropyridine (NADPH), the process being feasible because NADPH is a stabilised 1,4dihydropyridine in which the ring nitrogen is conjugated to the carbonyl of the 3-substitutent (cf. Hantzsch
synthesis products, 8.14.1.2). In the reverse sense, NADPH is a vital reducing agent in biosynthesis – it is
nature’s sodium borohydride. The rationale for the reverse process is the regain of aromaticity in the coenzyme product – a pyridinium ion.
The role of a pyridinium ion and a 1,4-dihydropyridine
in enzyme-catalysed oxidation and reduction processes
32.2.2 Pyridoxine (Vitamin B6) and Pyridoxal Phosphate (PLP)
The vitamin is transformed into pyridoxal phosphate (PLP), which, as a pyridine, is basic at the ring nitrogen, and in the active form, is N-protonated. Enzymes containing PLP have various functions, all connected
with amino acids. Amongst other activities, PLP-containing enzymes can: (i) effect transfer of an amino
group from an α-amino acid to an α-keto acid; (ii) bring about decarboxylation of an α-amino acid or
(iii) bring about de-amination of an α-amino acid. In each case, the chemistry of the process depends critically on the intrinsic reactivity of a pyridinium salt. The scheme shows decarboxylation of an α-amino
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acid: condensation of the pyridine-4-aldehyde with the amino group generates an imine, stabilised by
hydrogen bonding with the adjacent phenolic hydroxyl group. The decarboxylation is promoted by the flow
of electrons from the breaking C–C bond through to the positively charged pyridine nitrogen, generating
an extensively conjugated enamine/imine system, which regains the aromaticity of the pyridine ring by
C-protonation. Finally, a standard hydrolysis of the new imine link produces the amine corresponding to
the original amino acid, together with the regenerated co-enzyme.
The role of a pyridinium-4-aldehyde in enzyme-catalysed amino acid decarboxylation
32.2.3 Riboflavin (Vitamin B2)
Riboflavin is incorporated into another complex co-enzyme, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). This is
involved in enzyme-catalysed reductions of carbon–carbon double bonds, and the reverse. By accepting
two hydrogens, the co-enzyme is converted into a dihydro derivative (FADH2), the driving force for this
being the relief of the unfavoured interaction between the polarised, opposed C=N bonds.
32.2.4 Thiamin (Vitamin B1) and Thiamine Pyrophosphate
Thiamin pyrophosphate acts as a coenzyme in several biochemical processes and, in each case, its mode
of action depends on the intermediacy of a C-2-deprotonated species – an ylide (24.1.2.1 and 24.10).
For example, in the later stages of alcoholic fermentation, which converts glucose into ethanol and
carbon dioxide, the enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase catalyses the conversion of pyruvate into ethanal
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633
(acetaldehyde) and carbon dioxide, the former then being converted into ethanol by the enzyme alcohol
dehydrogenase. Thiamin pyrophosphate, in the form of its ylide, adds to the ketonic carbonyl group of
pyruvate; this is followed by loss of carbon dioxide then the release of ethanal by expulsion of the original
ylide as a leaving group, to continue the cycle.
The role of a thiazolium ylide in the enzyme-catalysed decarboxylation of pyruvate
Aromatic thiophenes play no part in animal metabolism, however aromatic thiophenes do occur in some
plants, in association with polyacetylenes with which they are biogenetically linked. Biotin (vitamin H), is
a tetrahydrothiophene.
After the identification of the 13th vitamin, vitamin B12, in 1948, there was a gap of 55 years before the
14th, a pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ), previously known and named methoxatin as a redox enzyme cofactor in bacteria, was shown, in 2003, to be a human dietary requirement.
32.3
Porphobilinogen and the ‘Pigments of Life’
Ultimately, all life on Earth depends on the incorporation of atmospheric carbon dioxide into carbohydrates.
The energy for this highly endergonic process is sunlight, and the whole is called photosynthesis. The very
first step in the complex sequence is the absorption of a photon by pigments, of which the most important
in multicellular plants is the green pigment chlorophyll a. This photonic energy is then used chemically to
achieve a crucial carbon–carbon bonding reaction to carbon dioxide, in which ultimately oxygen is liberated. Thus, formation of the by-product of this process, molecular oxygen, allowed the evolution of aerobic
organisms, of which man is one.
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Haemoglobin is the agent that carries oxygen from lung to tissue in the arterial bloodstream in mammals;
it is made up of the protein globin associated with a prosthetic group, the red pigment haem (heme). The
very close structural similarity of haem with chlorophyll is striking, strongly suggesting a common evolutionary origin. In oxygenated haemoglobin, the iron is six-coordinate iron(II) with a ring nitrogen of a
protein histidine residue as ligand on one side of the plane of the macrocycle, and on the other, molecular
oxygen. Haem without the ferrous iron is called protoporphyrin IX and the unsubstituted macrocycle is
called porphyrin. Haem is also the active site of the cytochromes, which are enzymes concerned with
electron transfer. Another porphobilinogen-derived system is vitamin B12, which is involved in the metabolism of all cells in the body.
All the tetrapyrrole pigments are biosynthesised by the combination of four molecules of porphobilinogen
(PBG), this in turn is made from 5-aminolevulinic acid (H2NCH2CO(CH2)2CO2H), and this from glycine
and succinic acid. There are complexities late in the tetramerisation sequence that we do not go into here,
but the essence of the process can be easily understood on the basis of simple pyrrole chemistry: the first
step is typical. Protonation of the amino group of PBG converts it into a leaving group, generating an
electrophilic azafulvene, (cf. 16.11) for attachment via a nucleophilic atom, X, on the enzyme. This first
enzyme-bound pyrrole now undergoes electrophilic substitution, as is typical for pyrroles, at an α-position
(Chapter 15), the electrophile being a second azafulvenium ion.
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The first steps in the biosynthesis of porphyrins from porphobilinogen (PBG)
Catabolism of haemoglobin leads to the yellow bilirubin, which is excreted as a diglucuronide (to solubilise it). The catabolic sequence is complex and malfunction can occur at several stages. For example,
liver disease can be diagnosed by measurements of bilirubin levels in blood, which rise with defective
operation. Bilirubin is responsible for the yellow colour of bruises and the yellow discolouration in
jaundice.
32.4 Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) and Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA); Genetic Information;
Purines and Pyrimidines
Nucleic acids2 are high molecular weight, mixed polymers of mononucleotides, in which chains are formed
by monophosphate links between the 5′-position of one nucleoside and the 3′-position of the next.3 They
occur in every living cell. The polymer is known as ribonucleic acid (RNA) when the sugar is ribose, and
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) when the sugar is 2-deoxyribose. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), the carrier
of all genetic information, consists of two intertwining helices. Each intertwining strand has a backbone,
on the outside, consisting of alternating ribose and dialkyl phosphate units. From each ribose, protruding
inwards, there is one of four heterocyclic bases: two purines, adenine (A) and guanine (G), and two pyrimidines, thymine (T) and cytosine (C), linked from C-1 of the ribose to N-1 of the pyrimidine bases or N-9
of the purine bases. The close association of the two strands is based on very specific hydrogen bonding
between an A residue of one strand and a T residue in the precisely opposite section of the other strand,
and between a C residue on one strand and a G residue on the other. This pairing is absolutely specific:
adenine cannot form multiple hydrogen bonds with guanine or cytosine, and cytosine cannot form multiple
hydrogen bonds with thymine or adenine. It is the sequence of the bases along the chain that carries the
information – particular sets of three bases code for a particular amino acid – the genetic information content
comes down simply to two sets of hydrogen bonds! The hydrogen bonding serves, not only to hold the two
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strands together, but also to transfer information, since, when the two strands separate, each strand acts as
a template to form a new strand through the specific AT and CG base pairings, of DNA or of RNA (ribonucleic acid). The information in messenger RNA (mRNA) thus produced is translated into protein.
In order to understand the specific hydrogen bonding that is the genetic basis of all life, we need to recall
the tautomeric forms that six-membered nitrogen heterocyles with amino and hydroxy substituents adopt:4
the amino-heterocycles exist as amino tautomers; the heterocycles with a potential hydroxyl α or γ to the
nitrogen exist in the carbonyl tautomeric form. These two preferences are illustrated in the structures for
the four DNA bases shown above. Only when this propensity is recalled can the hydrogen bonding interactions be understood. Ring imine nitrogens and carbonyl oxygens are hydrogen-bond acceptors and Nhydrogens are donors.
The only effective hydrogen bonding pairings in DNA: adenine/thymine (AT) and guanine/cytosine (GC)
There is another purine derivative of crucial biochemical importance – adenosine triphosphate (ATP).
This substance is a carrier of energy, for when a phosphate link is broken, a large amount of energy is
released. Note some trivial nomenclature: the moieties produced by linking one of the heterocyclic
bases to a ribose or 2′-deoxyribose sugar, are known as ‘nucleosides’ (e.g. adenosine, guanosine, cytidine,
thymidine). A ‘nucleotide’ is a 5′-phosphate (or di- or tri-phosphate) of a nucleoside – ATP is a
nucleotide.
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Caffeine (1,3,7-trimethylxanthine) is the well-known stimulant present in tea and coffee. Uric acid, the
end product of nucleic acid catabolism in humans, birds and reptiles (uric acid was one of the first heterocyclic compounds to be isolated as a pure substance, by the Swedish chemist Carl Scheele in 1776) is
formed by the action of the enzyme xanthine oxidase. In cases of excess uric acid, deposition of crystals
of uric acid can occur, leading to the joint pain known as gout, usually initially in the big toe and usually
in males.
32.5
Heterocyclic Natural Products
In addition to substances involved in primary metabolism, there are a whole host of compounds that are
termed secondary metabolites, the isolation and structural determination of which formed the major part
of early science of organic chemistry. Many such substances are heterocyclic and we give here just a small
selection to illustrate the enormous range and variety of structures produced by living organisms, often
with no obvious purpose or benefit to the organism! Many such substances do have very considerable
biological effects on mammals, notably on man, and plant extracts containing them were used in ancient
medicine.
32.5.1 Alkaloids5
Plants of many genera produce compounds called alkaloids (alkali-like), and indeed all the thousands of
known alkaloids contain nitrogen, by definition, and most are basic, and many are also toxic. Nicotine, a
structurally simple example of an alkaloid, is a highly toxic substance, and is the major active component
in tobacco (Nicotiana sp.), and amongst the most addictive drugs – an extraordinary contrast to the vital
role in life played by nicotinic acid amide (32.2.1). Coniine, the active ingredient of hemlock (Conium
maculatum), is another structurally simple example.
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Much more complex are the thousands of alkaloids that include an indole (or 2,3-dihydroindole) sub-unit6
and in each of these one can discern the tryptamine unit of the biosynthetic precursor tryptophan: strychnine
(33.3.2) (Strychnos nux vomica), vincristine (33.7) (Catharanthus roseus), and the antipsychotic and antihypertensive reserpine (Rauwolfia serpentina) are examples. A group of amides of lysergic acid, for
example, ergotamine, occur in ergot fungi (e.g. Claviceps purpurea), the remainder of the molecule comprising proline, phenylalanine and alanine units. Lysergic acid diethylamide is the notorious LSD.
Aromatic indolizines (28.1) are very rare in nature, but the fully reduced (indolizidine) nucleus is widespread in alkaloids, of which swainsonine is a typical example. There are many saturated or partially saturated pyrrolizidine alkaloids; senecionine is an example.
The quinolizinium ion (28.3) occurs naturally only rarely, for example as a fused ylide in the alkaloid
sempervirine, however there are hundreds of indole alkaloids that contain the same tetracyclic system, but
with the quinolizine at an octahydro level, as exemplified above (reserpine). In addition, many simpler
quinolizidine alkaloids, such as lupinine, are known.
There are also many alkaloids based on isoquinoline, but fewer on quinoline nuclei: papaverine and
morphine from the opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) and quinine (Cinchona officinalis) are typical.
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32.5.2 Marine Heterocycles
Investigation of animals from the marine environment has thrown up an intriguing variety of polyheterocyclic products (sometimes called sea alkaloids): five representatives are variolin B7 (sponge,
Kirkpatrickia varialosa), lamellarin B8 (mollusc, Lamellaria sp.), ascididemine9 (tunicate, Didemnum sp.),
wakayin10 (ascidian, Clavelina sp.) and dendrodoine11 (tunicate, Dendroda grossular), a rare natural
example of a multi-heteroatom compound.
The development of synthetic routes to such systems has prompted new thinking in the construction of
poly-heterocyclic systems, as a preamble to the preparation of synthetic analogues of these ‘lead compounds’, for biological evaluation.
32.5.3 Halogenated Heterocycles
Halogenated natural products occur in land organisms, but are especially prevalent in the marine environment, yielding a multitude of structural types and many of these are heterocyclic. Given the typical
susceptibility of pyrroles and indoles to electrophilic substitution, it is not surprising that biohalogenation in the sea produces substances ranging from tetrabromopyrrole, hexabromo-2,2′-bipyrrole, to Nmethyldibromoisophakellin and, amongst the halogenated indoles, from 4,7-dibromo-2,3-dichloroindole to
hinckdentine A and chartelline A (tryptamine residue in red).12
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32.5.4 Macrocycles Containing Oxazoles and Thiazoles
An extraordinary group of natural products, often again from the marine environment, having oxazole and/
or thiazole rings, often macrocyclic, are derived from biosynthetic cyclisation of precursor α-amino
acid units in a small peptide chain, and include substances such as ulapualide A13 (nudibranch, Hexabranchus sanguineus), telomestatin14 (Streptomyces anulatus), and diazonamide A15 (ascidian, Diazona
chinensis).
32.5.5 Other Nitrogen-Containing Natural Products
The pyrazine ring system is found in the fungal metabolite aspergillic acid and in dihydro form in the
luciferins of several beetles, including the firefly, Cypridina hilgendorfii, and is responsible for the chemiluminescence16 of this ostracod. Quite simple methoxy-pyrazines are very important components of the
aromas of many fruits and vegetables, such as peas and capsicum peppers, and also of wines.17 Although
present in very small amounts, they are extremely odorous and can be detected at concentrations as low as
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0.00001 ppm. Related pyrazines, probably formed by the pyrolysis of amino acids during the process of
cooking, are also important in the aroma of roasted meats. Several polyalkyl pyrazines are insect pheremones, for example 2-ethyl-3,6-dimethylpyrazine is the major component of the trail pheremone of the South
American leaf-cutting ant.
Some fungal metabolites from Streptomyces species include the quaternary salt pyridazinomycin. Divicine, present as a glucoside in broad beans and related plants, is the toxic agent responsible for ‘favism’,
a serious hemolytic reaction in genetically susceptible people (of Mediterranean origin).
32.5.6 Anthocyanins and Flavones
There certainly is a biological role for the anthocyanidins and natural flavones, which, grouped together,
are known as the flavonoids.18 These occur in flower pigments – as attractants for pollinating insects. The
anthocyanidins are polyhydroxyflavylium salts and occur in a large proportion of the red to blue flower
pigments and in fruit skins, for example grapes and therefore in red wines made therefrom.19 Anthocyanidins are generally bound to sugars, and these glycosides are known as anthocyanins.20 As an example,
cyanin (isolated as its chloride) is an anthocyanin that occurs in the petals of the red rose (Rosa gallica),
the poppy (Papaver rhoeas) and very many other flowers. Another example is malvin chloride, which has
been isolated from many species, including Primula viscosa, a mauvy-red alpine primula.
In the living cell these compounds exist in more complex bound forms, interacting with other molecules,
for example flavones,21,22 and the actual observed colour depends on these interactions.23 However, it is
interesting that even in vitro, simple pH changes bring about extreme changes in the electronic absorption
of these molecules. For example cyanidin is red in acidic solution, violet at intermediate pH and blue in
weakly alkaline solution, the deep colours being the result of extensive resonance delocalisation in each of
the structures.
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The naturally occurring flavones are yellow and are very widely distributed in plants. They accumulate
in almost any part of a plant, from the roots to the flower petals. Unlike the anthocyanins, which are too
reactive and short-lived, the much more stable flavones have, from time immemorial, been used as dyes,
for they impart various shades of yellow to wool. As an example, the inner bark of one of the North
American oaks, Quercus velutina, was a commercial material known as quercitron bark and much used in
dyeing: it contains quercetrin. The corresponding aglycone, quercetin, is one of the most widely occurring
flavones, found, for example, in Chrysanthemum and Rhododendron species, horse chestnuts, lemons,
onions and hops.
Coumarin24 has the sweet scent of newly mown hay, and is used in perfumes. The official birthdate of
the synthetic fragrance industry is held to be25 the discovery of a synthetic route to coumarin by W. H.
Perkin in 186826 using the reaction we now call the Perkin condensation (12.3.2.2).
Benzofuran occurs in a range of plant- and microbial-derived natural products, ranging in complexity
from 5-methoxybenzofuran, through the orange ‘aurones’, a group of plant pigments isomeric with cooccurring flavones (12.2), to griseofulvin, from Penicillium griseofulvum, used in medicine as an antifungal
agent.
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3
4
5
6
7
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T. J., Chapman and Hall, London and NY, 1988; ‘Flavonoids: Chemistry, Biochemistry and Applications’, Andersen, O. M. and Jordheim, M., CRC
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‘A curious brew’, Allen, M., Chem. Brit., 1996 (May), 35.
‘The Chemistry of Plant Pigments’, Ed. Chichester, C. O., Academic Press, NY, 1972; ‘The chemistry of anthocyanins, anthocyanidins and related
flavylium salts’, Iacobucci, G. A. and Sweeny, J. E., Tetrahedron, 1983, 39, 3005.
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‘Structure and molecular stacking of anthocyanins – flower colour variation’, Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl., 1991, 30, 17; ‘The chemistry of rose
pigments’, Eugster, C. H. and Märki-Fischer, E., ibid., 654; ‘Nature’s palette’, Haslam, E., Chem. Brit., 1993 (Oct.), 875.
Kondo, T., Toyama-Kato, Y. and Yoshida, K., Tetrahedron Lett., 2005, 46, 6645.
‘Synthesis of coumarins with 3,4-fused ring systems and their physiological activity’, Darbarwar, M. and Sundaramurthy, V., Synthesis, 1982, 337;
‘Naturally occurring coumarins’, Dean, F. M., Fortschr. Chem. Org. Naturst., 1952, 9, 225; ‘Naturally occurring plant coumarins’, Murray,
R. D. H., Fortschr. Chem. Org. Naturst., 1978, 35, 199; ‘The natural coumarins: occurrence, chemistry and biochemistry’, Murray, R. D. H., Méndez,
J. and Brown, S. A., Chichester, Wiley, 1982.
‘Perfumes: The Guide’, Turin, L. and Sanchez, T., Profile Books, 2008.
Perkin, W. H., J. Chem. Soc., 1868, 53.
33
Heterocycles in Medicine
The drugs used in human medicine1 cover the whole range of chemical structure types, but a majority are
heterocyclic small molecules or have heterocyclic structural components. Heterocyclic alkaloids were the
active ingredients in many natural remedies before the development of modern chemistry and some are
still used today, for example morphine derivatives. Rather than using complex systematic names, drugs are
given ‘trivial’ generic names and drugs acting on the same pharmacological basis often have related names,
particularly by the word ending, for example ondansetron and granisetron (see 33.4.3), losartan and candesartan (33.4.5). The manufacturer will also give a proprietary (trade) name to a drug, which is treated as
a proper noun and capitalised. In this chapter, we give first the generic name with, where appropriate, the
proprietary name in parenthesis. Note that proprietary names may be different in different countries.
