Open Access Article
Cong-Shuai
Wang‡
ab,
Qi
Xiong‡
a,
Hui
Xu‡
c,
Hao-Ran
Yang
a,
Yanfeng
Dang
*c,
Xiu-Qin
Dong
*a and
Chun-Jiang
Wang
*ab
aCollege of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, Engineering Research Center of Organosilicon Compounds & Materials, Ministry of Education, Wuhan University, Wuhan, Hubei 430072, P. R. China. E-mail: xiuqindong@whu.edu.cn
bState Key Laboratory of Elemento-organic Chemistry, Nankai University, Tianjin, 300071, China. E-mail: cjwang@whu.edu.cn
cTianjin Key Laboratory of Molecular Optoelectronic Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Tianjin University, Tianjin, 300072, China. E-mail: yanfeng.dang@tju.edu.cn
First published on 11th October 2023
The first organocatalytic atroposelective synthesis of axially chiral N,N′-pyrrolylindoles based on o-alkynylanilines was successfully established via de novo indole formation catalyzed by chiral phosphoric acid (CPA). This new synthetic strategy introduced CPA-catalyzed asymmetric 5-endo-dig cyclization of new well-designed o-alkynylanilines containing a pyrrolyl unit, resulting in a wide range of axially chiral N,N′-pyrrolylindoles in high yields with exclusive regioselectivity and excellent enantioselectivity (up to 99% yield, >20
:
1 rr, 95
:
5 er). Considering the potential biological significance of N–N atropisomers, preliminary biological activity studies were performed and revealed that these structurally important N,N′-pyrrolylindoles had a low IC50 value with promising impressive cytotoxicity against several kinds of cancer cell lines. DFT studies reveal that the N-nucleophilic cyclization mediated by CPA is the rate- and stereo-determining step, in which ligand–substrate dispersion interactions facilitate the axial chirality of the target products.
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| Scheme 1 Selected examples of N–N atropisomers and asymmetric de novo construction of indole atropisomers. | ||
Subsequently, a great deal of attention has been paid to the development of efficient synthetic strategies and some progress has been achieved, mainly involving direct N–H functionalization,4 the functionalization of prochiral or racemic bis-heteroaryl rings,5de novo ring formation via a Paal–Knorr reaction,6 or dual-ring formation by cyclization and oxidation.7 In addition, the catalytic atroposelective synthesis of N–N axially chiral molecules via de novo indole formation has emerged as an attractive route.8 The 5-endo-dig cyclization of o-alkynylanilines is a versatile method for the de novo generation of indole derivatives, and a variety of chiral indole atropisomers9 have been well established through this catalytic enantioselective cyclization (Scheme 1b). To our knowledge, the documented protocols rely heavily on asymmetric transition metal catalysis, and there are only two examples using organocatalysis for the construction of axially chiral indoles via the 5-endo-dig cyclization of o-alkynylanilines. In 2019, Yan and workers developed chiral quinine-derived thiourea-catalyzed asymmetric cyclization of o-alkynylanilines to give chiral naphthyl-C2-indoles with a C–C axis via vinylidene orthoquinone methide intermediates with excellent results.9c Meanwhile, Ye and coworkers realized chiral CPA-catalyzed atroposelective 5-endo-dig cyclization of ynamides to access chiral N-arylindoles with a C–N axis in high yields with excellent enantioselectivities.9d However, the approach to accessing axially chiral N–N bis-heteroaryl atropisomers through the de novo formation of chiral indole rings by the organocatalytic annulation of o-alkynylanilines remains undeveloped and unprecedented. During the preparation of this manuscript, Sparr and coworkers reported an asymmetric Pd-catalyzed 5-endo-hydroaminocyclization for the synthesis of N–N atropisomeric bisindoles and indolyl-carbazoles with moderate results.9j
Herein, we have designed and synthesized a new type of molecule, N-pyrrole o-alkynylanilines, as the substrates, and applied them in Brønsted-acid CPA-catalyzed atroposelective 5-endo-dig cyclization to achieve the de novo formation of axially chiral N,N′-pyrrolylindoles (Scheme 1c). It should be noted that this is the first organocatalytic annulation of o-alkynylanilines to prepare N–N axially chiral compounds in a practical and atom-economic manner. This fascinating protocol also faces a lot of challenges, including: (1) the development of new and efficient synthetic strategies to access N–N axially chiral molecules with excellent enantioselective control, (2) the design and synthesis of new kind of substrates and chiral N–N bis-heteroaryl pyrrolylindoles atropisomers, (3) the discovery and application of these highly-valuable molecules in the field of synthetic and medicinal chemistry.
