2593-28-4Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Three-Component 1,2-Carboamidation of Bridged Bicyclic Alkenes via RhIII-Catalyzed Addition of C-H Bonds and Amidating Reagents
Brandes, Daniel S.,Sirvent, Ana,Mercado, Brandon Q.,Ellman, Jonathan A.
, p. 2836 - 2840 (2021)
A three-component method is described for the preparation of syn-1,2-disubstituted bridged bicyclic compounds. The reaction was demonstrated for readily available aromatic and heteroaromatic C-H bond substrates with tertiary and secondary amide, lactam, p
Direct synthesis of benzoxazinones via Cp*Co(III)-catalyzed C–H activation and annulation of sulfoxonium ylides with dioxazolones
Yu, Yongqi,Xia, Zhen,Wu, Qianlong,Liu, Da,Yu, Lin,Xiao, Yuanjiu,Tan, Ze,Deng, Wei,Zhu, Gangguo
supporting information, p. 1263 - 1266 (2020/10/08)
A highly novel and direct synthesis of benzoxazinones was developed via Cp*Co(III)-catalyzed C–H activation and [3 + 3] annulation between sulfoxonium ylides and dioxazolones. The reaction is conducted under base-free conditions and tolerates various functional groups. Starting from diverse readily available sulfoxonium ylides and dioxazolones, a variety of benzoxazinones could be synthesized in one step in 32%-75% yields.
Palladium-Catalyzed 5-exo-dig Cyclization Cascade, Sequential Amination/Etherification for Stereoselective Construction of 3-Methyleneindolinones
Zuo, Youpeng,He, Xinwei,Tang, Qiang,Hu, Wangcheng,Zhou, Tongtong,Hu, Wenbo,Shang, Yongjia
supporting information, p. 2117 - 2123 (2020/12/22)
An cascade intramolecular 5-exo-dig cyclization of N-(2-iodophenyl)propiolamides and sequential amination/etherification (with N-hydroxybenzamides, phenyl hydroxycarbamate) protocol for the synthesis of amino- and phenoxy-substituted 3-methyleneindolinones using unexpensive Pd(PPh3)4 as catalyst has been developed. The protocol enables the assembly of structurally important oxindole cores featuring moderate functional group tolerance (particularly the halo group), affording a broad spectrum of products with diverse substituents in good to excellent yields. (Figure presented.).
Palladium-catalyzed cascade decarboxylative amination/6- endo-dig benzannulation of o-alkynylarylketones with n-hydroxyamides to access diverse 1-naphthylamine derivatives
Zuo, Youpeng,He, Xinwei,Tang, Qiang,Hu, Wangcheng,Zhou, Tongtong,Shang, Yongjia
supporting information, p. 3890 - 3894 (2020/05/18)
An efficient and practical one-pot strategy to produce highly substituted 1-naphthylamines via sequential palladium-catalyzed decarboxylative amination/intramolecular 6-endo-dig benzannulation reactions has been described. In this reaction, a broad range of electron-rich, electron-neutral, and electron-deficient o-alkynylarylketones react well with N-hydroxyl aryl/alkylamides to give a diversity of 1-naphthylamines in good to excellent yields under mild reaction conditions. The gram-scale synthesis, with benefits such as undiminished product yield and easy transformation, illustrated the practicality of this method.