In this book we are concerned with heterocycles and so the coverage in what follows does not necessarily
reflect the relative medical importance of different areas. Complete coverage of all areas of significance is
obviously impossible, but the aim is to give an appreciation of the wide-ranging importance of heterocycles
in medicine. Although heterocycles occur in drugs for all areas, they are particularly prominent, for obvious
reasons, for systems involving the heterocyclic neurotransmitters.
Of the top 10 best-selling (prescription) drugs by value in the year June 2006 – June 2007, seven were
(small molecule) heterocycles:2 atorvastatin (Lipitor; $13.5bn; a statin for cholesterol reduction); esomeprazole (Nexium; $6.9bn; a proton-pump inhibitor for reduction of gastric acid); clopidogrel (Plavix;
$5.8bn; an anti-platelet agent to prevent blood clots); olenzapine (Zyprexa; $4.9bn; an anti-schizophrenic);
risperidone (Risperdal; $4.8bn; an anti-schizophrenic); amlodipine (Norvasc; $4.5bn; an anti-hypertensive
agent); quetiapine (Seroquel; $4.2bn; for treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder). Of the three
remaining compounds, two were biomolecules – modified polypeptides: carbepoetin (Arancep; $5.1bn) and
etanercept (Enbrel; $4.9bn) and the remaining one – seretide (Advair; $6.7bn; an anti-asthmatic) – is the
only non-heterocyclic, small-molecule-based drug of the 10, a mixture of a steroid with a beta stimulant.
Note, however, that these are not the best-selling drugs by volume – those include over-the-counter (OTC)
drugs such as aspirin and paracetamol, which are available in supermarkets for very low prices (of which
a good proportion is for the packaging!).
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
John Joule and Keith Mills
646
33.1
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Mechanisms of Drug Actions3
Drugs exert their effects by a number of mechanisms, the most important being the following.
33.1.1 Mimicking or Opposing the Effects of Physiological Hormones or Neurotransmitters
Compounds that mimic the effect of the natural agent are known as agonists; those that oppose are known
as antagonists. These drugs act by binding at a receptor – the site where the natural physiological agent
binds. This receptor is usually a specific domain of a protein molecule comprising part of a cell. Agonists
activate the receptor and antagonists block it. Sometimes the word ‘blocker ’ is used in reference to antagonists, as in ‘beta-blocker ’. There are variants on these simple definitions, for example partial agonists that
cannot achieve the same maximum effect as full agonists, but can still compete with them for receptor
binding, therefore acting partly as antagonists.2
33.1.2 Interaction with Enzymes
Interaction with enzymes usually involves inhibition, but enzyme induction also has its uses, or can occur
unintentionally. Interactions generally occur by binding at the active site of the enzyme (where the substrate
binds), in a very similar manner to receptor binding – the comments below, concerning receptors, can
equally apply to enzyme interactions with drugs.
33.1.3 Physical Binding with, or Chemically Modifying, Natural Macromolecules
Physical binding with, or chemically modifying, natural macromolecules such as DNA and RNA, can
involve either direct interaction or the incorporation of synthetic analogues of structural components (e.g.
one of the heterocyclic bases) into the polymer.
Binding at the receptor may be competitive (i.e. the drug is in equilibrium/exchange with the natural
agent) or it may be non-competitive – firmly bound with no exchange.
Receptors usually exist as a number of sub-types, often with further sub-divisions, which mediate different physiological effects by interaction with the single natural agent. The key to a successful drug very
often depends on devising a molecule that has a selective interaction with just one sub-type.
Sometimes, binding at a site other than the normal receptor (allosteric binding) is the mechanism of
action – the remote binding alters the shape of the protein as a whole and hence influences the receptor.
Binding/action at the receptor is often only the start of a complex cascade of actions within the cell.
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The mechanisms of binding to the receptor can be essentially physical (H-bonding or attractions via ionic
or Van der Waals forces, etc.), with several points of interaction, or it may be covalent (e.g. N-alkylation
or O-acylation), which is often irreversible.
33.2 The Neurotransmitters
The nervous system is made up of two parts: the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous
system. The former operates in the brain and spinal cord and the latter in the rest of the body.
The CNS and the peripheral nervous systems are separated by the blood–brain barrier, which stands
between the bloodstream and the brain tissue – it is essentially the walls of the brain’s blood vessels, which
are different from those in the periphery. A complex combination of physical factors, such as lipophilicity/
polarity, molecular weight and active transport systems determines the ability of molecules to cross the
blood–brain barrier and thus gain access to the CNS. The consideration as to whether a drug can or cannot
reach the brain is always an important design consideration – drugs acting on the CNS obviously need to
reach it, but for peripherally acting drugs, the opposite is required – keeping them out may be essential to
avoid side-effects.
The conduction of signals along nerves is dependent on the release of neurotransmitters at synapses.
Some of the major neurotransmitters are heterocyclic (histamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine), others are not
heterocyclic (catecholamines: adrenaline, noradrenaline, dopamine; acetylcholine). These neurotransmitters
are present in both the peripheral and central systems, although dopamine acts mainly in the latter. The
CNS also has other neurotransmitters, including the amino acids glycine, glutamic acid and gammaaminobutyric acid (GABA).
Some receptors are named after the natural agent, e.g. histamine and 5HT, but others after natural products, the interactions with which were the only means of characterisation before the structures of the true
transmitters were known, e.g. opioid after opium (morphine) – the natural ligands here are peptides
(enkephalins and endorphins); cannabinoid after cannabis – the natural ligands are amides of arachadonic
acid.
33.3
Drug Discovery and Development
33.3.1 Stages in the Life of a Drug
1. Discovery: finding a series of potential candidates.
2. Optimisation: finding the best biological candidate(s) on the basis of safety and effectiveness.
3. Chemical development: finding a suitable medium-scale synthesis (maybe 1 kg) for initial clinical trials
and later a large-scale synthesis for production.
4. Clinical trials (several stages): initially, proof of the biological concept and finally demonstration of
clinical effectiveness and safety in a substantial number of patients.
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5. Approval by the regulatory authorities, such as the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the
European Medicines Agency (EMEA), as having clinical advantages over current treatments and a suitable safety profile.
6. Release for marketing, with appropriate post-marketing surveillance to detect low-level and unexpected
side-effects.
7. ‘Me-too’ competition: competitor companies try to develop related compounds, not covered by the
original patents, that may have a sufficiently improved profile to allow approval by the regulatory
authorities.
8. Expiry of patent: generic free-for-all: anyone free to make and market the compound, although processes
may be protected by the original inventor company.
9. Over-the-counter (OTC): Certain drugs, for example sumatriptan, ranitidine, omeprazole and various
anti-histamines, after extensive usage under prescription, showing a low incidence of side-effects, may
be approved for ‘over-the-counter ’ sales without a doctor ’s prescription. These are generic drugs, but
the original proprietary brand names are still owned by the inventing company and may still be preferred
by some customers.
33.3.1.1 Me-too drugs
This stage of drug ‘development’ starts as soon as the identity of the lead drug has been disclosed. It
involves competitor companies investigating related molecules that are not covered by the inventor ’s patent,
in the hope that they will have advantages over the original. Although cynics regard this as simply a moneymaking exercise, which is true to some degree, it has played an important role in optimising particular
classes of drug and is actually an important stage of development. It often happens that apparently similar
compounds have different side-effect profiles. Thus the existence of competitor drugs allows the eventual
emergence of the best, and of alternatives when the original drug shows unacceptable levels of side-effects
a significant length of time after release, as has often occurred.
In the absence of ‘me-too’ drugs, there would be many fewer therapeutic options available.
33.3.1.2 Orphan Drugs
Research and development is very expensive, particularly as the majority of drugs in development fail to
reach the market place, and requires sufficient income from sales of successful drugs to fund it. However,
some diseases have such a low incidence that income from potential sales of drugs developed under the
standard scheme cannot cover these enormous costs. Here, the regulatory authorities may grant orphan drug
status, which allows a less onerous version of the approval process. Safety is still checked rigorously, but
larger-scale trials are waived, not least because there may not be enough patients available. The manufacturers are also given financial incentives.
33.3.1.3 Prodrugs
A number of drugs, for example proguanil (33.6.1) and omeprazole (33.4.1), are not active in their own
right, but undergo activation in vivo. Sometimes, however, an active drug is deliberately converted into
a protected, possibly inactive, form – a prodrug (esters are quite common), so as to give better absorption
or protection from breakdown, for example in the stomach. It does, of course, require a mechanism for
re-activation, possibly an enzymatic conversion, at the site of action.
33.3.1.4 Pharmacogenetics
It has always been known that in any group of patients there will be responders and non-responders to
many drugs, and that there are differences in susceptibilities to side-effects. If a drug is only effective in a
sub-population of patients, the benefits for this minority may be lost during statistical analysis if the (nontargeted) trials have involved the general population. Genetic variations can be very important in this respect
and genetic targeting is a current ‘hot’ topic.
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33.3.1.5 Risk–Benefit
No medicine is perfect; all have side-effects. Some side-effects, because they are relatively uncommon,
will not become statistically significant until a large number of patients have been treated, and are therefore
not apparent until after general release. There is always a risk to be balanced with a benefit, higher risks
(side-effects up to possible death) being acceptable, the more serious and less treatable the target disease
is. This is inevitable and must be accepted by the informed patient as part of the ‘deal’.
33.3.2 Drug Discovery
A traditional logical approach to drug design involves synthesis of compounds that are structurally similar
to the natural agent, with alterations of substituents or variations in the electronic nature or precise shape
of any aromatic rings (a key asset of heterocycles!). Modifications using heterocycles can also be used to
give favourable physical properties, for example replacing a benzene ring by a pyridine ring may improve
aqueous solubility, or other variations may be used to facilitate or prevent access to the CNS.
A surprising number of drugs bear only a tenuous (or no!) structural similarity to the natural agent/
transmitter. An excellent illustration is the well-known indole alkaloid strychnine, which is a competitive
antagonist of the CNS neurotransmitter glycine.
Other routes to drug discovery include screening of compounds (‘natural products’) from natural sources
that may have been reported (but not necessarily – random screening of these natural compounds is more
frequently used) in folklore to have medicinal properties, fortuitous discovery of unexpected activity in a
compound being investigated in other areas (Viagra is a prime example) and the crude but reasonably
effective method of screening large numbers of random compounds synthesised by combinatorial chemistry. This last method is very popular at present, as it is amenable to automation, as is much biological
testing.
When a lead compound has been obtained by any of these methods, more rational optimisation is
carried out.
33.3.3 Chemical Development
(NOTE: The active compound may be referred to as the API (active pharmaceutical ingredient) or DS
(drug substance). This is formulated with various additives into the final medicine.)
One key to commercialising a drug is a good chemical synthesis, which is highly reproducible, both in
chemistry and product purity. It must also be produced to a target price that varies greatly depending on a
number of factors, including potency i.e. it relates to the amount of the chemical substance used in the final
formulation (tablets etc). Most of the total cost is in discovery, development and testing rather than manufacture. The cost of production of the API is a relatively minor part of the final cost, but still substantial,
so production costs are controlled, requiring a synthetic route that must be as efficient and cheap as
possible.
This is the most demanding area for the chemist. The requirements for scale-up and production are very
different from those in medicinal chemistry/discovery and need a very different approach to chemistry.
Yields for steps in a process are very frequently increased dramatically by intensive process research –
improving literature reactions with reported yields of 20–30% up to a usable 80–90% is not uncommon.
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The number of steps in the synthesis is a major determinant of cost. Standard preliminary targets are for
90% hplc yields in each stage, with purification by (usually) crystallisation; chromatographic purification
on a production scale, which may be in ton quantities, is very rare.
A crucial aspect is the quality of the final product, with very rigorous criteria for reproducible levels of
purity and of levels of potentially toxic trace impurities, particularly metals. All impurities down to ca.
0.1% must be identified and possibly reference samples of the impurities synthesised, which often provides
another interesting challenge for the chemist. Some metal derivatives, such as organotin compounds and
mercury must be at essentially undetectable levels; others, such as palladium, may be acceptable at very
low levels, depending on dose. These requirements can greatly restrict the synthetic chemistry available
for the production route – many elegant and ingenious reactions found, for example, in this book, though
suitable for general synthesis and preliminary phases of drug discovery, may be of no use for production
due to residues of reagents in the final product. A very clean synthesis from a chemical point of view could
have 0.1% of a heavy-metal impurity, but this corresponds to 1000 ppm for something that may only be
allowed at 10 ppm or less in a drug.
Minimisation of environmental impact must also be considered – there are legal constraints on effluents
of various types, as well as costs of disposal. These factors must therefore be taken into account when
considering the production synthesis of a drug.
33.3.4 Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP)
(The term ‘cGMP’ (‘current good manufacturing practice’), found in some publications, can be even more
confusing for chemists for whom GMP can mean guanosine monophosphate and cGMP, cyclic guanosine
monophosphate!)
GMP is the enforcement of rigorous control of purity and consistency of the production of any substance
that is to be administered to a human. It is designed to avoid human error that could lead to contamination
of the final product. It does not apply to process research, but does when any process on any scale is used
for the preparation of any batch of drug for clinical use. It is the responsibility of the manufacturer, under
potential scrutiny from the regulatory authorities, and adds dramatically to the cost of the process, particularly at the small-scale early stages.
33.4
Heterocyclic Drugs4,5
For convenience, the following sections are grouped, where possible but with flexibility, according to the
natural neurotransmitter or enzyme to which the drugs relate and may include central and peripheral actions.
A separate section on CNS-specific drugs with more complex mechanisms is included later. Later major
sections, for example infection and cancer, are, of necessity, related to disease areas.
33.4.1 Histamine
Four histamine receptors have been identified, but two – H3 and H4 – have no clinical relevance at
present.
Histamine, acting at the H1 receptor, is mainly known for producing allergic responses, for example hay
fever and skin reactions, such as urticaria (‘nettle rash’). Antagonists of this receptor, which suppress these
actions of histamine, are well known to the layman, under the loose description ‘anti-histamines’, as hay
fever remedies.
Typical H1 antagonists are not particularly structurally reminiscent of histamine! Early compounds often
had side-effects caused by actions at other receptors such as that for acetylcholine, but their main drawback
is antagonism of H1 receptors in the CNS, leading to drowsiness. Promethazine (Phenergan) has such strong
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effects in the CNS that it has found use as a sedative and is also of use for treatment of motion sickness.
Others, such as chlorpheniramine (Piriton), show only moderate sedative effects. More recently, compounds
such as loratidine (Clarityn) have been devised that do not enter the CNS and are therefore free from sedative effects.
The H2 receptor is part of a complex system within parietal cells, involved in mediating release of acid
into the stomach. Although this is an essential part of digestion, excessive amounts of acid can lead to
simple indigestion, but can also cause or aggravate the more serious medical problem of peptic ulcers. The
development, in the 1970s, of selective H2 antagonists that inhibit the release of gastric acid was a major
advance in medicine, as they are very effective in treating ulcers, are very safe, and have almost eliminated
the need for surgery for this illness. They were an enormous financial success because of this. The first
compound developed was cimetidine (Tagamet), which is closely related, structurally, to histamine and as
such, a more ‘logically’ designed compound than the H1 antagonists. Other H2 antagonists, particularly
ranitidine (Zantac) followed, which had an even more favourable side-effect profile. The dimethylaminofuran unit in ranitidine can be visualised as replacing the imidazole ring at the receptor. A closer imidazole
substitute is the thiazole ring found in famotidine (Pepcid).
Another type of antacid is the proton-pump inhibitor. As mentioned above, H2 receptors initiate a
complex cascade within a cell resulting in the production of gastric acid, but the actual final release of the
acid from the cell is via an enzyme – H+,K+-ATPase, the ‘proton pump’ – which exchanges protons from
inside the cell with potassium ions outside. Omeprazole (Losec) was designed to inactivate this enzyme
and is even more effective than the H2 antagonists, almost completely stopping the production of acid. The
mechanism of action of omeprazole is very different from the competitive H2 antagonism. The drug is
converted in vivo into a highly selective sulfenylating agent for the SH of a specific cysteine residue in the
enzyme. This disulfide formation irreversibly deactivates the enzyme so effectively that recovery of acid
production requires the biosynthesis of new enzyme. This activation of omeprazole is acid-catalysed and
may involve initial protonation of the benzimidazole nitrogen and/or the sulfoxide oxygen. Because of this
susceptibility to acid, omeprazole is formulated as gastro-resistant granules, so as to avoid activation and
decomposition in the stomach before it can be absorbed from the more alkaline part of the gastro-intestinal
(GI) tract.
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Mechanism of action of omeprazole
33.4.2 Acetylcholine (ACh)
Acetylcholine mediates two different types of activity via corresponding receptors – muscarinic and nicotinic – which relate to the pharmacological activities of two natural products, muscarine and nicotine. The
former type of action occurs in nerve synapses and the latter at neuromuscular junctions and peripheral
ganglia. The term cholinergic is used for the general effects of acetylcholine.
Clinically useful muscarinic agents tend to be simple choline derivatives, although the alkaloid pilocarpine is a muscarinic agonist used in the treatment of glaucoma. The muscarinic antagonist pirenzepine
(Gastrozepin) is an alternative to the H2 antagonists for the treatment of peptic ulcers and some cholinergic
side-effects caused by radiotherapy. The best-known nicotinic agonist is nicotine! Nicotinic antagonists
include the natural bis-quaternary isoquinoline curare alkaloid tubocurarine, the paralytic agent from curare
(a South American arrow poison), which is used in surgery as a muscle-relaxant.
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33.4.2.1 Anticholinesterase Agents
The physiological activity of acetylcholine relies on local release, stimulation of the receptor, then
rapid hydrolysis (deacetylation) by acetylcholinesterase, which results in deactivation. The indole alkaloid
physostigmine, from the West African calabar bean, and the relatively simple synthetic compound pyridostigmine, which has a more obvious relationship to choline, are reversible inhibitors of acetylcholinesterase. Controlled inhibition of the enzyme by such drugs, which results in a build-up of ACh, is useful in
conditions such as myasthenia gravis, a muscle weakness, which is caused by insufficient production
of ACh.
Irreversible inhibition of acetylcholinesterase is the mechanism of action of poisoning by nerve gases,
such as sarin and, to a lesser degree, by other organophosphates, such as those used as insecticides, leading
to persistent, widespread and quite possibly fatal, excessive cholinergic effects. The inhibition is due to
phosphorylation of a serine OH at the active site of the enzyme – this OH is the nucleophile that attacks
the acetyl group during physiological functioning of the enzyme. It is possible to reactivate the enzyme,
provided treatment is given promptly, by use of pralidoxime (2-PAM). Here, the N-methylpyridinium binds
via electrostatic forces to the same site as the choline trimethylammonium, bringing the very nucleophilic
oxime oxygen close enough to attack the phosphoryl group, releasing the serine OH. The (saturated heterocyclic) alkaloid atropine, a muscarinic antagonist, is also administered.