:
26–89
:
11 er, Table 1, entries 11–14). Pleasingly, SPINOL-derived CPA12 containing a 1-pyrenyl substituted group furnished the best results in terms of reactivity and enantioselectivity (93% yield, 89
:
11 er, Table 1, entry 12). A further solvent survey in the presence of CPA12 revealed that toluene is the most favorable choice, and the enantioselectivity of product 2a was greatly improved to 91
:
9 er (Table 1, entry 19). When the reaction temperature was gradually decreased to −10 °C, excellent enantioselectivity was obtained (90% yield, 95
:
5 er, Table 1, entry 22). It was found that the ee value was maintained without improvement at −40 °C, but lower reactivity was observed with only 50% yield (Table 1, entry 23). Accordingly, it was identified that the optimized protocol for the 5-endo-dig-cyclization of N-pyrrolo-acetylanilines should be conducted under conditions with SPINOL-derived CPA12 as the privileged catalyst in toluene at −10 °C.
| Entry | CPA | Solvent | T (°C) | Yieldb (%) | eec (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a All reactions were carried out with 0.2 mmol 1a in 2 mL of solvent catalyzed by CPA (10 mol%). b Isolated yield of the two steps overall. c The er value was determined by chiral HPLC analysis. | |||||
| 1 | (R)-CPA1 | CHCl3 | RT | 96 | 50 : 50 |
| 2 | (R)-CPA2 | CHCl3 | RT | 95 | 54 : 45 |
| 3 | (R)-CPA3 | CHCl3 | RT | Trace | — |
| 4 | (R)-CPA4 | CHCl3 | RT | 93 | 50 : 50 |
| 5 | (R)-CPA5 | CHCl3 | RT | 95 | 50 : 50 |
| 6 | (R)-CPA6 | CHCl3 | RT | 96 | 61 : 39 |
| 7 | (R)-CPA7 | CHCl3 | RT | 90 | 50 : 50 |
| 8 | (R)-CPA8 | CHCl3 | RT | 90 | 69 : 31 |
| 9 | (R)-CPA9 | CHCl3 | RT | 95 | 65 : 35 |
| 10 | (R)-CPA10 | CHCl3 | RT | Trace | — |
| 11 | (S)-CPA11 | CHCl3 | RT | 90 | 76 : 24 |
| 12 | (S)-CPA12 | CHCl3 | RT | 93 | 89 : 11 |
| 13 | (S)-CPA13 | CHCl3 | RT | 94 | 74 : 26 |
| 14 | (S)-CPA14 | CHCl3 | RT | 96 | 84 : 16 |
| 15 | (S)-CPA12 | EtOAc | RT | Trace | — |
| 16 | (S)-CPA12 | THF | RT | Trace | — |
| 17 | (S)-CPA12 | CH3CN | RT | 92 | 60 : 40 |
| 18 | (S)-CPA12 | Acetone | RT | Trace | — |
| 19 | (S)-CPA12 | Toluene | RT | 95 | 91 : 9 |
| 20 | (S)-CPA12 | Toluene | 10 | 95 | 92 : 8 |
| 21 | (S)-CPA12 | Toluene | 0 | 93 | 93 : 7 |
| 22 | (S)-CPA12 | Toluene | −10 | 90 | 95 : 5 |
| 23 | (S)-CPA12 | Toluene | −40 | 50 | 95 : 5 |
:
9–95
:
5 er. In addition, the N-pyrrolo-acetylanilines (1f–1j) containing different substituted groups on the phenyl ring of the aniline motifs could be well accommodated to give the desired products (2f–2j) in good to high yields with excellent enantioselectivities (81–97% yields, 91
:
9–95
:
5 er). The absolute configuration of cycloadduct 2b was unambiguously determined as S by X-ray diffraction analysis (CCDC 2279386).10
| a All reactions were carried out with 0.2 mmol 1 in 2 mL of toluene catalyzed by CPA12 (10 mol%) at −10 °C. The yield is isolated yield. The er value was determined by chiral HPLC analysis. |
|---|
|
On the other hand, we also investigated the feasibility of the CPA12-catalyzed 5-endo-dig-cyclization of N-pyrrolo-acetylanilines with different substituted groups on the phenyl ring in the pyrrole motif. It was found that a wide range of N-pyrrolo-acetylanilines (1k–1t) bearing electron-rich groups or electron-deficient groups on the phenyl ring worked as good reaction partners, and this cyclization proceeded smoothly, resulting in the corresponding chiral products (2k–2t) in good to high yields with excellent enantioselectivities (87–96% yields, 87
:
13–95
:
5 er). It is noteworthy that the position of the substituted group did not affect the reactivity or enantioselectivity. Additionally, the heteroaryl-fused substrate 1u was well tolerated to deliver the corresponding product 2u in 90% yield with 90
:
10 er. Remarkably, the alkyl-substituted substrate 1v also worked well, leading to the expected product 2v in high yield with good enantioselectivity (97% yield, 95
:
5 er) (Table 3).