Rhodium(III)-catalyzed C4-amidation of indole-oximes with dioxazolones: Via C-H activation
Deng, Ke-Zuan,Fu, Xiao-Pan,Ji, Ya-Fei,Tang, Shi-Biao,Wu, Gao-Rong,Xia, Cheng-Cai,Yang, Jin-Yue,Zhang, Li-Li
supporting information, p. 7922 - 7931 (2020/11/02)
A novel method for the Rh(III)-catalyzed oxime-directed C-H amidation of indoles with dioxazolones has been developed. This strategy provides an exclusive site selectivity and the directing group can be easily removed. This transformation features a wide substrate scope, good functional group tolerance and excellent yields, and may serve as a significant tool to construct structurally diverse indole derivatives for the screening of potential pharmaceuticals in the future. This journal is
Consecutive Lossen rearrangement/transamidation reaction of hydroxamic acids under catalyst- and additive-free conditions
Jia, Mengmeng,Zhang, Heng,Lin, Yongjia,Chen, Dimei,Chen, Yanmei,Xia, Yuanzhi
, p. 3615 - 3624 (2018/05/26)
The Lossen rearrangement is a classic process for transforming activated hydroxamic acids into isocyanate under basic or thermal conditions. In the current report we disclosed a consecutive Lossen rearrangement/transamidation reaction in which unactivated hydroxamic acids were converted into N-substituted formamides in a one-pot manner under catalyst- and additive-free conditions. One feature of this novel transformation is that the formamide plays triple roles in the reaction by acting as a readily available solvent, a promoter for additive-free Lossen rearrangement, and a source of the formyl group in the final products. Acyl groups other than formyl could also be introduced into the product when changing the solvent to other low molecular weight aliphatic amide derivatives. The solvent-promoted Lossen rearrangement was better understood by DFT calculations, and the intermediacy of isocyanate and amine was supported well by experiments, in which the desired products were obtained in excellent yields under similar conditions. Not only monosubstituted formamides were synthesized from hydroxamic acids, but also N,N-disubstituted formamides were obtained when secondary amines were used as precursors.
Experimental and computational studies on H2O-promoted, Rh-catalyzed transient-ligand-free ortho-C(sp2)-H amidation of benzaldehydes with dioxazolones
Ding, Jun,Jiang, Wei,Bai, He-Yuan,Ding, Tong-Mei,Gao, Dafang,Bao, Xiaoguang,Zhang, Shu-Yu
supporting information, p. 8889 - 8892 (2018/08/17)
An efficient and convenient ligand-free, rhodium-catalyzed ortho-C(sp2)-H amidation of benzaldehydes with dioxazolones using H2O as the key promoter is described. Using this protocol, a wide range of benzaldehyde substrates were selectively amidated in good to excellent yields with broad functional group compatibility. KIE experiments revealed that the C-H bond activation was likely the rate-limiting step. In addition, computational studies indicated that the catalyst precursor interacted with water and dioxazolones to generate the active catalytic species. Notably, the practicality and efficacy of this method were illustrated by a late-stage amidation of an estrone-derived molecule and further transformations of the amidated product.
Design and synthesis of dihydroisoquinolones for fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD)
Palmer, Nick,Peakman, Torren M.,Norton, David,Rees, David C.
, p. 1599 - 1610 (2016/02/10)
This study describes general synthesis aspects of fragments for FBDD, as illustrated by the dihydroisoquinolones 1-3. Previous Rh(iii) methodology is extended to incorporate amines, heteroatoms (N and S), and substituents (halogen, ester) as potential binding groups and/or synthetic growth points for fragment-to-lead elaboration.
A two-step tandem reaction to prepare hydroxamic acids directly from alcohols
Dettori, Giovanna,Gaspa, Silvia,Porcheddu, Andrea,De Luca, Lidia
supporting information, p. 4582 - 4585 (2014/06/24)
The first synthesis of hydroxamic acids from alcohols has been developed. Both benzylic and aliphatic alcohols can be tolerated and applied in this reaction. The methodology is economical, environmentally benign and high yielding. This journal is
Benzohydroxamic acids as potent and selective anti-HCV agents
Kozlov, Maxim V.,Kleymenova, Alla A.,Romanova, Lyudmila I.,Konduktorov, Konstantin A.,Smirnova, Olga A.,Prasolov, Vladimir S.,Kochetkov, Sergey N.
supporting information, p. 5936 - 5940 (2013/10/22)
A diverse collection of 40 derivatives of benzohydroxamic acid (BHAs) of various structural groups were synthesized and tested against hepatitis C virus (HCV) in full-genome replicon assay. Some of these compounds demonstrated an exceptional activity, suppressing viral replication at sub-micromolar concentrations. The compounds were inactive against key viral enzymes NS3, and NS5B in vitro assays, suggesting host cell inhibition target(s). The testing results were consistent with metal coordination by the BHAs hydroxamic group in complex with a target(s). Remarkably, this class of compounds did not suppress poliomyelitis virus (PV) propagation in RD cells indicating a specific antiviral activity of BHAs against HCV.