33.4.3 5-Hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)
5-Hydroxytryptamine has at least 14 receptors and sub-types. Compounds acting on these receptors are
drugs for the treatment of disorders of the cardiovascular, gastrointestinal and central nervous systems.
Sumatriptan (Imigran), a 5-HT1D agonist, in part, causes vasoconstriction selectively in intracranial blood
vessels, opposing the vasodilation that is the pathological basis of migraine. The discovery of the triptan
class of drugs was a major advance in the treatment of migraine.
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The 5-HT3 antagonists ondansetron (Zofran) and granisetron (Kytril) are effective in relieving the nausea
and vomiting that are side-effects of radiotherapy and treatment with cytotoxic drugs. They probably function by a combination of central and peripheral actions.
Alosetron (Lotronex) is effective in certain variants of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), but was withdrawn from use because it may cause serious side-effects. However, it was later re-instated for restricted
use following petitions from patients.
33.4.4 Adrenaline and Noradrenaline
Adrenaline and noradrenaline are prominent throughout the cardiovascular system, acting through α- and
β-adrenergic receptors, which exist as a number of sub-types. The interaction of effects from these receptors is quite complex. Many common adrenergic drugs are simple carbocyclic analogues of adrenaline, but
a few of the important compounds are heterocyclic, for example prazosin (Hypovase) and indoramin
(Doralese) are α-antagonists, used for the treatment of hypertension and benign prostatic hypertrophy;
timolol (Blocaderen) is an anti-hypertensive, anti-angina and anti-arrythmic β-antagonist.
33.4.5 Other Significant Cardiovascular Drugs
Amlodipine (Norvasc) is one of a number of 1,4-dihydropyridines, the mechanism of action of which
involves blocking calcium channels (they are said to be ‘calcium antagonists’), resulting in a relaxation of
vascular smooth muscle. They are useful for hypertension and angina. Diazoxide (Proglycem) is a vasodilator used for intravenous administration in hypertensive emergency. Hydralazine (Apresoline) and minoxidil
(Rogaine) are vasodilators used for chronic hypertension, the latter being particularly useful for cases
resistant to other drugs. Minoxidil is also one of the few drugs of proven value for the treatment of baldness (alopecia).
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The angiotensin system also affects blood pressure. Angiotensin-I (inactive) is converted by angiotensin
converting enzyme (ACE) into angiotensin-II, which causes vasoconstriction and therefore increased blood
pressure. These effects of angiotensin-II can be controlled, either by use of an inhibitor of ACE or an
angiotensin-II antagonist. ACE inhibitors are generally derived from amino acids, but the angiotensin
antagonists are heterocyclic compounds, which notably contain tetrazoles as replacements for carboxyl
groups, resulting in increased potency. Losartan (Cozaar) was a widely used angiotensin-II antagonist, but
more potent compounds such as candesartan cilexetil (Amias) (a complex-ester prodrug) are now more
popular.
33.4.6 Drugs Affecting Blood Clotting
Blood clotting is an essential function to avoid excessive bleeding, but its malfunction is also of major
importance as a cause of disease. The mechanism of blood clotting is a complex sequence of events. It is
initiated by platelet activation, leading to their aggregation and formation of plug at the site of damage.
This aggregation also causes the release of substances that trigger the rest of the cascade, involving a series
of clotting factors.
Controlled inhibition of blood clotting is a very important therapeutic strategy for prevention and treatment of heart attacks and occlusive stoke. It is usually combined with drugs to reduce blood pressure and
statins to control cholesterol levels.
Low-dose aspirin is the drug most commonly used to inhibit platelet aggregation. It acts by inhibiting
the enzyme that initiates synthesis of pro-aggregatory prostaglandins. Proton-pump inhibitors or H2blockers are often co-administered with aspirin to prevent gastric bleeding. Other drugs inhibit platelet
action by different mechanisms. Ticlopidine (Ticlid) was the first of its class, acting as an ADP antagonist,
but clopidogrel (a close structural analogue; see page 645) has a better side-effect profile and, as was
mentioned above, is extremely successful commercially. It is also used in combination with aspirin following angioplasty.
Cilostazol (Pletal), a selective inhibitor of PDE III, is used for the treatment of intermittent claudication,
an occlusive disease of blood vessels in the legs, which causes pain on walking. It acts as a vasodilator
and inhibitor of platelet aggregation. Warfarin, initially developed as a rat poison, and a number of similar
compounds, are effective anti-clotting agents by their action as vitamin K antagonists.
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33.4.7 Other Enzyme Inhibitors
COX (cyclooxygenase) enzymes are involved in the first stage of prostoglandin synthesis and their inhibition
is the basis of action of the Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDS). There are two types of
enzyme, COX-1 and COX-2 – inhibition of the latter results in anti-inflammatory and analgesic effects
while inhibition of the former is responsible for side-effects, particularly gastric bleeding. Most older
NSAIDS have both COX-1 and COX-2 activity (indomethacin (Indocin) is an example), although etodolac
(Eccoxolac) shows very good selectivity for COX-2. Highly selective COX-2 inhibitors such as celecoxib
(Celebrex) are now at the forefront, although another COX-2 inhibitor (Vioxx) was withdrawn due to
cardiovascular problems. Ketorolac (Acular) has a different balance of analgesic and anti-inflammatory
properties and is particularly useful for topical administration to the eye.
Statins reduce the amount of cholesterol in the blood by inhibition of one of the enzymes (HMG CoA
reductase) involved in its biosynthesis and are therefore very useful for prevention of heart disease. The
original statins were complex aliphatic fungal metabolites, such as simvastatin (Zocor), but a number of
synthetic heterocyclic analogues carry only a small portion (comprising the ring-opened lactone) of the
original structures. Atorvastatin (Lipitor) (page 645 for structure) is the most significant drug in this class
by value, and is particularly useful due to its lower incidence of the serious side-effects sometimes found
for other drugs of this class. Cerivastatin (Baycol), another heterocyclic analogue (with improved solubility)
was widely used, but later withdrawn from sale due to an unacceptable level of these serious
side-effects.
Other useful enzyme inhibitors include acetazolamide (Diamox) (carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) for the
treatment of glaucoma, congestive heart failure, epilepsy and motion sickness (a very useful drug!). Sildenafil (Viagra), famous for treatment of impotence, inhibits a phosphodiesterase enzyme (PDE5) that is
involved in the breakdown of ATP.
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Leflunomide (Arava) is an anti-proliferative drug that inhibits dihydroorotate dehydrogenase, an enzyme
essential for the synthesis of pyrimidines such as uracil, via aromatisation of dihydroorotic acid. It also has
some immunomodulatory effects and is useful for intractable cases of rheumatoid arthritis, despite being
liable to cause a number of serious side-effects. It is actually a prodrug, being converted into the active
compound, a nitrile formed by cleavage of the isoxazole ring (cf. 25.5.1).
33.4.7.1 Cytochrome P450 Enzymes
The enzymes in this very large group have active sites containing haem, where oxidation–reduction reactions are governed by interconversion of Fe(II) and Fe(III). They are very widely distributed in all forms
of life from animals down to the simplest organisms. They are important medically as they are responsible
for much metabolic degradation of drugs and are also involved in the biosynthesis of biomolecules, such
as steroids. Sub-types, which may be genetically determined, may lead to different rates of metabolism of
drugs in different patient groups, causing problems in establishing the correct dose.
Inhibitors can be used therapeutically, but also occur in unwanted situations. They cover a range of
structural types, but often are heterocycles containing imine groups (azines and azoles), in which the nitrogen coordinates to the metal. This binding can be quite sensitive to steric hindrance, allowing control in
the design of drugs where inhibition is either wanted or not.
Fomepizole is used for the treatment of poisoning by ethylene glycol or methanol. It acts by inhibiting
alcohol dehydrogenase, the enzyme that converts these two compounds into toxic metabolites. Abiraterone,
which inhibits enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of testosterone, shows great promise in the treatment
of prostate cancer. The logic of the design of this drug is clear – add the 3-pyridyl inhibitor group to a
structure closely related to the target biomolecule. The anti-fungal azoles (see 33.6.1) have a related mechanism as they selectively inhibit enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of steroids necessary for fungal
growth.
On the downside, grapefruit juice contains inhibitors such as bergamotin and naringin, which can drastically reduce the rate of metabolism of many drugs, leading to toxic effects from overdose! However, there
may be some potential here for improving drugs that are subject to excessively rapid metabolism.
658
Heterocyclic Chemistry
33.4.8 Enzyme Induction
Although most enzyme-related drugs are inhibitors, some are enzyme inducers – they switch on the gene
responsible for synthesis of the enzyme, increasing its production. An interesting example is methylene
blue, originally used as a biological stain, but also having a complex combination of biological actions. Its
best-established medical role is for the treatment of methemoglobinemia*, a condition in which a portion
of hemoglobin exists in the Fe(III) state, which is unable to transport oxygen. Methylene blue induces
production of the enzyme diaphorase II, also known as NADPH methemoglobin reductase, which is selfexplanatory – it reduces Fe(III) to Fe(II), the oxygen-carrying form.
Other actions of methylene blue include monoamine oxidase inhibition, which can cause dangerous
interactions with certain other drugs. However, it also has potential to treat malaria and Alzheimer ’s disease,
the latter as a formulation named ‘Rember ’. Its activity in Alzheimer ’s disease is thought to depend on
converting an abnormal ‘tangled’ form of a protein in the brain back to the normal form, although the
mechanism for this is not clear.
33.5
Drugs Acting on the CNS
The CNS contains a wide variety of neurotransmitters and high concentrations of receptors. Mechanisms
of action of many drugs are often complex combinations of receptor-based actions. Some of the most widely
used (and abused) drugs are hypnotics/sedatives, for treatment of insomnia. Barbiturates such as amylobarbitone have been used for many years, but suffer from side-effects and are addictive. Thiopentone
sodium salt (sodium pentothal), however, is very useful as a short-acting intravenous anaesthetic. The
benzodiazepines, such as diazepam (Valium) and alprazolam (Xanax), are safer drugs for insomnia and
also can be used for treatment of anxiety and muscle spasms. Zolpidem (Ambien) is a newer and more
selective hypnotic.
*Pronounced ‘met-hemoglobinemia’, not ‘meth-’, which could imply methylation.
Heterocycles in Medicine
659
Another barbiturate (phenobarbitone (Luminal)) and a newer drug lamotrigine (Lamictal) are used to
treat epilepsy. Trazodone (Molipaxin) is a useful anti-depressant with fewer side-effects than some of the
older drugs. The action of varenicline (Champix), used to treat smoking withdrawal, has a straightforward
mechanism, being a nicotinic partial agonist.
Anti-psychotic agents, acting primarily as dopamine and 5-HT antagonists, are used mainly to treat
schizophrenia. Newer agents such as olanzapine (Zyprexa) and risperidone (Risperidal) have fewer sideeffects than the traditional phenothiazines, such as chlorpromazine (Thorazine).
The neurodegenerative states present a challenge for medicinal chemistry. Parkinson’s disease is caused
primarily by a deficiency of dopamine and so dopamine agonists, such as ropinirole (Requip) and pramipexole (Mirapexin), are effective in alleviating some of the symptoms. Both of these are also used to treat
‘restless legs’ syndrome. Riluzole (Rilutek) is the only drug so far developed to have a significant effect
in treatment of motor neurone disease.
33.6 Anti-Infective Agents
This section covers parasitic (protozoa and helminths (‘worms’)), bacterial and viral diseases. The mechanisms of action of many of these agents are complex and diverse and, in some cases, not fully understood,
but enzyme inhibition is common to many.
33.6.1 Anti-Parasitic Drugs
The most important protozoan infection is malaria and this was an early target for medicinal chemical
research. The traditional treatment was an extract of the bark of the cinchona tree, which contained the
660
Heterocyclic Chemistry
alkaloid quinine. Current emphasis is on prevention by continuous dosing during exposure, using
synthetic anti-malarial drugs, which must be under constant review as resistance eventually develops. Many
of these drugs are quinolines with obvious similarities to quinine, for example mefloquine (Lariam).
Proguanil (Paludrine) is of particular interest because the active species, formed in vivo, is a triazine
(cycloguanil).
Metronidazole (Flagyl) is used for both bacterial (commonly for dental infections) and some protozoan
infections, such as amoebic dysentery. Benzimidazoles, such as mebendazole (Pripsen), are an important
group of anthelmintics. The most common anti-fungal agents are triazoles such as fluconazole
(Diflucan).
33.6.2 Anti-Bacterial Drugs
Among anti-bacterial agents, the simplest must be isoniazide (Rimifon), an important anti-tuberculosis
drug. Heterocyclic contributions to mainstream antibiotics include a group of quinolones e.g. the broadspectrum anti-bacterial ciprofloxacin (Cipro) perhaps best known in connection with terrorist use of anthrax
and the diamino-pyrimidine trimethoprim (Triprim). Many of the sulfonamides, the first synthetic antibiotics, contain heterocyclic residues.
Co-trimoxazole (Septrin) is a well-known combination of a sulfonamide (sulfamethoxazole) with trimethoprim. This combination inhibits enzymes at two points of folic acid (32.2) utilisation – the sulfonamide
inhibits incorporation of p-aminobenzoic acid during bacterial folic acid synthesis, and trimethoprim inhibits its conversion into tetrahydrofolate. The overall result is synergistic, i.e. there is a greater activity than
the sum of the two components.
Heterocycles in Medicine
661
Penicillins and cephalosporins are saturated heterocycles; many aromatic heterocycles are included in a
multitude of their side-chain variants.
33.6.3 Anti-Viral Drugs
Many antiviral6 agents are simply modified nucleosides, often only in the ribose residue, such as the antiherpes drug acyclovir (Zovirax), the anti-HIV protease inhibitor zidovudine (Retrovir) (AZT) and lamivudine (Epivir) (3-TC), which is active against HIV and hepatitis. Heterocycle-modified compounds include
the anti-herpes idoxuridine and a general anti-viral compound ribavirin (Rebetol). These generally work
by disrupting the synthesis of viral DNA following incorporation, in competition with natural nucleosides,
at an early stage. Non-nucleoside compounds, such as delavirdine (Rescriptor), a reverse transcriptase
inhibitor, and saquinavir (Invirase), a protease inhibitor, (both anti-HIV drugs) act by binding close to the
active site of an enzyme, altering its conformation and thereby deactivating it.
33.7 Anti-Cancer Drugs
Anti-cancer drugs generally act by disrupting the growth of cells and therefore oppose the excessive and
abnormal growth that is the basis of cancer pathology. They are often referred to as cytotoxic or antimetabolites. One of several mechanisms can be operative: disrupting the synthesis of DNA either by Nalkylating one of the bases (adenine, guanine, cytosine or thymine) or by incorporation of a modified base
or nucleoside by competition with the natural bases for the DNA-synthesising enzymes. Alkylating agents
are usually simple chemical ‘reagents’ or their precursors, an example of the latter being temozolomide
(Temodal), which breaks down in vivo to give the powerful alkylating agent diazomethane. Possibly the
resemblance of temozolomide to a nucleic acid base allows it to come into close contact with its target. It
is used for glioma and melanoma. 6-Mercaptopurine and 5-azacytidine (Vidaza) are anti-leukemics; gemcitabine (Gemzar) is used against breast and lung cancers.
662
Heterocyclic Chemistry
Some cytotoxic agents, such as azathioprine (Imuran), are used as immunosuppressive drugs rather than
for treating cancer, acting by similar mechanisms, but with different balances of effects. These drugs would
typically be used to prevent organ rejection following transplantation or to treat severe inflammatory diseases due to autoimmune reactions. Other mechanisms include interference with the function of folic acid,
an important growth factor. Methotrexate (MTX) is a well-established and widely used anti-cancer and
immunosuppressive agent that acts in this manner.
5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) is a cytotoxic agent used to treat solid tumours, such as those of the breast and
colon. However, its prodrug capecitabine (Xeloda) is much better absorbed orally. 5-FU, applied as a cream,
is also very useful for the treatment of certain skin cancers. It is significant that 8% of the population lack
an enzyme that can metabolise 5-FU. In these people, administration of normal doses of the drug can lead
to dangerously high toxic levels in the blood.
A number of inhibitors of various tyrosine kinase enzymes are important new cancer drugs: sunitinib
(Sutent) is used for the treatment of certain kidney and GI cancers; imatinib (Glivec) for chronic myeloid
leukemia and GI tumours, and lapatinib (Tykerb/Tykerv) for breast and lung cancers. Bortezomib (Velcade),
a proteasome inhibitor is used to treat multiple myeloma and is notable for being a boronic acid.
Heterocycles in Medicine
663
Irinotecan (Camptosar), a more selective synthetic analogue of camptothecin (a natural, but toxic, anticancer alkaloid), acts by inhibiting topoisomerase I, an enzyme involved in ordering the strands of DNA.
Some compounds act by physical binding with vital natural polymers – the complex indole alkaloid vincristine is a classic example – it binds to tubulin, a protein essential to cell division.
33.8
Photochemotherapy
Treatment of certain diseases, particularly of the skin, by ultraviolet irradiation (including sunshine) is a
very old technique (phototherapy). A more modern approach involves administering photosensitising agents
followed by irradiation with ultraviolet or visible light (photochemotherapy). The ideal situation is that
selectivity is achieved by the sensitising agent concentrating in the target organ, but accurately targeted
irradiation using a laser is also possible. Note, the laser is not a burning laser, just a high intensity source
for activation of the sensitiser.
33.8.1 Psoralen plus UVA (PUVA) Treatment
Oral administration of a psoralen such as methoxsalen (8-methoxypsoralen), followed by exposure to
ultraviolet light (UV-A) can be used to treat psoriasis, eczema, vitiligo and a number of other skin diseases.
There is a small risk of inducing relatively easily treatable, non-melanoma, skin cancers and possibly,
generally only after extensive treatment, a very small risk of malignant melanoma. Similar psoralens are
the components, somewhat controversially, of some tanning aids.
664
Heterocyclic Chemistry
33.8.2 Photodynamic Therapy (PDT)
Photodynamic therapy is a slightly different type of photochemotherapy and is used to treat cancers and
pre-malignant lesions, both of the skin and internal organs, the latter using an endoscopic laser. It usually
involves intravenous administration of certain porphins, followed by laser irradiation at visible wavelengths.
A common agent used is porfimer (Photofrin is porfimer sodium), a linked porphin oligomer (MW ca.
10 000) prepared from natural materials, but 5-aminolevulinic acid (ALA) can be applied topically to some
accessible (skin) lesions, where it becomes a precursor for biosynthesis of protoporphyrin IX. This therapy
can only be used for tumours that lie relatively close to the surface of the tissue, that is, to the depth that
the light can penetrate.
Verteporfin (Visudyne) is used similarly for the treatment of the ‘wet’ form of macular degeneration (the
variant characterised by excessive vascularisation of the retina) and other eye diseases.
The mechanism of PUVA and PDT both involve the formation of singlet oxygen, which is cytotoxic,
and the former also probably also includes some direct action on DNA.
References
1
2
3
4
5
6
‘Comprehensive Medicinal Chemistry II’, Ed. Triggle, D. and Taylor, J., Elsevier, 2006.
Chem. World, Jan 2008, p.15.
‘Goodman & Gilman’s The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics’, Ed. Brunton, L. L., Lazo, J. S., and Parker, K. L., 11th Edtn., McGraw-Hill,
2005. This is the standard textbook, which is subject to frequent revision.
‘Molecules and Medicine’, Corey, E. J., Czakó, B., and Kürti, L., John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2007. This is a useful general discussion from a chemical/
biochemical viewpoint of major drugs of all structural types.
We do not give references for the individual drugs. General information is contained in references 1,3 and 4, but an internet search will give up-to-date
information. Wikipedia is often a good start as it usually gives chemical structures (unlike many medical papers), however further verification should
be sought.
‘AIDS-Driven nucleoside chemistry’, Huryn, P. M. and Okabe, M., Chem. Rev., 1992, 92, 1745.
Index
α-Effect 20
‘α-Position’, in names 1
‘β-Position’, in names 1
Abiraterone 657
ACE inhibitors 655
4-Acetamidobenzenesulfonyl azide 105
Acetazolamide 656
Acetyl hypofluorite 609
1-/2-Acetyl-1,2,3-triazole 558
Acetylcholine 652
1-Acetylindole 376
reaction with MoOPH 385
3-Acetylindole 376
1-Acetylindoxyl, Wittig reaction 398
2-Acetylthiophene 327
Achmatowicz rearrangement 351
Acidity of C-hydrogen in 5-membered heterocycles
Acidity of C-hydrogen in 6-membered heterocycles
Acidity of C-hydrogen, factors influencing 38
Acidity, definition 19
Activated zinc 47
Activating substituents for electrophilic substitution
Active pharmaceutical ingredient 649
Acular 656
Acyclovir 661
Acyl radicals, generation 28, 29
1-Acyl-benzotriazoles, use in N-acylation of pyrrole
3-Acylindoles, reduction to alkyl 396
C-Acylpyrroles, 2/3-rearrangement 309
Additives, for Pd(0)-catalysis 61
Adenine 516, 527, 635
from 2-chloropurine 522
ring-opening 519
ring synthesis
from 4-chloropyridine-5,6-diamine 532
from HCN plus NH3 534
Adenosine 515, 636
N-alkylation 516
notable purine synthesis 534, 535
15
N-1- 617
Adrenaline 647, 654
Adrenergic receptors 654
Heterocyclic Chemistry 5th Edition
© 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
40, 42
42
22, 23
299
John Joule and Keith Mills
Advair 645
Agonists 646
AICA see 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide
Alcoholic fermentation 632
Aldehyde synthesis, using thiazoles 466
Alkaloids 637, 638
Alkyl radicals, generation 29
N-Alkylation of azoles 30
N-Alkylation, unambiguous via O-silyl-derivatives 267
3-Alkylidene-3H-indoles 382
Allosteric binding 646
Alosetron 654
Alprazolam 658
Alzheimer’s disease 658
Ambien 658
Amias 655
Amidines, synthesis from 1,2,4-oxadiaxoles 571
α-Amino acids 629, 640
deamination 631
decarboxylation 631, 632
a 2-Amino-1,3,4-oxadiazole 570
a 5-Amino-1,2,4-thiadiazole 570
3-Amino-1,2,4-triazole 560
Amino-1,3-azoles, basicity 471
γ-Aminobutyric acid 647
Aminocarbonyl radicals, generation 28
2-Aminoimidazole 471
ring synthesis 475
5-Aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide, in pyrimidine synthesis
532, 533
a 3-Aminoindole, as acetamide 375
Amino-indoles, tautomerism 400
1-Aminoindolizines 542
Amino-isoquinolines, basicity 185
3-Aminoisoquinoline 181
4-Aminoisothiazole, diazotisation 493
5-Aminolevulinic acid 634, 664
Aminomalononitrile, in oxazole ring synthesis 475
Aminopurines, conversion into halides 529
diazotisation 528
tautomerism 525
Amino-pyrazines, basicity 271
666
Index
2-Aminopyrazine, diazotisation 272
from Chichibabin reaction 256
2-Aminopyrazole, Diels–Alder reaction 491
3-Aminopyrazole, halogenation 493
nitration 493
ring synthesis from acrylonitrile 495
4-Aminopyridazine, from Chichibabin reaction 256
2-Aminopyridine 132, 544
3-Aminopyridine 133
Amino-pyridines, acylation 145
N-alkylation 145
basicity 144
diazotisation 146
electrophilic substitution, regioselectivity 145
halogenation 145
nitration 145
tautomerism 142
Amino-pyrimidines, basicity 271
1-Aminopyridinium iodide 126
2-Aminopyrimidine, bromination 272
4-Aminopyrimidine, from Chichibabin reaction 256
2-Aminopyrimidine-5-boronic acid 272
2-Aminopyrimidine methiodide, Dimroth rearrangement
272
Amino-quinolines, basicity 185
5-Aminotetrazole 561, 564
diazotisation 564
ring synthesis 568
2-Aminothiazole, halogenation 471
3-Aminothiophene-2-carboxylate, methyl 611
Amlodipine 645, 646, 654
Anchimeric assistance in purine glycosylation 518
α-Angelica lactone 357
β-Angelica lactone 357
Angiotensin-I and –II 655
Aniline, acidity 11
Anomeric affect 590, 591
ANRORC process 181, 209, 210, 211, 357
Antagonists 646
Anthocyanins 130
colour variation with pH 641, 642
Anticholinesterase agents 653
Antihistamine 650
Antipyrine 493
API 649
Apigenin, notable chromone synthesis 244
Apresoline 654
Arachadonic acid amides 647
Arancep 645
Arava 657
Aristeromycin, notable purine synthesis 534
Aromas, natural 640, 641
Aromatic electrophilic substitution, mechanism 116
Aromatic nucleophilic substitution, mechanism 117
Aromatic resonance energy 6
Aromaticity
benzene 5
naphthalene 6
pyridine 7
Arylboronic acids
in Cu-catalysed azole N-arylations 86, 87
in Cu-catalysed purine N-arylations 87
5-Aryltetrazoles, thermolysis 564
Ascidian 640
Ascididemine 639
Aspergillic acid 640, 641
Aspirin 655
Atomic carbon 564
Atorvastatin 645, 656
ATP 515, 636, 637
Atrazine 623
Atropine 653
Aureusin 642
Aurones 642
2-Aza-bicyclo[2.2.0]hexadienes 141
(2.2.2)Azacyclazine 552
5-Azacytidine 661, 662
4-, 5-, 6-, 7-Azaindoles 400
basicity 400, 401
biological 3-alkylation 620
ring synthesis from ortho-iodo-pyridinamines plus alkynes
421
4-Azaindoles, ring synthesis from ortho-nitropyridylacetonitrile
422
6-Azaindoles, ring synthesis from pyrroles 422
7-Azaindole, typical reactions 401
N-oxide 401
Aza-indolizines 543
basicity 543
Azathioprine 662
Azete 597
Azetidines 597
basicity 592
ring synthesis
from X(C3)Y 602
ring synthesis via 2 + 2 additions 602
Azetidinone, from an isoxazole 489
2-Azidopyrimidine 258
Aziridines 592
basicity 592
lithio 599
reaction with nucleophiles 594
removal of N 595
ring opening reactions 594, 595
ring synthesis
from alkenes 600, 602
from X(C2)Y 600
from imines 601
N-tosyl 594
Azirines 592
Diels–Alder reactions 596
ring synthesis from oximes 601
Azoles, acidity 557
Azoles, basicity 20, 447
Azoles, mesomeric structures 11
1,2-Azoles
electrophilic substitution, regioselectivity 456
nucleophilic substitution, regioselectivity 456
Index
ring synthesis from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus H2NZH 459
typical reactivity 456
1,3-Azoles
C-hydrogen exchange 464
N-alkylation, relative rates 462
electrophilic substitution, regioselectivity 456
lithiation, regioselectivity 457
nucleophilic substitution, regioselectivity 456
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)Hal plus H2N(C)(C=Z) 458
from TsCH2NC plus R(C=Z)H 458
typical reactivity 455
ylides 464
1,3-Azole acids, decarboxylation 464
1,3-Azole N-oxides 473
AZT 661
Azulene, synthesis from Zincke’s salt 153
Baeyer-Villiger oxidation 230
Balz-Schiemann reaction 611
Barbiturates 263, 659
Barbituric acid 263
Bartoli synthesis of indoles 412
Barton-Zard synthesis of pyrroles 315
Base pairing in nucleic acids 635, 636
Basicity, definition 19
Batch processes 104
Baycol 656
BEDT-TTF
Benetex® OB 625
Benzene
mesomeric structures 6
orbital picture 6
resonance 6
1H-Benzimidazole see Benzimidazole
Benzimidazoles 503
acidity 505
N-acylation 504
basicity 503
bromination 504
2-metallation 505
2-nucleophilic substitution 505
ring synthesis using 1,3,5-triazine 576
ring synthesis
from ArN=CNH2 509
from ortho-Ar[NH2][NH2] plus RCO2H 507, 508
N-substitutions 505
Benzimidazole-2-thiol 504, 505
1,2-Benzisothiazole 503
2,1-Benzisothiazoles, ring synthesis from ortho-Ar[Me][NH2]
plus SOCl2 512
1,2-Benzisoxazoles 503
ring synthesis from ortho-Ar[Hal][(C=NOH)R] 509, 510
2,1-Benzisoxazoles, ring synthesis from ortho-Ar[N3][(C=O)R]
511
Benzo[1,2-b:4,3-b′]-dipyrroles, notable pyrrole synthesis 318
Benzo[b]furans 369
2-lithiation 371
ring synthesis from phenols 372
667
Benzo[b]pyryliums 205, 229
ring synthesis from ArOH plus R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R
207
Benzo[b]thiophenes 369
2-lithiation 371
Benzo[c]furans 369, 447
Diels–Alder reaction 372
Benzo[c]pyrylium 229
Benzo[c]thiophenes 369, 447
Diels–Alder reaction 372
ring synthesis
from thiophenols 372
from phthalides 450
from thiophenes 450
Benzo-1,2-azoles, typical reactivity 458
Benzo-1,3-azoles, typical reactivity 458
Benzoin condensation 471
Benzopyrones
electrophilic addition to oxygen 232
electrophilic substitution 232
halogenation 232
1H-2-Benzopyran-1-one 229
2-Benzopyran-3-ones, Diels–Alder reaction 236
2H-1-Benzopyran-2-one 229
3H-2-Benzopyran-3-one 229
4H-1-Benzopyran-4-one 229
nitration 232
Benzopyrylium ions, addition of ammonia 230
1-Benzopyrylium ions 229
addition of carbon nucleophiles 231
addition of silyl enol ethers 231
ring synthesis
from ArOH plus R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R 237, 238
from ArOH plus RC≡C(C=O)R 238
from ortho-Ar[OH][C=O)R] plus RCH2(C=O)R 237
2-Benzopyrylium ions 229
ring synthesis from ortho-Ar[C=O][CH2(C=O)R] 242
Benzothiazoles 503
2-metallation 505, 507
2-nucleophilic substitution 505
ring synthesis
from ortho-Ar[SR][(C=O)R] 459
from Ar(NH)(C=S)NHR 509
from ortho-Ar[NH2][SH] plus RCO2H 507, 508
a Benzo[b]thiophene 2,3-quinodimethane 33
Benzo[c]thiophenes, synthesis from dihydrobenzo[c]thiophene
S-oxides 450
Benzothiophenes, 2,3-dihydroxylation 620
Benzotriazole 579–581
N-arylation 581
displacement with Grignard reagents 580
leaving group in VNS processes 580, 581
use in cyclopropane synthesis 580
use in 1,4-diketone synthesis 580
use in ene-one synthesis 580
use in general synthesis 579
use in peptide synthesis 580
use in stabilising cations 580
Benzotriazoles, conversion into other heterocycles 581
668
Index
Benzoxazoles 503
2-metallation 506
2-nucleophilic substitution 505
ring synthesis from ortho-Ar[NH2][OH] plus RCO2H 507,
508
Benzyl isonitriles, preparation 564
3-Benzyl-5-(2-hydroxyethyl)-4-methylthiazolium chloride 471
Bergamotin 657, 658
Biginelli synthesis of dihydropyrimidinones 278
with ionic liquid tag 102
Bilirubin 635
Biotin 633
2,2′-Bipyridyl 60
Birch reduction 139, 140, 307, 353, 392
Bis(pinacolato)diboron 50
Bischler synthesis of indoles 411, 412
Bischler–Napieralski synthesis of isoquinolines 195
Blocaderen 654
Blood-brain barrier 647
[bmim][Br], synthesis in flow reactor 105
[BMIM][Cl] see [bmim][Cl]
[bmim][Cl] 621
1-Boc-indole, 2-lithiation 389
a 1-Boc-indole-2-stannane 391
N-Boc-pyrrole 304
addition of a carbene 308
Diels–Alder reactions 307
Bohlmann–Ratz reaction 161
in flow reactor 104
Boronates, in cross couplings 65, 66
Boronic acids, acidity 48
esters 49
oxidation to phenols 52
preparation via lithation 44, 50
preparation via Pd(0)-coupling 50
preparation via transmetallation 51
structure 48
Boroxins 49
Bortezomib 662, 663
Bpy see 2,2′-Bipyridyl
Brassinin 629
3-Bromo-1-TIPS-pyrrole 298
halogen-metal exchange 306
3-Bromo-7-azaindole 401
2-Bromobenzimidazole 504
6-Bromochromone 232
3-Bromocoumarin 232
1-Bromo-3-formyl-2H-isoindole 448
2-Bromofuran 349
3-Bromofuran, halogen-metal exchange 351
1-Bromo-2H-isoindole, from phthalimidine 448
4(5)-Bromoimidazole, halogen-metal exchange 468
3-Bromoindazole, halogen-metal exchange 506
3-Bromoindole 375
5-Bromoindole, halogen metal exchange 391
5-Bromoindoles, Cu-catalysed 5-amination 86
4-Bromoisoquinoline 178
5-Bromoisoquinoline 178
3-Bromoisoquinoline, conversion into 3-aminoisoquinoline 181
3-Bromo-2-pyrone, in Diels–Alder reactions 217
5-Bromo-2-pyrone, in Diels–Alder reactions 217
4-Bromopyrazole 488
halogen-metal exchange 490
2-Bromopyridine 134
3-Bromopyridines 137
nucleophilic displacement of bromine 133, 134
3-amination 86
5-Bromopyrimidine 255
halogen-metal exchange 250, 260
Minisci reaction at C-4 261
3-Bromoquinoline, halogen-metal exchange 182
5-Bromoquinoline, halogen-metal exchange 182
2-Bromothiophene 326
displacement of bromide with methoxide 330
conversion into 3-bromothiophene 332
oxidative coupling 83
3-Bromothiophene 327
displacement of bromide with methoxide 330
Grignard reagent from 331, 332
Bromo-triazoles, relative reactivity in nucleophilic
displacements 558
5-Bromo-1,2,4-triazolo[1,5-a]pyridine 547
5-Bromouracil 264
Buchwald–Hartwig amination 83, 84
Buchwald-Hartwig biphenyl ligands 60
But-2-en-1,4-diones from furans 351
Butenolides 357
from 2-trimethylsilyloxyfurans 357
2-t-Butoxyfuran, 5-lithiation 358
2-t-Butylisoindole, electrophilic substitution 448
3(5)-t-Butylpyrazole, N-acetylation 486
Caffeine 637
Calcium antagonists 654
Camptosar 663
Candesartan cilexetil 655
Cannabinoid receptors 647
Capecitabine 662
Carbazole, ring synthesis 113
Carbene ligands for Pd(0) reactions 60
Carbepoetin 645
Carbocyclic bromovinyldeoxyuridine, notable pyrimidone ring
synthesis 281
β-Carboline, dihydro, synthesis via Vilsmeier reaction 377
γ-Carboline, ring synthesis using benzotriazole 581
Carbonyl diimidazole 463, 464
Carbostyril 180
Catalysts, for Pd(0) reactions 59
CDI see Carbonyl diimidazole 464
Celebrex 656
Celecoxib 656
Central nervous system 647, 649, 658
Cephalosporins 587, 661
Cerivastatin 656
Cesium fluoroxysulfate 611
Chalcone 230
Index
Champix 659
Chan–Lam reaction 86, 87
Chartelline A 639, 640
Chemical shifts
13
C, heterocycles 16
1
H NMR, heterocycles 15
Chichibabin reaction 132, 179, 180, 256, 575
Chloramine T 600
4-Chloro-5-azaindole, relative reactivity to nucleophiles 402
4-Chloro-7-azaindole
from the N-oxide 401
nucleophilic substitution 402
2-Chlorobenzimidazole 505
2-Chlorobenzoxazole 505
2-Chloro-3-formylindole, from oxindole 397
5-Chloroimidazo[1,2-a]pyridine 543
Chloro-isoquinolines, rates of nucleophilic substitution 26
1-Chloroisoquinoline 184
3-Chloro-1,2,4-triazole 560
Chlorophyll a 633, 634
2-Chloropurine 522
6-Chloropurine 522
2-Chloropyrazine
from N-oxide 251
lithiation 250
3-Chloropyridazine 258
Chloropyridines, rates of nucleophilic substitution 24
2-Chloropyridine, nucleophilic displacement 134
3-Chloropyridine, from pyrrole 308
4-Chloropyridine 136
2-Chloropyrimidine 258, 259
addition of heteroaryllithium 256
2-Chloropyrrole 298
Chloroquine, notable quinoline synthesis 198
Chloro-quinolines, rates of nucleophilic substitution 26
2-Chloroquinoline
3-metallation 182
nucleophilic substitution 181
Chloro-thiadiazoles 558
2-Chlorothiazole 466
Chlorpheniramine 651
Chlorpromazine 659
Chromenol 230
Chromones 205, 229
addition of Grignard reagents 234
ring opening with amines 233
ring opening with base 233
ring synthesis
from ortho-Ar[OH][(C=O)R] plus RCO2R 237, 240, 241
from ortho-Ar[OH][Hal] plus HC≡CR plus CO 242
Chromylium 229
Chuangxinmycin, notable indole synthesis 419, 420
Chymotrypsin 630
Cilostazol 655
Cimetidine 651
Cinnoline 253
Cipro see Ciprofloxacin
Ciprofloxacin 660
669
Claisen ortho-ester rearrangement in indole series 394
Claisen rearrangement, in furan series 355
Clarityn 651
Clevios 626
Clopidogrel 645, 655
C-Methylation via Pd(0)-catalysed coupling 68
CNS see Central nervous system
Cobalt catalysis
of coupling reactions 61
pyridine ring synthesis 164
Coelenterazine, notable pyrazine synthesis 282
Co-enzymes 630, 631
Collagen 629
Combes synthesis of quinolines 188, 189
Coniine 637,638
Conjugate acid 19
Conrad-Limpach-Knorr synthesis of quinolones 189
Cookson’s reagent 561
Copper(I) 3-methylsalicylate, additive in coupling reactions 63
Copper(I) thiophene-2-carboxylate, additive in coupling
reactions 63
Copper-catalysed
amination 85
imidazole N-phenylation 85
imidazole N-thiophen-2-ylation 85
O-arylation 87
Copper-halogen exchange 48
Co-trimoxazole 660
Coumarins 205, 229, 642
addition of Grignard reagents 234
2-arylation 234
Diels–Alder reaction 235
electrophilic substitution 232
halogenation 232
photochemical dimerisation 236
photochemical [2 + 2] addition 236
reductive ring opening 235
ring synthesis
from ArOH plus R(C=O)(C)CO2H 237
from ortho-Ar[OH][(C=O)R] plus RCH2CO2R 237,
238, 239
Coupling constants, 1,2- and 1,3-, NMR, heterocycles 17
COX enzymes 656
Cozaar 655
CR gas 622
Cross couplings
mechanism/coupling cycle 64, 65
named reactions 66
nucleophilic partner 65, 66, 70
side reactions 65
Stille reaction 67, 68
Hiyama–Denmark reaction 68
Kumada–Corriu reaction 69
Negishi reaction 69
Sonogashira reaction 69
CuTC see Copper(I) thiophene-2-carboxylate
Cyanin 641
Cyanoacetamide 161
670
Index
Cyanocobalamin 634
1-Cyanoimidazole 464
2-Cyanoisoquinoline 188
3-Cyanopyridine, synthesis via Pd(0)-catalysed cyanation 70
2-Cyanopyrimidine 258
3-Cyanopyrrole, via irradiation of 2-cyanopyrrole 309
5-Cyanotetrazole 562
Cyanuric acid 574
(3.2.2)Cyclazine 552
(3.3.3)Cyclazine 552
Cyclazines 552, 553
Cyclic guanosine monophosphate 650
Cycloguanil 660
Cyclopentadienyl anion
mesomeric structures 9
orbital picture 9
Cypridina luciferin 641
Cyproconazole 623
Cytochrome P450 657
Cytosine 263, 635
DAPI 624
Davicil 623
Delavirdine 661
Dendrodoine 639
Deoxyribonucleic acid see DNA
1,4-Diacetylindole, from 4-trimethylsilylindole 392
Diaminomaleonitrile, in pyrazine ring synthesis 280
2,4-Diaminopyrimidine, diazocoupling 272
5,6-Diaminouracil, in pyrazine ring synthesis 280
Diamox 656
Diazepam 658
Diazines, mesomeric structures 8
Diazinones
N-substitution 266, 267
O-alkylation 267
Diaziridine 596
Diazirine 596
Diazonamide A 640
Diazo-pyrazoles 494
Diazotetrazole, hazards 564
Diazotisation in HF 612
Diazoxide 654
3,5-Dibromo-1,2,4-triazole 559
3,4-Dibromo-1-TIPS-pyrrole 298
3,5-Dibromo-2-pyrone, in Diels–Alder reactions 217
2,3-Dibromofuran, halogen-metal exchange, regioselectivity
353
1,3-Dibromo-4,4-dimethylhydantoin, for bromination of pyrrole
298
2,3-Dibromopyridine, regioselectivity in halogen-metal
exchange 137
2,5-Dibromopyridine
metal-halogen exchange, regioselectivity 137
nucleophilic substitution of bromine, regioselectivity
134
3,4-Dibromopyridine, nucleophilic substitution of bromine,
regiochemistry 133
2,4-Dibromothiazole 472
halogen-metal exchange, regioselectivity 468
2,3-Dibromothiophene 327
2,5-Dibromothiophene 326
1,4-Dicarbonyl compounds, from furans 348
1,3-Dichloroisoquinoline, nucleophilic substitution of chlorine,
regioselectivity 181
2,6-Dichloropurine 522
2,6-Dichloropyridazine 274
a 2,6-Dichloropyridine, regioselectivity in coupling 74
2,4-Dichloropyrimidine
lithiation 259
regioselective nucleophilic substitution 257
2,4-Dichloroquinolines, regioselectivity in coupling 74
2,5-Dichlorothiophene 326
Diels–Alder reaction 216, 217, 235, 236, 248, 250, 261, 262,
270, 271, 307, 308, 330, 333, 334, 353–355, 358, 372,
393, 394, 469, 491, 559, 561, 577, 578
Dienomycin C 151
1-(Diethoxymethyl)indole 376
2-lithiation 389
Diethyl furan-3,4-dicarboxylate, ring synthesis 360
1-(2,2-diethylbutanoyl)indole
for 3-lithiation 389
for 7-lithiation 390
Diflucan 660
2,3-Difluoroacrylates 613
3,5-Dihalo-2(1H)-pyrazinones, Diels–Alder reactions 271
3,4-Dihydroazete 597
2,5-Dihydro-2,5-dimethoxyfuran, via bromination of furan 349
2,3-Dihydrofuran 590
lithiation 599
2,5-Dihydrofuran acids, via Birch reduction 353
2,3-Dihydroindole see Indoline
4,7-Dihydroindole, from Birch reduction 392
Dihydroorotic acid 657
2,5-Dihydro-1-phenylsulfonylpyrrole, from reduction 306
3,4-Dihydro-2H-pyran 590
1,4-Dihydropyrazine 261
Dihydropyridazinones, dehydrogenation 274
Dihydropyridines 588
1,4-Dihydropyridines, stability 159
Dihydropyrimidones, ring synthesis from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R
plus RCH=O plus urea 278
2,5-Dihydropyrrole, from reduction of pyrrole 306, 307
via olefin metathesis 604
cis-Dihydroxylation, biological 620
3,6-Diiodopyridazine 258
2,5-Diketopiperazines 279
2,5-Dilithiofuran 352
2,5-Dilithiothiophene 331
2,5-Dimethoxytetrahydrofuran, in pyrrole ring synthesis 312
3-Dimethylaminomethyl-7-azaindole 401
4-Dimethylaminopyridine 128
2-Dimethylaminothiophene 328
Dimethyldioxirane 233
indoles into 3-hydroxy-oxindoles 386
oxidation with 255, 530, 596
Index
Dimethyl formamide dimethyl acetal, in indole ring synthesis
407
2,5-Dimethylfuran, as a fuel 347
O,N-Dimethylhydroxylamine, use to make amines via halogen
displacement 258
4,5-Dimethylpyrimidine, side-chain halogenation 273
Dimethyl 1,2,4,5-tetrazine-3,6-dicarboxylate, ring synthesis
from 2xEtO2CC=N2 579
2,4-Dimethylthiazole, ring synthesis 474
1,3-Dimethyluracil
Diels–Alder reaction 270
reaction with guanidine 266
Dimroth rearrangement 271, 516, 527, 528, 617
Dioxane 587
Dioxiranes 596
2,4-Dioxygenated pyrones, tautomerism 218
1,3-Diphenylisobenzofuran 448
1,3-Dipolar cycloadditions 112
Dipolar cycloadition, of münchones 472
a Dipyrromethane 301
Dipyrromethene cation 302
Direct metallation 37
mechanism 38
Direct zincation 47, 48
Directed ortho-metallation 38
in pyridines 43, 135–137
in diazines 44, 259, 260
in furans 41, 352, 353
in indoles 390
in quinolines 181, 182
in thiophenes 331
Directed ortho-halogen exchange 137
ortho-Directing groups 135
on diazines 44
on pyridines 43
Disconnections
for 5-membered heterocycles 108
for 6-membered heterocycles 108
2,5-Di-t-butylfuran 359
from furan 350
ring synthesis 359
2,5-Di-t-butylpyridine 130
2,4-Di-t-butylpyrrole 296
Dithieno[3,2-b:2′,3′-d]thiophene 332
Divicine 641
DMAP see 4-Dimethylaminopyridine
DMFDMA see Dimethyl formamide dimethyl acetal
DNA 635, 646
Doebner–Miller synthesis of quinolines 191
DoM see Directed ortho-metallation
Dopamine 647, 659
Doralese 654
Dragmacidin D, notable indole/pyrazine synthesis 420, 421
Eccoxolac 656
Ehrlich colour reaction
of indoles 381
of pyrroles 301
671
Electrophilic aromatic substitution
mechanism 20, 21
comparison pyrrole/thiophene/furan 22
Electrophilic radicals 27, 30
EMEA 648
Enaminates 54, 146
Enamines typical reactivity 107
Enbrel 645
Endorphins 647
Enkephalins 647
Enol phosphates, cross coupling 590
Enols typical reactivity 107
Episulfide 592
Epivir 661
Epoxides 592
inversion of stereochemistry 594
from alkenes 604, 605
reaction with cyanate 594
reaction with nucleophiles 592–594
regiochemistry of ring opening 593
ring opening reactions 592
ring synthesis
from R2C=CR2 plus RCO3H 604, 605
from Hal(C2)OH 605
trifluoromethyloxirane, lithiation 599
Ergotamine 638
Erlenmeyer azlactone 472
Eschenmoser’s salt
in reaction with indole 383
in reaction with thiophenes 328
Eseroline alkaloid skeleton 394
Esomeprazole 645
Etanercept 645
3-Ethoxyacryloyl isocyanate, in pyrimidone ring synthesis 277
Ethyl indole-2-carboxylate, ring synthesis 406
Ethylene imine 592
Ethylene oxide see Epoxides
Ethylene sulfide 592
Etodolac 656
European Medicines Agency 648
FAD see Flavin adenine dinucleotide
Famotidine 651
FDA see Food and Drug Administration
Fe(0)-Fe(II) cross coupling cycle 61
Fe(I)-Fe(III) cross coupling cycle 61
Feist-Benary synthesis of furans 360
FH4 see Tetrahydrofolic acid
Fischer synthesis of indoles 372, 403–405
in flow reactor 104
mechanism 403
regioselectivity 404
tryptophans and tryptamines 405
‘Fish hook arrows’, definition 5
Five-membered heterocycles
metallation regioselectivity 292
side-chain reactivity 292
substituent effects in electrophilic substitution 291
672
Index
Flagyl 660
Flavin adenine dinucleotide 632
Flavone 2,3-epoxides 233
Flavones 641
lithiation 235
reaction with malononitrile 234
Flavonoids 229
Flavylium 229, 230
addition of water 230
Flow reactor 104, 105, 564
Flower pigments 209, 230
Fluconazole 660
Fluorescein 624
Fluoroacetamide, hazards 612
Fluoroacetic acid, hazards 612
2-Fluoroethanol, hazards 612
a 3-Fluorofuran 615
4(5)-Fluorohistamine, notable imidazole synthesis 478
a 2-Fluoroindole 614
a 3-Fluoroindole 611
a 3-Fluoroisoquinoline 615
a 5–18Fluorooxindole 619
a 2-Fluoropurine 612
2-Fluoropyrazine 260
a 4-Fluoropyrazole 613
Fluoropyridines
nucleophilic displacements 133
rates of nucleophilic substitution 25
2-Fluoropyridine 133
3-Fluoropyridine 136
N-Fluoropyridinium fluorides 610
N-Fluoropyridinium salts, enol addition 151, 152
N-Fluoropyridinium triflate 127
a 5-Fluoropyrimidine 613
a 2-Fluoropyrrole 611
a 3-Fluoropyrrole 615
a 3-Fluoroquinoline 614
a 4-Fluoroquinoline 613
5-Fluorothiazoles 610, 611
5-Fluorouracil 609, 662
Fluorous silica gel 101
Folic acid 282, 630, 660, 662
Fomepizole 657
Food and Drug Administration 648
3-Formylchromone
Diels–Alder reaction 235
ring synthesis from o-hydroxyacetophenone
234
2-Formylfuran, reaction with bromine 349
3-Formylfuran, 5-lithiation 353
2-Formylimidazole 466
ring synthesis 475
3-Formylindole
from Vilsmeier reaction 377
4-thallation 385
5-Formylindole 391
3-Formylpyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridine 546
5-Formylpyrimidine 260
2-Formylpyrrole 299
2-Formylthiophene 327
Friedel–Crafts acylation of thiophene 327
Friedländer synthesis of quinolines 192, 193
5-FU 662
Fukuyama synthesis of indoles 414
Furans 289, 347
acylation 349
addition of singlet oxygen 355
2,5-addition 291
2,5-adduct from bromination 349
2,5-adduct from nitration 348
alkylation 350
basicity 348
bromination 349
Diels–Alder reactions 353–355
dipolar cycloadditions 354
dipole moment 10
hydrolytic ring opening 348
Mannich reaction 350
metallation 352
mercuration 351
nitration 348
ortho-directed lithiation 352, 353
oxidative conversion
into piperidines 351
into pyrans 351
into unsaturated 1,4-diketones 351
orbital picture 10
photochemical [2 + 2] additions 356
protonation 347
2,3-quinodimethane 31, 32
reaction with chloral 350
reaction with imines 350
resonance energy 7
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)Hal plus R(C=O)(C)(C=O)OR 360
from C4O compounds 361, 362
from oxazoles 293
from but-3-ene-1,4-diols 53
from HO(C)C=C(C)OH and similar 361
from oxazoles 53, 469
from R(C=O)(C2)(C=O)R 293
from R(C=O)(C2)(C=O)R 359
miscellaneous methods 362
structure 10
sulfonation 348
typical reactivity 289
Vilsmeier reaction 349
Furan-2,5-disulfonic acid 348
Furan carboxylic acids
decarboxylation 356
ipso-nitration 356
3-carboxylic acid, 5-nitration 356
a Furan-3,4-bis-silane, ring synthesis 53
a Furan-3-stannane 53
Furaneol, notable furan synthesis 363
Furazan 569
Index
Furfural 347 see also 2-formylfuran
conversion into 1,2-diaminocyclopentenones 357
synthesis from xylose 359
Furfuryl halides, tele-substitution 356
Furoxan 569
Fürstner synthesis of indoles 414
Fusarinic acid, notable pyridine synthesis 165
GABA see γ-Aminobutyric acid
Gassman synthesis of 3-alkythioindoles 414
Gastro-intestinal tract 651
Gemcitabine 661
Gemzar 661
Gewald synthesis of thiophenes 340
GI tract see Gastro-intestinal tract
Glivec 662
D-Glucal, conversion into a furan 359
α-(D)-Glucopyranose 591
β-(D)-Glucopyranose 591
Glucose 591, 632
Glutaconaldehyde, sodium salt 152
Glycosyltrifluoro-acetimidates 267
GMP see Good manufacturing practice
cGMP see cyclic guanosine monophosphate
Good manufacturing practice 650
Gramine 383
conversion into 3-alkenylindoles 396
displacement of dimethylamine with nucleophiles 395
Grandberg synthesis of tryptamines 406
mechanism 406
Granisetron 645, 654
Grignard reagents, in cross couplings 65, 66
Grignard reagents
preparation 45, 46
reactions with electrophiles 45, 46
Griseofulvin 642
Grubbs olefin metathesis to make heterocycles 604
Guanidines, synthesis 487
Guanine 516, 527, 635
Guareschi synthesis of pyridines 160, 161
H1 antagonists 650
H2 antagonists 651
Haem 634
Haemoglobin 634
Halex reactions 612
Halo-azoles, relative reactivity in nucleophilic substitution 558
Halo-diazines, relative reactivity in nucleophilic substitution
256
Halogen dance process
in pyridines 136, 137
in thiophenes 332
Halogen-metal exchange 37, 39
reagents 39–40
Halopyrazines, relative reactivity in nucleophilic substitution
256
Halopyridazines, relative reactivity in nucleophilic substitution
256
673
Halopyrimidines, relative reactivity in nucleophilic substitution
256–258
2-Halopyrimidines, nucleophilic displacement 250
Halo-ribosides 518
Hammick reaction 148, 185
Hantzsch synthesis of pyridines 158, 159
Hantzsch synthesis of thiazoles 473
Hazards
fluoroacetate 609
explosions 105, 561, 564
perchlorates 105, 209
tosyl azide and replacements 105
toxicity of heterocycles 622
toxicity of tin compounds 67
Heavy fluorous compounds 101
Heck reaction 77, 87, 88, 123, 384
mechanism/catalytic cycle 88
Hemetsberger–Knittel synthesis
of a 5-azaindole 422
of indoles 113, 415
N-Heterocyclic carbenes 471
Hinckdentine A 639, 640
Hippuric acid 472
Histamine 463, 629, 647
Histamine receptors 650
Histidine 462, 463, 629
Hiyama–Denmark coupling reaction 66, 68
Hofmann exhaustive methylation 588, 589
5-HT see 5-Hydroxytryptamine
HT3 antagonists 654
Hydralazine 654
Hydrazine substituent, oxidative removal 577
β-Hydride elimination from palladium compounds 58
2-Hydroxy-5-methylfuran 357
2-Hydroxyfurans, tautomerism 357
3-Hydroxyindazole, tautomerism 507
1-Hydroxyindoles
synthesis from indoline 418
tautomerism 399
2-Hydroxyindole, tautomerism 397
3-Hydroxyindole, tautomerism 398
3-Hydroxyisoquinoline, tautomerism 184
5-Hydroxyisothiazole, tautomerism 493
Hydroxylamine O-sulfonic acid 126
Hydroxyproline 629
1-Hydroxypyrazole 486
3-Hydroxypyrazole, tautomerism 493
Hydroxypyridines, tautomerism 142
3-Hydroxypyridine, electrophilic substitution, regioselectivity
143
5-Hydroxypyrimidines, in Wittig reactions 270
2-Hydroxypyrrole, tautomerism 310
8-Hydroxyquinoline 183
3-Hydroxythiophene 336
tautomerism 226
2-Hydroxythiophene, tautomerism 335
5-Hydroxytryptamine 63, 629, 647
11
C-1′-5-hydroxytryptophan 618
674
Index
Hygrine 589
Hypovase 654
Hypoxanthine 516, 517
IEDDA see Inverse electron demand Diels–Alder
Imatinib 662, 663
IMes 60
1H-Imidazole see Imidazoles
Imidazoles 455, 461
acidity 30, 467
C-acylation, mechanism 465, 466
N-acylation 463, 464
N-alkylation 462, 463, 467
N-arylation with boronic acids 86
basicity 461
2-bromination, mechanism 465
hydrogen bonding 462
Mannich reaction 463
nitration 464
orbital picture 11
radical substitution 469
reversible N-alkylation
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)Hal plus H2N(C=NH) 473, 474
from TosMIC plus R(C=NR) 476
sulfonation 465
tautomerism 462
N-vinylation 463
an Imidazole N-oxide, ring synthesis 473
Imidazole-5-sulfonic acid 465
Imidazolidine 461
Imidazoline 461
Imidazolium salts, nucleophilic addition to 470
Imidazolium ylide 464
Imidazo[1,2-a]pyridines 543, 544
lithiation 544
ring synthesis from pyridines 544
Imidazo[1,5-a]pyridines 543, 545
lithiation 545
ring synthesis from pyridines 546
Imidazo[4,5-b]pyridin-2-ones 508
Imidazo[1,5-a]pyrimidine 549
Imidazo[1,5-c]pyrimidine 543
Imidazo[2,1-b]oxazole 552
Imidazo[2,1-b]thiazole 552
Imidazo[1,5-a]-1,3,5-triazines, ring synthesis 550
Imidazo[5,1-f][1,2,4]triazines, ring synthesis from imidazoles
550
Imidazol[1,5-d][1,2,4]triazine 543
Imuran 662
Indazol-3-one, ring synthesis from anthranilic acid plus HNO2
511
1H-Indazole see Indazole
Indazoles, acidity 505
N-alkylation 503, 504
N-acylation 504
basicity 503
nitration 504
ring synthesis
from ortho-Ar[Hal][(C=NNH2)R] 510
from ortho-Ar[NHAc][CH2R] plus RONO 510
N-substitutions 505
Indigo 373
from indoxyl 398
Indocin 656
Indol-3-ylacetic acid 629
Indol-3-ylacetonitrile, synthesis from gramine 395
Indol-5-ylboronic acid 391
1H-Indole see Indole
3H-indole 373
nucleophilic addition to 379
Indoles 369, 373
acidity 386
C-acylation 376–378
N-acylation 387
C-alkylation 378
α-alkylation, mechanism 379
N-alkylation 387
alkynylation 379
allylation 379
benzene-ring acylation 378
a 3-boronic acid, ipso substitution 52
bromination 375
a 3-bromoindole, halogen-metal exchange 390
N-carboxylation for 2-lithiation 389
carboxylic acids, decarboxylation, mechanisms 396, 397
Diels–Alder addition, intramolecular 393
dimer 383
dipolar cycloadditions, intramolecular 393
3-ketones, reduction to alkyl 371
C-lithiations, N-protecting groups for 388
Diels–Alder reaction with a 1,2,4,5-tetrazine 394
dimerisation 383
direct metallation
regioselectivity 81
electrophilic substitution
rate 23
regioselectivity 370
α-substitution, mechanism 370
halogenation 375, 376
2-halo- into 2-nitro- 386
iodination 375
Mannich reactions 370, 382–384
mercuration 384
nitration 374
nitrosation 384
N-substituted, 2-lithiation 371
orbital picture 11
protonation 37
2,3-quinodimethanes 32, 33
radical attack 391
with displacement of arylsulfonyl 391
reaction with aldehyde plus arylsulfinic acid 383
with aziridines 380
with azodicarboxylate 375
with conjugated carbonyl compounds 380, 381
Index
with conjugated imines 381
with epoxides 380
with formaldehyde 382
with isocyanides 377
with ketones and aldehydes 382
with nitroethene 381
with oxalyl chloride 377
reactivity 370
reduction to indoline 392
ring synthesis
from ArNHOH plus RC≡CR 405
from ArN(CHR)(C=O)R 411, 412
from ArNHCl plus RSCH2(C=O)R 414
from ArNR(N=CRH) 372, 403–405
from ortho-Ar[(N)(C=O)][((C=O)R] 414
from ortho-Ar[Hal][(N)C=C(C=O)R] 413
from ortho-Ar[Hal][NHR] plus RC≡CR 410
from ortho-Ar[N(C=O)][CH2R] 410, 411
from ortho-Ar[N≡C][C=CR] 414
from ortho-Ar[N3][C=CNO2] 415
from ortho-Ar[NH][C(C=O)R] 406
from ortho-Ar[NHR][C≡CR] 409
from ortho-Ar[NO2][C=C] 408
from ortho-Ar[CH3][NO2] 372, 407, 408
from p-benzoquinones and enamines 413
from pyrroles 307, 412
sulfonation 375
1-TIPS-gramine, 4-lithiation 390, 396
1-TIPS-indole, 3-lithiation 389
1-TIPS-indole-3-bromo, via lithiation 389
thiocyanation 375
typical reactions 369
N-sulfonylation 387
synthesis from indolines 415, 416
Indolenine see 3H-indole
Indolines 588
from indole 39
an Indole-3-acid, decarboxylation 378
an Indole-3-silane 53
an Indole-5-silane 52
an Indole-2-trifluoroborate, ipso alkylation 52
1H-Indolium cation 373
2H-Indolium cation 373
3H-Indolium cation 373
addition of hydrogen sulfite 374
Indolizine 539, 540
acetylation 540
aromaticity 539
basicity 540
lithiation 540
nitration 540
reaction with diethyl acetylenedicarboxylate 540
ring synthesis from pyridines 541, 542
Indolyl anion, mesomeric structures 386, 387
Indolyl N-Grignard reagents, 3-substitutions 387,
388
Indomethacin 656
Indophenine, colour test for thiophene 328
675
Indoramin 654
Indoxyl 398, 399
anion methylation 398
oxidation to indigo 398
ring synthesis from ortho-Ar[CO2H][(N)CH2CO2H] 417
Inhibitor of transforming growth factor β1, type 1 receptor,
notable imidazole synthesis 478, 479
1,1-Insertion of Pd 58
1,2-Insertion of Pd 57, 58
Inverse electron demand Diels–Alder reactions 261, 262
Invirase 661
Iodine fluoride 610
3-Iodo-1-TIPS-pyrrole, halogen-metal exchange 306
a 5-Iodo-2-pyrone, ring synthesis via iodolactonisation 216
4-Iodo-3-formylindole, via 4-thallium compounds 385
3-Iodochromone 233
3-Iodoindazole 504
3-Iodoindole 375
4-Iodoisothiazole 490, 493
2-Iodopyrazine 259
7-Iodopyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridine 546
5-Iodo-1-methyltetrazole 563
4-Iodothiazole 468
2-Iodothiophene 326
displacement with thiol 330
Iridium-catalysed boronation 51
Irinotecan 663
Iron catalysis of coupling reactions 61
Isatins 399
conversion into oxindoles 399
reaction with thiophene 328
electrophilic substitution 399
ring synthesis from ArNH2 plus CCl3CH=O 418
Isay synthesis of pteridines 282, 283
Isobenzofurans 447
Diels–Alder reactions 248
synthesis from 1-alkoxyphthalans 451
from phthalides 452
synthesis via cycloreversions 451
Isobenzothiophene 447
Isocarbostyril 180
Isochromylium 229
Isocoumarins 229
ring synthesis
from ortho-Ar[CO2H][CH2(C=O)R] 243
from ortho-Ar[CO2Me][Hal] plus RC≡CR 243
1H-Isoindole 447
2H-Isoindole 447
Isoindoles 369, 447
Diels–Alder reaction 372
ring synthesis from ortho-Ar[(C=O)R][(C=O)R] plus RNH2
450
synthesis by cycloreversions 450
synthesis from 1,3-dihydro-isoindoles 449
Isomaltol, conversion into 4-pyridones 357
Isoniazide 660
Isonicotinic acid 148
Isophakellin, N-methyl-dibromo- 639
676
Index
Isoquinolines 115, 177
basicity 177
bromination 178
electrophilic substitution, regioselectivity 122
hydroxylation 180
linked to a solid-support 99
nitration 178, 180
mechanism 22
nitro-, oxidative amination 180
nucleophilic substitution of halogen, regioselectivity
122
oxidation of the benzene ring 179
radical substitution 182
reaction with activated alkynes 187
ring synthesis
from Ar(C2)NH2 plus R(C=O)H 195, 196
from ortho-Ar[C≡CR][CH=NR] 197
from 2-benzopyrylium ions 206, 231
from Ar(C2)NH2 plus R(C=O)Cl 195
from ArCH=O plus H2NCH2CH(OR)2 194, 195
from indanedione monoximes 198
from ortho-dialdehydes 197
Isoquinoline-1-carboxylic acid, decarboxylation 185
Isoquinolinium salts, Grignard addition 186
Isoquinoline N-oxide
conversion into 2-cyanoisoquinoline 188
nitration 188
Isoquinoline 3,4-quinodimethane 33
1-Isoquinolone 184
conversion into 1-chloroisoquinoline 184
formylation 184
Isothiazoles 455, 485
N-alkylation 486
basicity 486
halogen-metal exchange 490
5-lithation 489
nitration 487
sulfonation 487
Isothiazolidine 485
Isothiazolium salts, ring opening with hydride 492
Isothiazoline 485
Isothiazol-5-one 493
Isoxazole 455, 485
basicity 486
interconversion with 1,2,4-thiadiazole 491
nitration 487
ring opening via 3-anion 489
ring synthesis
from nitrile oxides 53
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus H2NOH 494, 495
from RC≡N+—O− plus RC≡CR 496
synthons for β-amino-enones 490
Isoxazole-4-boronates, synthesis from alkynylboronates 73
Isoxazole-5-boronates, synthesis from alkynylboronates
73
an Isoxazole-5-stannane, ring synthesis 53
Isoxazolidine 485
Isoxazoline 485
Isoxazolium salts, base-catalysed ring opening 492
Japp–Klingemann reaction 419
JohnPhos 60
Ketorolac 304, 656
Knorr synthesis of pyrroles 312
Knorr’s pyrrole 313
Kryptofix 619
Kumada–Corriu coupling reaction 66, 69, 71, 123
Kytril 654
‘Lab on a chip’ 104, 105
β-Lactamase 598
β-Lactams 587, 598
β-Lactones 598
Lamellarin 639
Lamictal 659
Lamivudine 661
Lamotrigine 659
Lapatinib 662, 663
Lariam 660
Lawesson’s reagent, in thiophene ring synthesis 336, 337
Lead compound 649
Leaf-cutting ant 641
Leaving groups, in oxidative addition 62, 63
Leflunomide 657
Leimgruber–Batcho synthesis of indoles 372, 407
mechanism 498
‘Ligandless’ catalysts 61
Ligands, for palladium(0) reactions 60
Light fluorous compounds 101
Lipitor 645, 656
Lithiated heterocycles, regiostability 40
Lithiating reagents 38, 39
Lithiation
in the presence of N-hydrogen 44
of indoles, protecting groups 41
of pyridines, regioselectivity 43, 44
of pyrroles, protecting groups 41
solvents 39
3-Lithiofuran, stability 352
1-Lithioindoles, N-substitutions 388
3-Lithiothiophene, stability 331
Lithium chloride
promoter of CuI-catalysed N-arylation of imidazoles 86
use in direct metallations 46
use in halogen-metal exchange 46
Loratidine 651
Losartan 655
Losec 651
Louisanin A, notable pyridine synthesisc166
Loxapine 622
Luciferin 641
Luminal 659
Lupinine 638
Lysergic acid 638
Lysine 589
Madelung synthesis of indoles 410, 411
Maleic hydrazide 274, 632
Index
Malvin chloride 641
Manganese(II) catalysis of coupling reactions 61
Mannich reaction 289, 302, 303, 328, 350, 370, 382–384, 383,
486, 563
using boronic acids 51
Mebendazole 660
Mechanism of aromatic electrophilic substitution 20, 21
Mechanism of aromatic nucleophilic substitution 24–26
Mefloquine 660
Melamine 575, 622
Melatonin 629
Meldrum’s acid, use to make 3-hydroxythiophene 335, 336
5-Membered heterocycles, ring synthesis, from enol and C2XH,
mechanism 109
Mercury compounds
by metal-metal exchange 54
by electrophilic mercuration
furans 351
indoles 384
oxazoles 54
thiazoles 54
thiophenes 329
Mesionic heterocycles, structures, mesomeric structures 13
Mesoionic compounds
cycloadditions 113
definition 113
Mesoionic oxazolones 472
Mesoionic thiazolones 472
Messenger RNA 636
Metal-metal exchange 37
2-Methanesulfonylpyrimidine 258
Methotrexate 282, 662
Methoxatin 633
notable isoquinoline synthesis 198, 199
Methoxysalen 663
N-Methoxycarbonylpyrrole, reaction with singlet oxygen 307
Methoxydiazines, nucleophilic displacements 258
3-Methoxyfuran, Diels–Alder as a dienophile 355
2-Methoxyfuran, Diels–Alder reactions 358
5-Methoxyimidazo[1,2-a]pyridine 543
1-Methoxyindole, 2-lithiation 400
1-Methoxyphthalan 451
8-Methoxypsoralen 663
2-Methoxypyrazines, displacement of MeO 258
4-Methoxypyridazine, displacement of MeO 258
2-Methoxypyridine 133
4-Methoxypyrimidine, displacement of MeO 258
Methyl chromone-3-carboxylate, Diels–Alder reaction 235
1-Methyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole, ring synthesis 404
1-Methyl-1,2,3-triazole, bromination 558
3-Methyl-1,2,4-oxadiazole 569
1-Methyl-1,2,4-triazole 559
Methyl-1,2,5-thiadiazoles, side-chain deprotonation 570
4-Methyl-4H-1,2,4-triazole 559
Methyl-4-pyrones, side-chain condensations 218
1-Methyl-7-azaindole 401
2-Methyladenine, notable pyrimidine ring synthesis 281
Methyl-chromones, side-chain condensation 236
Methyl-coumarins, side-chain condensation 236
Methylene blue 623, 658
3-Methylfuran, mercuration 351
3-Methylimidazo[1,2-a]pyridine 543
2-Methyl-imidazoles, side-chain reactions 55
Methyl-imidazolium salts, side-chain reactivity 457
N-Methyliminodiacetic acid 49
Methyl-indoles, side-chain substitution 394, 395
1-Methylindole, photochemical [2 + 2] addition 394
2-Methylindole
5-nitration, mechanism 375
alkylation with araldehyde and a silane 382
reaction with a glycosyl bromide 382
ring synthesis from o-allylaniline 113
side-chain reactions 55
3-Methylindole, oxidative cleavage of 2,3-bond 385
2-Methylisoquinolinium iodide
cycloaddition 183
reduction 183, 186
conversion into 2-methyl-1-isoquinolone 186
Methyl-isothiazoles, side-chain acidity 492
Methyl-oxazoles, side-chain acidity 470
4-Methyloxazole, lithation and ring openingn 468
Methyl-purines, condensation at methyl 530
Methylpyrazines, side-chain oxidation, biological 255
2-Methylpyrazine 255
Methyl-pyrazoles, side-chain acidity 492
3(5)-Methylpyrazole 485
2-Methylpyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridine 546
3-Methylpyridazine 254
4-Methylpyridazine, side-chain substitution 273
Methyl-pyridines
oxidation of side-chain 130
side-chain acidity 54, 55, 146
side-chain halogenation 147
side-chain substitution 55, 120, 146, 147
1-Methylpyridinium iodide 128
Methyl-pyrimidines, acidity 252
Methyl-pyrimidones, side-chain metallation 269
Methyl-pyrroles, oxidation of side-chain 303
3-Methylpyrrole, dimerisation 306
N-Methylpyrrolidone 587
Methyl-pyryliums, side-chain substitution 213
2-Methylquinoline side-chain substitution 185
4-Methylquinoline, radical substitution 182
2-Methyltetrahydrofuran, solvent properties 347
Methyl-tetrazoles, side-chain lithiation 563
1-Methyltetrazole 562
electrophilic substitution 563
2-Methyltetrazole 562
Methyl-thiazoles
side-chain acidity 470
side-chain condensation 470
Methyl-thiophenes, side-chain halogenation 334
2-Methylthiothiazole, ring synthesis 474
4-Methypyrimidine, side-chain oxidation, biological 255
‘Me-too’ drugs 648
Metronidazole 660
MIDA 49
Migraine 653
677
678
Index
Minisci reaction 27, 138, 182, 560, 576
Minoxidil 654
Mirapexin 659
Mitomycins 587
Mitsunobu reaction
using fluorous reagents 101
using polystyrene-diphenylphosphine 100
Molipaxin 659
Molybdenum cofactor 282, 630
Monomode microwave heating 103
Morphine 638, 647
Morpholine 588
basicity 588
mRNA see Messenger RNA
MTX 662
Mucobromic acid, from 2-formylfuran 349
Mukaiyama reagent, fluorous version 102
Multimode microwave heating 103
Münchnones 47
Muscarine 652
Muscarinic receptor 652
Myasthenia gravis 653
NAD+ 631
NADPH 588, 631
Names of aromatic heterocycles 1, 2
Names of saturated heterocycles 3
Naming fused heterocycles 2
Naphthalene, resonance 6
Naringin 657, 658
Negishi coupling reaction 66, 69, 74, 77, 78, 269, 371
Nemertellin, notable pyridine synthesis 166
Nenitzescu synthesis of 5-hydroxyindoles 413
Nerve gases 653
Nettle rash 650
Neurotransmitters 629, 646, 647, 649
Nexium 645
NFSI 610
NHC see N-Heterocyclic carbene
Ni(0)-catalysed amination 85
Niacin 630
Nicotinamide 631
Nicotine 637, 638, 652
Nicotinic acid 148
Nicotinic antagonists 652
Nicotinic receptor 652
Nitrene insertion 113
Nitrile imines, generation (in situ) for cycloaddition 496
Nitrile oxides, generation (in situ) for cycloaddition 496
N-Nitro groups, as leaving groups 488
Nitroacetamide 161
3-Nitro-7-azaindole 401
6-Nitrochromone 232
2-Nitrofuran 348
4(5)-Nitroimidazole 464, 467
3-Nitroindazole 504
2-Nitroindole, via 2-lithiation 389
1-Nitroisoquinoline 180
4-Nitroisoquinoline 178
5-Nitroisoquinoline 178
8-Nitroisoquinoline 178
Nitrones 590
4-Nitropyrazole 487
3-Nitropyridine 129
Nitro-pyrroles, nucleophilic displacement of nitro 303
2-Nitropyrrole 297
3-Nitropyrrole 297
Nitrosation of amino-oxydiazines 272
2-Nitrothiophene 326
3-Nitrothiophene 326
3-Nitro-1,2,4-triazole 560
NMP see N-Methylpyrrolidone
Noradrenaline 647, 654
Norvasc 645, 654
N-Oxides, rates of nucleophilic substitution 25
NSAIDS 656
Nucleophilic aromatic substitution
mechanism 24–6
enhancement in acid for heterocycles 25
Nucleophilic radicals 27
Nucleophilicity, of azines 20
Nucleoside 515
Nucleotide 515, 636
Nudibranch 640
Numbering of heterocycles 1
O- versus N-arylation, ligands for 87
Octaethylhemiporphycene, notable pyrrole synthesis 318
Octahydroindole, from indole 392
Octaethylporphyrin, notable pyrrole synthesis 317
Olenzapine 645, 646, 659
Omeprazole, mechanism of action 652
Ondansetron 645, 654
notable indole synthesis 418
Opium 647
Opium poppy 638
Ornithine 589
Orphan drugs 648
OTC drugs 648
Oxadiazoles, aromaticity 569
ring syntheses 571–573
1,2,3-Oxadiazoles 569
1,2,4-Oxadiazoles 569
as masked amidines 571
ring synthesis
from amidoximes 571
from N-acylamidines 571
1,2,5-Oxadiazoles 569
ring opening 570
1,3,4-Oxadiazoles 569
ring synthesis
from C(C=O)NHNH(C=O)R 572
from tetrazoles 564, 572
Oxaziridines 596, 587
Oxazoles 455, 461
adducts from bromination 465
Index
N-alkylation 462, 463
basicity 461
Diels–Alder reactions 469
magnesiation 468
mercuration 54
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)(NH)(C=O)R 474, 475
from R(C=O)(C=N2)R plus RCN 476, 477
from TosMIC plus R(C=O)H 476
Oxazole-3-carboxylic acid, ester, ring synthesis 475
Oxazolidine 461
Oxazoline 461
Oxazolium salts, nucleophilic addition 470
Oxazolium ylide 464
Oxazolo[4,5-b]pyridines 508
an Oxazol-2-one, conversion into chloride 472
Oxetane 597
2H-Oxete 597
Oxidative addition 57
regioselectivity 57, 63
Oxindoles 397
electrophilic substitution 397
from indole-2-boronic acids 52
from isatins 399
ring synthesis from Ar(N)(C=O)CHalR 416,
417
Oxiranes see Epoxides
OXONE® 596
Oxyalkyl radicals, generation 28
Oxy-diazines
electrophilic substitution 264
tautomerism 263, 264
Oxypurines
O-acylation 526
N-alkylation 526
conversion into halides 527
conversion into sulfides 527
O-silylation 526
O-sulfonylation 526
tautomerism 525
Oxypyrimidines, electrophilic substitution 251
Paal-Knorr synthesis of furans 359, 360
Paal-Knorr synthesis of pyrroles 311, 312
Paclobutrazol 623
Palladation, aromatic 59
Palladium catalysis, general discussion 56–59
Palladium compounds
from boronic acids 58, 59
from Grignard reagents 58
from stannanes 58
from zinc compounds 58
Palladium-alkene complexes 59
Palladium-catalysed reaction types 56
Palladium-on-carbon catalysis of coupling reactions 60,
61
Paludrine 660
Papaverine 638
Papaverine, notable isoquinoline synthesis 198
Paraquat 138, 632
Parkinson’s disease 659
Passive heating elements 103
Paternò-Büchi reaction 605
Payne rearrangement 593
PBD 624
PBG see Porphobilinogen
Pd(0)-catalysed reaction
involving amination: mechanism/catalytic cycle 84
involving boron compounds 66, 67
involving carbonylation 89
involving cyanation 70
involving Grignard reagents 69
involving silicon compounds 68
involving tin compounds 67
involving zinc compounds 69, 71
leaving groups 61–64
using alkynes 69
using 9-BBN derivatives 70
using benzofuran-2-boronic acid 61
using a bromoalkyne 69
using a 5-bromobenzofuran 78
using 2-bromofuran 75
using a 2-bromofuran 74
using 4-bromoindole 88, 90
using 5-bromoindole 61
using 7-bromoindole 67
using 6-bromoisoquinoline 123
using a 2-bromopyridine 67, 70, 78
using 3-bromopyridines 70, 71, 72
using 5-bromopyrimidine 61, 67
using a 5-bromopyrimidine-2,4-dione 78
using 3-bromoquinoline 68, 88
using 2-bromothiazoles 67, 85, 250
using a 2-bromothiophene 67, 71, 75
using 3-bromothiophene 67, 71
using 4-chloro-7-azaindole 402
using a 2-chloroimidazole 73
using a 2-chloropyrazine 79
using 2-chloropyrazine 71
using 3-chloropyridine 70
using 2-chloropyridines 69, 80
using a 2-chloropyrimidine 75, 84
using 4-chloropyrimidine 72
using a 6-chloro-1,2,4-triazine 76
using coumarin-4-tosylates 76
using 2,5-dibromopyridine 84
using 2,6-dibromopyridine 69, 75
using 3,5-dibromo-2-pyrone 76
using 2,4-dibromothiazole 73
using 2,5-dibromothiophene 71, 78
using 2,6-dichloropyridines 74
using a 2,3-diiodoindole 72
using direct palladation
of 4-acetylpyridine 82
of a 7-azaindole 81
of a furan 88
679
680
Index
of an imidazo[1,2-a]pyridine 80
of indole 81, 88
of a thiazole 80
of a thiophene 80
using enolates 70
using furan-2-boronic acid 69
using furan-3-boronic acid 73
using furan-2-carboxylic acid, for oxidative Heck 89
using a furan-2-zinc compound 62. 371
using a furan-3-stannane 292
using 5-halopyrimidines 76
using an imidazole-2-stannane 76
using an imidazole-2-zinc compound 72
using an imidazole-5-boronic acid 73
using an indole-3-stannane 72
using indole: N-vinylation 84
using indole: N-alkenylation 84
using indole: oxidative coupling 83
using an indole-2-boronate 71
using an indole-4-boronate 420
using an indole-3-boronic acid 72, 420, 421
using an indole-2-Grignard 72
using an indole-3-Grignard 72
using indole-3-mercury compound 384
using an indole-2-silanol 68
using an indole-2-triflate 62
using indole-5-triflate 371
using an indole-2-zinc compound 72
using 4-iodo-1-phenylsulfonylimidazole 457
using a 3-iodopyridine 69, 123
using monoalkyl tins 67, 68
using nonaflates 64
using an oxazole-2-stannane 72, 76
using an oxazole-4-triflate 73
using phosphates as leaving groups 64
using a purine-8-bromide 77
using a purine-6-chloride 77
using a purine-2-iodide 77
using a purine-6-zinc compound 76
using a pyrazine-2-stannane 75, 76
using a pyrazole-5-stannane 73
using a pyridazine-4-boronate 75
using a pyridine-3-borane 77
using pyridine boronic acids 74, 78
using pyridine stannanes 74, 76, 77
using pyridine-2-thiones 64
using a pyridine-3-zinc compound 74
using a pyrimidine-5-boronic acid 75
using a pyrimidine-2-stannane 75
using a pyrimidine-5-stannane 250
using a pyrrole-2-boronic acid 71
using a pyrone-3-triflate 76
using sulfonates of deoxyguanosine 76
using sulfonium salts 64
using tetrazole-5-stannanes 73, 74
using a thiazole-5-boronate 79
using thiazole-2-stannanes 72, 73, 76
using thiazole-5-stannanes 73, 79
using thiones 64
using a thiophene-3-boronic acid 71
using thiophene-2-stannanes 67, 71
using a thiophene-2-zinc compound 78
using a 1,2,3-triazolyl-5-zinc compound 74
using trifluoroborates 66, 67, 70
using a uridine-5-zinc compound 269
PDE5 656
PEG see Polyethylene glycol
Pelargonidin chloride, notable benzopyrylium synthesis 243
Penicillins 587, 661
Pentazoles 557, 565
Pentosans 359
Pepcid 651
PEPPSITM-IPr 60
Perchlorate salts, hazards and alternatives 209
Perchloryl fluoride 609
Peripheral nervous system 647
Petasis reaction 51, 52, 329
Pfitzinger synthesis of quinolines 193
Pharmacogenetics 648
Phase tags 97, 101
Phenanthroline 60
1,10-Phenanthroline, 4,6-dimethoxy, ligand for N-arylation of
imidazoles 85
Phenergan 650
Phenobarbitone 659
1-Phenyl-1,2,3-triazole
5-lithiation 559
Diels-Alder reaction 559
2-Phenyl-2H-1,2,3-triazole 558
4-Phenyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione 561
ring synthesis 567
Phenylalanine 638
2-Phenylindole, ring synthesis 403
1-Phenylisoindole, tautomerism 449
4-Phenyloxazole, reaction with benzyne 469
3(5)-Phenylpyrazole 488
1-Phenylsulfonyl-2-nitroindole, diopolar cycloaddition 393
1-Phenylsulfonylindole
2-lithiation 389
magnesiation 388
nitration 37
3-bromo, halogen-metal exchange 391
3-methyl bromination 396
3-triflate 399
1-Phenylsulfonylindoxyl, ring synthesis 399
1-Phenylsulfonylpyrrole
acylation, regioselectivity 299
2-boronic acid 305
lithiation 305
sulfenylation 297
2-tri-n-butylstannane 306
5-Phenyltetrazole, regioselective N-alkylation 562
2-Phenylthiopyridine 133
4-Phenylurazole 567
Photochemotherapy 663
Photofrin 664
PhPI 622
Phthalazine 253
Index
Phthalimidine 448
Phthalocyanines 449
Phytoalexin 629
Picolinic acid 148
Pictet–Gams synthesis of isoquinolines 195
Pilcarpine 652
Piloty-Robinson synthesis of pyrroles 315
Pinacol borane 50
Pinacol boronates 49
Pinacol diboron 50
Piperideine 588
trimer 589
Piperidines 588
basicity 588
conformation 590
dehydrogenation139
dipole moment 7
from pyridine 139
ring synthesis from X(C5)Y 603
Pirenzepine 652
Piriton 651
1-Pivaloylindole, 4-acylation 378
pKa, definition 19
pKaH, definition 19
Plavix 645
Pletal 655
Plexcore 626
PLP 631
Poly(acetylene) 625
Poly(aniline) 625
Poly(pyrrole) 625
Poly(thiophene) 625
Polybenzimidazole 622
Polyethylene glycol 100
Polymer-bound
base 100
brominating agent 100
Polyvinylpyridinium hydrofluoride 612
Pomeranz–Fritsch synthesis of isoquinolines 194, 195
POPOP 624
Porphine 301
Porphobilinogen 295, 633, 634, 635
Porphyrinogen 301
PPO 624
PQQ 633
Pralidoxime 653
Pramipexole 659
Prazosin 654
Precatalysts, for Pd(0) reactions 59
Prins reaction 221
Pripsen 660
Prodrugs 648
Proglycem 654
Proguanil 660
Proline 629, 638
as ligand for CuI-catalysed amination 86
Promethazine 650, 651
Propiolactones 598
N-Protecting groups for lithiations 45
681
Protodeboronation 49, 50
Proton-pump inhibitor 651
Protoporphyrin IX 634, 664
Psoralen 663
PTAD see 4-Phenyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione
Pteridines 282, 283, 630
ring synthesis
from 4,5-diaminopyrimidones 283
from pyrazine N-oxides 283
9H-Purine see Purine
Purine 515
acidity 524
N-acylation 519
basicity 516
N-alkylation 516–518
regioselectivity 517, 518
amino, basicity 516
diazocoupling 520
halogenation 519, 520
leaving groups 523
linked to a resin 98
8-metallation 524
nitration 520
nucleophilic substitution 521–523, 526
regioselectivity 522
N-oxidation 519
ring synthesis
from 1,3,5-triazines 533
from 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide 532, 533
from formamide 534
from pyrimidine-4,5-diamines plus RCO2H 530–533
tautomerism 515
PUVA 663
PVPHF 612
2H-Pyran 209, 212, 590
4H-Pyran 209, 212, 590
Pyrazine 249, 253
N-oxide, conversion into halides 251, 263
conversion into nitriles 263
lithiation 263
basicity 253, 254
boiling point 253
lithiation 259
N-oxidation 254
photochemical conversion into pyrimidine 262
radical substitution 261
reaction with chloroformates and nucleophiles 273
halogenation 255
Diels–Alder reactions 262
ortho-assisted lithiations 260
ring synthesis
from N=CC=NC=C 281
from 2xR(C=O)CNH2 279
from R(C=O)(C=O)R plus H2N(C2)NH2 279, 280
from R(C=O)(C=O)R plus H2N(C2)NH2 252
2-tri-n-butylstannane 259
Pyrazinium-3-olate, mesomeric structures 13
dipolar cycloadditions 270
Pyrazino[2,3-b]pyrimidine
682
Index
Pyrazol-3-one 493
1H-Pyrazole see Pyrazole
Pyrazole 455, 485
acidity 30, 488
N-acylation 486
N-alkylation 486, 488
basicity 486
halogenation 487
halogen-metal exchange 490
hydrogen-bonding 485
5-lithation 489
Mannich reaction at nitrogen 486
nitration 487
photochemical conversion into imidazoles 491
N-protecting groups for 5-lithiation 489
protonation 486
reaction with cyanamide 487
sulfonation 487
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus RNHNH2 494, 495
from RC≡N+–NR− plus RC≡CR 496
from RCH=N2 plus RC≡CR 497
from an isoxazole 490
miscellaneous methods 497
a 4-stannane 490
a 5-stannane, synthesis from an alkynylstannane 7
5-stannanes 497
Pyrazoline 485
Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridines 543, 546
Pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyridine
electrophilic substitution 546
lithiation 546
ring synthesis
from pyridines 546
from pyrazoles 550
Pyrazolo[1,5-b]pyridazine 549
a Pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine, ring synthesis 491
1H-Pyrazolo[4,3-d]pyrimidine 535
3-Pyrazolone, ring synthesis from acrylonitrile 495
Pyrazolones, condensation with aldehydes 493
Pyridate 623
Pyridazine 249, 253
N-alkylation 254
ortho-assisted lithations 260
basicity 253, 254
boiling point 253
a 4-boronate 275
Diels–Alder reactions 262
lithiation 259
N-oxide, nitration 262
nitro-, displacement of nitro 262
reaction with n-BuLi 256
reaction with chloroformates and nucleophiles 273
ring synthesis
from 1,2,4,5-tetrazines and alkynes 275
from R(C=O)(C2)(C=O) plus N2H4 252
from R(C=O)(C2)(C=O)R plus N2H4 274
from 1,4-dihydrofurans plus N2H4 274
4-stannanes, ring synthesis 75, 275
zincation 259
Pyridazinomycin 641
Pyridazinones, conversion into halides 274
Pyridines 115, 125
acetoxymercuration 130
α-acids, decarboxylation 148
α-alkylation/arylation 131
α-amination 132
N-alkylation 128
N-amination 126
basicity 125
bromination, mechanism 22
α-cyanation 129
dimerisation 138, 139
dipole moment 7
donation of lone pair 116
electrophilic substitution
rate 116, 117
regioselectivity 116, 117
substituent effects 117
Grignard reagents, preparation 138
halogenation 130
N-halogenation 127
lithiation, with ortho assistance 135
lithiation at C-2 134, 135
mesomeric structures 7
C-nitration 129
N-nitration 126
N-oxidation 126
3-phosphonate, via Pd(0)-catalysed coupling 70
proton exchange in basic solution 134
N-sulfonation 127
nucleophilic substitution of halide
mechanism 118
regioselectivity 118
orbital picture 7
photochemical conversion into 2-aza-bicyclo[2.2.0]
hexadienes 141
proton exchange 128
protonic salts 125, 126
radical halogenation 138
radical substitution, regioselectivity 119, 138
reaction with thionyl chloride 127
resonance energy 7
ring synthesis
from 1,2,4-triazine 577
from a pyrimidine 250
from [2 + 2 + 2] cycloadditions 164
from 1,2,4-triazines 162
from 2R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus H2NC=C(C=O)R 160
from aza-1,3,5-trienes 163
from azadienes plus alkynes 163
from C≡C(C)NH2 plus RCH2(C=O)R 164
from enamides 165
from furans 164
from oxazoles 162
from R(C=O)(C)3(C=O)R plus NH2OH 157
Index
from R(C=O)(C)3(C=O)R plus NH3 156–158
mechanism 109
from RC≡C(C=O)R plus H2NC=C(C=O)R 161
from RCH=O, 2R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus NH3 158,
159
industrial 165
from RC=O)(C)(C=O)R plus enamine, mechanism 110
a 3-silane, synthesis via coupling 52
a 4-silane, ipso substitution 54
silylation 132
a 2-stannane 53
ipso substitution 53
synthesis via coupling 74
a 3-stannane, synthesis via coupling 74
sulfonation 129
3-sulfonic acid 129
typical reactivity 115
Pyridine sulfur trioxide complex 127
ring opening 152
sulfonation of indole 375
sulfonation of pyrrole 297
conversion into pyrylium perchlorate 219
Pyridinium bromide 127
Pyridinium hydrobromide 127
Pyridinium tribromide 127
Pyridinium salts
N-alkoxycarbonyl, nucleophilic addition 150
N-alkoxycarbonyl, reduction 149
N-dealkylation 153
dithionite reduction 149
enolate addition 150, 151
Grignard addition 150, 151
linked to solid-support 98, 100
orbital picture 8
organozinc addition 151
oxidation to pyridones 148
photochemical conversion into cyclopentenes 141
rates of nucleophilic substitution 25
reduction 148, 149
structure 8
N-trifluoromethanesulfonyl, phosphite addition 152
Pyridinium-3-olate, in cycloadditions 140
4-Pyridone, linked to a resin 98
2-Pyridone, N-arylation with boronic acids 86, 87
Pyridones, acidity 143
N/O-alkylation 143
conversion into amines 144
conversion into halides 144
mechanism 120
electrophilic substitution
mechanism 21
regioselectivity 142
halogenation 143
mesomeric structures 9
nitration 143
2-Pyridones, from 2-pyrones 206, 207
2-Pyridones, in [2 + 2] cycloadditions 141
in [2 + 4] cycloadditions 140
683
photochemical conversion into 2-aza-bicyclo[2.2.0]
hexadienes 141
4-Pyridones
ring synthesis
from 4-pyrones 206, 207
from a furan 357
Pyridine N-oxides 126
O-alkylation 154
bromination 154
conversion into 2-aminopyridines 156
conversion into halides 121, 155
deoxygenation 126
dipole moment 153
electrophilic substitution 121
Grignard addition 155
mercuration 154
mesomeric contributors 154
nitration 154
nucleophilic substitution 121
oxidation of 2-methyl 156
reaction with POCl3 155
Pyridoxal phosphate 631
Pyridoxine 631
notable pyridine synthesis 165
3,4-Pyridyne 134
Pyrimidines 249, 253
N-alkylation 254
ortho-assisted lithiations 260
basicity 253, 254
boiling point 253
5-boronic acid 260
bromination 255
5-carboxylic acid, methyl ester, aza-Diels–Alder reaction
250
conversion into pyrazole 256
Diels–Alder reactions 262
linked to solid-support 99
mesomeric structures 8
N-oxidation 254
orbital picture 8
an N-oxide, ring synthesis 262
a 4,5-quinodimethane 32
radical substitution 261
reaction with chloroformates and nucleophiles 273
reaction with hydrazine 256
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus H2N(C=NH) 252
from 1,3,5-triazine and alkynes 277
from ketones plus 2xRCN 278
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus H2N(C=NH)
275–277
from 1,3,5-triazine 577
synthesis from pyrazine, photochemical 262
a 4-silane 259
a 2-stannane 259
4-stannanes 52, 53
typical reactivity 249
zincation 259
684
Index
Pyrimidones, conversion into amines 270
conversion into chlorides 269
conversion into thiocarbonyl 269
reaction with nucleophiles 265, 266
ring synthesis
from 3-ethoxyacryloyl isocyanate plus RNH2 277, 278
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus urea 276
O-silylation 267
2-Pyrones 205, 209
conversion into 2-pyridone 215
photochemical conversion into a bicyclic β-lactone 217
5-carboxylate, Diels–Alder with 2-methoxyfuran 355
bromination 214
Diels–Alder reactions 216, 217
ring synthesis
from RC=C(C)CO2H plus CH2O 221
from R(C=O)(C)CO2H plus R(C=O)CH2R 220
miscellaneous routes 221, 222
4-Pyrones 205, 209
electrophilic addition 213
Grignard addition 215
conversion into 4-halides 212
conversion into 4-pyridones 215
mesomeric structures 9
photochemical conversion into 2-pyrones 212, 213
ring opening with base 215
ring synthesis
from 4xRCO2H 223
from enamines and diketene 224
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)(C)(C=O)R 222
from 1,3,5-triketones 207
miscellaneous routes 223
1H-Pyrrole see Pyrroles
Pyrroles 289, 295
acidity 11, 30, 304
acylation 298, 299, 300
aldehydes/ketones, reduction to side-chain alkyl 309
alkenylation 300
alkylation 300
basicity 296
bromination 298
carboxylic acids, decarboxylation 309, 310
ipso iodination 310
chlorination 298
Diels–Alder reaction 308
dipole moment 10
electrophilic substitution mechanism 22
rate 22, 290
regioselectivity 290
halo-, halogen-metal exchange 305, 306
iodination 298
C-lithiation 305
Mannich reaction 302
mesomeric structures 9
nitration 296, 297
orbital picture 9
polymerization 295
protonation 296
reaction with acetone 301
with dichlorocarbene 308
with hydroxylamine 296
with ketones 300
resonance energy 7
sulfonation 297
3-sulfonic acid 297
trimerisation 303
radical displacement of phenylsulfonyl 306
reaction with para-dimethylaminobenzaldehyde 302
ring synthesis
from C4N units 316
from isonitriles 293
from ketone oximes and acetylene 316
from mesionic compounds and acetylenes 317
from R(C=O)(C)NH2 plus R(C=O)CH2(C=O)R,
mechanism 313
from R(C=O)(C)NH2 plus EwgC ≡ CEwg 314
from R(C=O)(C)NH2 plus R(C=O)CH2(C=O)R 312
from R(C=O)(C2)(C=O)R plus NH3 293
mechanism 109
R(C=O)(C2)(C=O)R plus RNH2 311, 312
from RCH2CH=NN=CHCH2R 315
from RO2CCH2N≡C plus RC=C(NO2)R 314
from TsCH2N≡C plus RC=C(C=O)R 314
side-chain reactivity 309
a 3-stannane 306
substitution regioselectivity 23
N-substitution 304
1-TIPS-pyrrole 304
bromination 298
nitration 297
typical reactivity 289
Pyrrolidine 588
acidity 304
basicity 291, 588
dipole moment 10
N-protonation 290
ring synthesis
from X(C4)Y 602, 603
from cycloaddition to alkenes 603
from pyrrole 306
3-Pyrrolin-2-one 310
4-Pyrrolin-2-one 310
Pyrroline 588
1H-Pyrrolium cation 296
2H-Pyrrolium cation 296
3H-Pyrrolium cation 296
3H-Pyrrolizine see Pyrrolizine
Pyrrolizine 539, 551
anion 539
lithiation 551
Pyrrolo[1,2-a]pyrazine 543
ring synthesis from pyrroles 550
a Pyrrolo[1,2-a]quinoxaline 542
Pyrrolo[1,2-c]pyrimidines, ring synthesis from pyrroles 550
a Pyrrolo[2,1-b]thiazole 542
Pyrrolo[2,3-b]pyridine 400
Index
Pyrrolo[2,3-c]pyridine 400
Pyrrolo[3,2-b]pyridine 400
Pyrrolo[3,2-c]pyridine 400
Pyrryl anion 304
mesomeric structures 11
orbital picture 11
Pyrylium hexachloroantimonate(V) 209
Pyrylium perchlorate, synthesis from Py+SO3− 219
Pyrylium ions, addition of cyanide 211
addition of NH3 210
addition of nitromethane 211
addition of organometallics 211
addition of water 210
addition of Wittig reagent 212
conversion into benzenes 211
conversion into pyridines, mechanism 210
mesomeric structures 8
orbital picture 8
reactivity 205, 206
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)3(C=O)R 207
from C=CCH2R plus 2R(C=O)Cl 219
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus R(C=O)CH2R 220
from R(C=O)(C)3(C=O)R 218, 219
ring synthesis, detailed mechanism 111, 112
typical reactivity 205
Pyrylium-3-olates
generation 213
dipolar cycloaddition 213
Quaternisation, rate of, in azines 20
Quercetin 642
Quercitron bark 642
Quetiapine 645, 646
Quinazoline 253
Quinine 638, 660
Quinodimethanes, generation 31, 32
Quinolines 115, 177
acid-catalysed exchange 177
amination, regioselectivity 179, 180
basicity 177
3-boronic acid, oxidation 182
bromination 178
electrophilic substitution, regioselectivity 122
hydroxylation 180
mesomeric structures 12
nitration 177, 178
mechanism 22
nucleophilic substitution, regioselectivity 122
nucleophilic 2-alkylation/arylation 179
orbital picture 11
oxidation of the benzene ring 179
reduction, regioselective 183
a 3-stannane 53
structure 11
6-sulfonic acid 178
8-sulfonic acid 178
2,3-quinodimethane 31
685
3,4-quinodimethane 31
ring synthesis
from ArNH2 plus R(C=O)C=CR 190, 191
from ArNH2 plus R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R 188–190
from ortho-Ar[(C=O)R][NH2] plus R(C=O)CH2R 192
from isatin and R(C=O)CH2R 193
from ortho-Ar[NH2][C≡C(C=O)R] 193
sulfonation 178
typical reactivity 121
Quinolizidine alkaloids 638
4H-Quinolizine 539
Quinolizinium ions 539, 551
ring opening 551
ring synthesis from pyridines 551
2-Quinolone, 3-lithiation 182
4-Quinolone, nitration, regioselectivity 184
Quinolones, tautomerism 184
ring synthesis, from ArNH2 plus R(C=O)(C)CO2R 189
Quinoxaline 253
a Quinoxaline 2,3-quinodimethane 32
Quinoxaline, benzene ring oxidation 255
Radical substitutions (see also ring systems in Contents)
of a furan 30
of a pyrrole 30
of a benzothiazole 28
of a pyridine 29
of a pyrimidine 28
of a quinoline 28, 29
of an isoquinoline 28
regiochemistry in azines 27–30
Ramberg-Bäcklund reaction 595
Raney nickel, desulfurisation of thiophenes 333
Ranitidine 651
notable furan synthesis 363
Reactive blue 4 623
Rebetol 661
Receptors 646
Reductive elimination 57
Reissert compounds 186, 187, 507
Reissert reaction, on solid-support 99
Reissert synthesis of indoles 406
Rember 658
Requip 659
Rescriptor 661
Reserpine 638
Retrovir 661
Rheumatoid arthritis 657
Rhodium catalysis, benzimidazole-2-alkylation 82
Rhodium-catalysed silane formation 52
Ribavirin 661
Riboflavin 632
Ribonucleic acid 635
Ribose sugars 515
Ribosylation
of purines 518
of uracils 267, 268
Riecke zinc 47
686
Index
Rieke magnesium, with bromothiophenes 332
Rilutek 659
Riluzole 659
Rimifon 660
Ring closure, rate of versus size 599
Rink resin 97
Risk-Benefit 649
Risperidal 645
Risperidone 645, 646, 659
RNA 635, 646
Robinson-Gabriel synthesis of oxazoles 475
Rogaine 654
Ropinirole 659
RTILs 621
RuPhos 70
Salcomine 588
Saquinavir 661
SelectfluorTM 610
1-SEM-imidazole, 2-lithiation 467
N-SEM-pyrrole, 2-lithiation 305
Sempervirine 638
Senecionine 638
Septrin 660
Seretide 645
Serine 598
Seroquel 645
Serotonin 377, 629
notable indole synthsis 419
Sharpless epoxides 593
Sharpless epoxidation 605
Side-chain oxidation, biological 619
Silanes
in cross coupling reactions 65, 66, 68
ipso alkylation 54
synthesis via coupling 52
Sildenafil 649, 656
notable 1H-pyrazolo[4,3-d]pyrimidine synthesis 535
2-Silyloxypyrroles, reactions with aldehydes 311
2-Silyloxythiophenes, reaction with aldehydes 336
Simvastatin 656
Singlet oxygen
addition to a pyrrole 307
addition to furans 355
reaction with tryptophan 385
Skraup synthesis of quinolines 190, 191
Sodium coumarate 233
Sodium coumarinate 233
Solid-phase scavengers 100
Solid-phase synthesis 98
Sonogashira reaction 66, 69, 76, 77, 457
SPhos 60, 66
Sponges 639
SPS see Solid-phase synthesis
Stannanes
in cross couplings 65, 66
ipso substitution 53
synthesis via coupling 52
toxicity 67
Statins 656
Staurosporine aglycone, notable indole synthesis 419
Stille reaction 66, 67, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 79, 250
Strychnine 638, 649
N-Substituents for pyrrole C-lithiation 305
N-Substituted indoles, lithiation, regioselectivity 388
Sucrose 590
Sugasawa synthesis 417
Sulfamethoxazole 660
Sulfolane 587
Sulfonamides 660
Sulfone
displacement to release a pyrimidine from solid-support 99
as leaving group 257, 258, 523, 560, 576
Sulfoxide as leaving group, ability 578
Sulfur to link a pyrimidine to solid-support 99
Sumatriptan 654
14
C-2-Sumatriptan 617
Sunitinib 662, 663
Sutent 662
Suzuki–Miyaura reaction 66, 67, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 78, 420,
421
using encapsulated Pd catalyst 103
Swainsonine 638
Sydnones 569
Tagamet 651
Tartrazine 493
Tautomerism in heterocycles 12
Taylor synthesis of pteridines 283
3-TC 661
tele-Substitution
in halo-diazines 256, 257
in thenyl halides 335
in furan series 356
Telomestatin 640
Temodal 661
Temozolomide 661, 662
2,2′:5′,3″-Terthiophene, notable thiophene ring synthesis
341
Testosterone 657
Tetrachlorodioxin 622
Tetracyanoquinodimethane 626
4,5,6,7-Tetrahydroindole, from Birch reduction 392
1,2,3,4-Tetrahydrocarbazole 379
Tetrahydrofolic acid 630
Tetrahydrofuran 587
basicity 291
ring opening 599
Tetrahydropyran 590
conformation 590
Tetrahydropyridines, from olefin metathesis 604
1,2,3,4-Tetrahydropyrimidine derivative 261
Tetrahydrothiophene, basicity 291
1,2,3,4-Tetrahydro-β-carbolines, from tryptamines 384
Tetrakis(2-thienyl)methane, notable thiophene synthesis 341
1,2,3,3-Tetramethyl-3H-indolium iodide, from indole 378
Tetrathiafulvalenes 626
‘Tetrazene’ 561
Index
1,2,3,5-Tetrazine 574
1,2,4,5-Tetrazine 574
Diels–Alder reaction 578
nuclophilic substitutions 578
ring synthesis from 2xArC≡N 579
Tetrazoles 557
acidity 11, 557
a 5-stannane 563
lithiation 563
N-alkylation 562
ring synthesis
from amidrazones 568
from RC≡N plus RN3 567, 568
stability 561
anion, mesomeric structures 11
Tetrazolo[1,5-a]pyridine, ring-opening 547
Tetronic acid 357
Thenyl halides, via side-chain halogenation 334
THF see tetrahydrofuran 291
Thiadiazoles
aromaticity 569
ring syntheses 572–574
1,2,3-Thiadiazole 569
ring synthesis on solid-support 99
metallation 570
1,2,4-Thiadiazole 569
ring synthesis from RC(C=S)NH2 plus [O] 573
1,2,5-Thiadiazole 569
ring synthesis from H2N(C2)NH2 plus S2Cl2 574
1,3,4-Thiadiazole 569
1,2,3-Thiadiazoles, ring synthesis from a hydrazone plus SOCl2
572
Thiamin 631, 632
Thiamin pyrophosphate 457, 471, 632, 633
Thiapyran 590
1,2,3,4-Thiatriazole 574
Thiazoles 455, 461
N-alkylation 462, 463
basicity 461
mercuration 54
nitration 464
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)Hal plus H2N(C=S)R 473, 474
from TosMIC plus R(C=S) 476
from thiazolidines 477
4-stannanes 468
Thiazolidine 461
Thiazoline 461
Thiazol-2-one, bromination 472
Thiazolium salts, deprotonation
Thiazolium ylide 457, 464, 471, 633
Thiazolo[3,2-c][1,2,3]triazole 552
Thieno[2,3-f:5,4-f’]bis[1]benzothiophene, notable thiophene
synthesis 341
Thieno[2,3-d]imidazole, notable imidazole synthesis 478
Thieno[3,4-b]thiophene, notable thiophene synthesis 340
Thietanes 597
ring synthesis from X(C3)Y 605
2H-Thiete 597
687
Thiiranes 592, 595
ring synthesis from epoxides 605
removal of S 595
ring opening reactions 595
Thiolane 590
Thiolanium salts 591
3-Thiolen-2-one 335
4-Thiolen-2-one 335
Thiolenones, acidity 336
Thiophenes 289, 325
acids, decarboxylation 335
S-alkylation 329
S,S-dioxides, Diels–Alder reaction 330
S-oxide, Diels–Alder reaction 334
chloromethylation 328
dipole moment 10
halogenation 326
lithiation 331
Mannich reaction 328
nitration 326
orbital picture 10
reaction with aldehydes 328
with isatin 328
resonance energy 7
structure 10
sulfonation 326
trimerisation 325, 326
2-sulfonic acid 326
3-boronic acid 332
ipso displacement 328
acylation 333
Diels–Alder reaction 333, 334
mercuration 329
nitro-, nucleophilic substitution 330
S-oxidation 330, 331
radical substitution 333
reduction to tetrahydrothiophenes 333
reductive desulfurisation 333
ring synthesis
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus HSCH2CO2R 293
from R(C=O)(C)(C=O)R plus HSCH2CO2R 338
from R(C=O)(C=O)R plus R(C=O)CH2SCH2(C=O)R
337
from R(C=O)(C2)(C=O)R plus ‘S’ 336, 337
from R(C=O)R plus EtO2CCH2CN plus S 340
from RC≡CC≡CR plus sulfide 337
from thiazoles 340
miscellaneous methods 339, 340
3-tri-n-butylstannane 332
ipso substitution 53
typical reactivity 289
3,4-Thiophyne, generation 331
Thiopurines, conversion into halides 529
Thorazine 659
Thymine 263, 635
11
C-2-thymine 618
Ticlid 655
Ticlopidine 655
Timolol 654
688
Index
Tin compounds, toxicity 67
Topoisomerase I 663
Tosyl azide, hazards and substitutes 105
Toxicity of heterocycles 622
Trace amounts of tin 67
Traceless link 98
Transmetallation 58
Traube synthesis of purines 531, 532
Trazodone 548, 659
Trialkyltin reagents, toxicity 67
1,2,3-Triazine 574, 575
ring synthesis from 1-aminopyrazole 578
1,2,4-Triazine 574
Diels–Alder reaction 577
nucleophilic substitutions 575, 576
ring synthesis from R(C=O)(C=O)R plus H2N(C=NNH2)
578
VNS reaction 575
1,3,5-Triazine 574
amination 575
bromination 575
formate equivalent 576
Diels–Alder reaction 577
ring synthesis
from 3xRC≡N 578
miscellaneous methods 578, 579
1,2,3-Triaziniums, nucleophilic addition 576
radical substitution 576
1,2,3-Triazoles 557
N-alkylation 558
ring synthesis
from enamine plus RN3 112
from RC≡CR plus RN3 565, 566
miscellaneous methods 566
1,2,4-Triazoles 557, 559, 560
N-acetylation 559
leaving group in purine chemistry 523
N-methylation 559
nucleophilic substitution 560
radical substitution 560
ring synthesis from hydrazine derivatives 566,
567
1,2,3-Triazolo[1,5-a]pyridine 543, 547
ring-opening 547
ring synthesis 548
1,2,4-Triazolo[1,5-a]pyridine 543, 547, 548
ring synthesis 549
1,2,4-Triazolo[4,3-a]pyridine 543, 548
ring synthesis 548
[1,2,4]Triazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine 564
[1,2,3]Triazolo[1,5-c]pyrimidine 549
[1,2,4]Triazolo[4,3-b]pyridazine 549
ring synthesis from pyridazines 550, 551
2,4,5-Tribromoimidazole 465
2,3,5-Tribromothiophene 327
Trifluoroborates 49
ipso substitutions 52
Trifluoromethyl hypofluorite 609
1-(Triisopropylsilyl)indole see TIPS-indole under Indoles
1-(Triisopropylsilyl)pyrrole see TIPS-pyrrole under
Pyrroles
Trimethoprim 660
Trimethoxysilane, toxicity 68
1,3-Bis(2,4,6-trimethylphenyl)imidazole carbene 471
4-Trimethylsiloxypyridine 143
Trimethylsilyl azide 565
2-Trimethylsilyl-2H-1,2,3-triazole 558
2-Trimethylsilyl-2H-indazole 506
a 2-Trimethylsilylbenzimidazole, ipso substitution 504
2-Trimethylsilylbenzothiazole 505
ipso substitution 504
2-Trimethylsilylfurans, conversion into butenolides 358
1-Trimethylsilylimidazole 462
a 2-Trimethylsilylimidazole, 5-lithiation 467
4-Trimethylsilylindole 392
a 2-Trimethylsilyloxazole 468
2-Trimethylsilyloxyfuran 357
2-Trimethylsilylthiazole 466
Trimethyltin compounds, toxicity 67
Tri-o-tolylphosphine 60
2,4,6-Triphenylpyrylium, nitration 210
Triprim 660
a Tripyrrane 301
Tris(furanyl)-18-crown-6, notable furan synthesis 363
Trofimov synthesis of pyrroles 316
Tryptamine, conversion into the oxindole 386
Tryptophan 629
protected, acid-catalysed pyrrolidine ring closure 374
pyrrolidine ring closure with Br2 374
reaction with singlet oxygen 385
synthesis from gramine 395
TTF-TCNQ 626
Tubocurarine 652
Tunicates 639
Tykerb/Tykerv 662
Ulapualide A 640
Uracils 251, 263
electrophilic substitution 264, 265
N-1-alkylation 268
N-deprotonation 251
photochemical [2 + 2] reactions 271
halo, Grignard formation 269
N-deprotonation 266
ring synthesis from 3-ethoxyacryloyl isocyanate plus RNH2
278
halogen-zinc exchange 269
Uric acid 637
Uridines
dipolar cycloaddition 271
lithiation 268
15
N-uridine triacetate 617
Urticaria 650
UV absorption, heterocycles 14, 15
Valium 658
van Leusen synthesis of pyrroles 314
mechanism 314
Index
Variolin B 639
Velcade 662
Verenicline 659
Verteporfin 664
Viagra 649, 656
ViagraTM see Sildenafil
Vicarious nucleophilic substitution 132, 179, 352, 386, 422,
575, 580, 581
mechanism 26
Vidaza 661
Viktor Meyer 325
Vilsmeier reaction 299, 327, 349, 350, 377,
mechanism 299, 377
Vinamidinium salts, in pyridine ring synthesis 160
in thiophene ring synthesis 338
Vincristine 638, 663
Vinyl-pyridines, nucleophilic addition 148
a Vinyl-pyrrole, Diels–Alder reaction 308
Visudyne 664
Vitamin B1 630, 632
Vitamin B2 632
Vitamin B3 631
Vitamin B6 631
Vitamin B12 633, 634
Vitamin H 633
Vitamin K 655
Vitamins 630
VNS see Vicarious nucleophilic substitution
Wakayin 639
Wang resin 97
Warfarin 655
Xanax 658
Xanthine oxidase 637
Xanthine, nitration 520
Xanthopterin 282
Xantphos 84
Xeloda 662
XPhos 66
Xylose, conversion into furfural 359
Zantac 651
Zidovudine 661
Zinc, activated 47
Zinc compounds
in cross couplings 65, 66, 71, 74
preparation 47
Zincke salt
of isoquinoline 186
of pyridine 152, 153
Zinpyr 624
Zocor 656
Zofran 654
Zolpidem 658
Zovirax 661
Zyprexa 645, 659
689