| a All reactions were carried out with 0.2 mmol 1 in 2 mL of toluene catalyzed by CPA12 (10 mol%) at −10 °C. The yield is isolated yield. The er value was determined by chiral HPLC analysis. |
|---|
|
:
5 er). In addition, compound 2a could undergo a condensation–cyclization reaction with 2,2-diethoxy-N,N-dimethylethan-1-amine to furnish product 3 containing an indolo[3,2-a]carbazole skeleton in 80% yield without erosion of the er value, which forms the key core structure in natural indolo[3,2-a]carbazole alkaloids from deep-water sponges of the genus Asteropus.11
To gain mechanistic insights into the CPA-dependent stereoselectivity, density functional theory (DFT) calculations were performed with the Gaussian 09 package.12 As shown in Fig. 2a, the reaction starts with the hydrophosphoryloxylation of the alkyne moiety in the CPA-substrate adduct IM1viaTS1 with an energy barrier of 16.9 kcal mol−1, leading to allene-type intermediate IM2.13 Subsequently, the nucleophilic cyclization of the N atom in the aniline moiety on the central carbon of the allene moiety occurs viaTS2 (ΔG‡ = 21.3 kcal mol−1), forming protonated indole complex IM3. Finally, the deprotonation viaTS3 delivers product 2a and regenerates IM1 through product/substrate exchange. Herein, the transition state of proton transfer TS3 could not be located, which may be because proton transfer from ammonium to the phosphate anion could be regarded as an extremely facile process (see ESI† for more details). Overall, N-nucleophilic cyclization viaTS2 is the rate- and stereo-determining step that controls the axial chirality of the formed product. TS2 (leading to the major product) is found to be lower than TS2′ (leading to the minor product) by 1.0 kcal mol−1, whose computed result agrees with the experimental observations. Noncovalent interactions (NCIs) using IGMH analysis have been utilized to compare the two competing transition states (TS2vs.TS2′).14 As shown in Fig. 2b, the main difference between the two transition states is that TS2 has favorable C–H⋯π dispersion interactions between the phenyl group of the pyrrole moiety and the pyrenyl substituent in CPA; while only weak C–H/C–H ligand–substrate interactions can be detected in TS2′ of the analogous parts. Accordingly, the ligand–substrate dispersion interactions serve as the key factor controlling the axial chirality of the N,N′-pyrrolylindole products.
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| Fig. 2 (a) DFT-computed catalytic cycle with free energy given in kcal mol−1. (b) Origin of the stereoselectivity between TS2 and TS2′. Comparison of key NCIs by IGMH analysis. | ||
:
1 rr, 95
:
5 er). The scale-up synthesis and the synthetic transformation for the construction of an indolo[3,2-a]carbazole skeleton as a key core structure in natural product asteropusazoles exhibited potential utilization. Preliminary studies of biological activity suggested that these structurally important N,N′-pyrrolylindoles had a low IC50 value, which could offer an encouraging opportunity for drug discovery. DFT mechanistic explorations indicated that the stereochemistry was regulated by the CPA-promoted N-nucleophilic cyclization step, wherein the favored transition state is stabilized by more ligand–substrate C–H⋯π dispersion forces.
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. CCDC 2279386. For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF or other electronic format see DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3sc03686c |
| ‡ These authors contributed equally. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |