Weitao
Sun‡
,
Maria
Uttendorfer‡
,
Fahima I. M.
Idiris
,
A. Yannic R.
Werling
,
Khushal
Siddiq
and
Christopher R.
Jones
*
Department of Chemistry, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Road, London, E1 4NS, UK. E-mail: c.jones@qmul.ac.uk
First published on 12th September 2023
5,6-Dihydrophenanthridines are prepared from aryl amines via intramolecular addition to N-tethered arynes under mild conditions. A new o-silylaryl triflate precursor was developed to increase reactivity and enable electron-rich and electron-poor aryl amines to undergo cyclisation. A complete switch in product selectivity occurs when the reaction is conducted in air, affording the corresponding phenanthridin-6(5H)-one as the sole product under otherwise identical reaction conditions.
Arynes have also been utilised in the synthesis of phenanthridine derivatives and related alkaloid natural products.6,7 These versatile reactive intermediates afford valuable benzenoid and heterocyclic frameworks8 and have experienced a recent resurgence in interest due to the advent of aryne precursors that act under mild conditions, namely the o-trimethylsilylaryl triflates (oSATs)9 and the hexadehydro-Diels–Alder reaction of polyalkynes.10 Cyclisation onto a pendant aryne has proven a valuable method to furnish phenanthridine derivatives, most notably in the synthesis of natural products.6a–e,g,h However, these approaches all generate arynes using organometallic reagents or strong bases at low temperatures which restricts the functional group tolerance. Methods that operate via electrophilic aromatic substitution (SEAr) have also been limited to electron-rich aryl nucleophiles such as 1 (Scheme 1a),6a–e which although common in the natural products, precludes preparation of more diverse substrate analogues. Alternatively, Barluenga and Sanz utilised anionic cyclisation onto pendant arynes (accessed from 3) to yield phenanthridine derivatives 4 and 5 by exploiting stronger in situ-formed aryllithium nucleophiles (Scheme 1b).6g,h However, this strategy also required organolithium reagents (in excess) to form both the aryne and the nucleophile, plus pre-functionalisation (o-bromination) of the pronucleophilic arene.
Given our interests in the chemistry of arynes,11 we sought to develop a cyclisation approach to phenanthridine derivatives that exploited the benzylic oSAT precursor 7a previously used in our group (Scheme 1c).11b Inspired by the strategy of both Kessar and Stermitz in their syntheses of alkaloid natural products,6c,d it was proposed that aryl amines bearing an N-tethered aryne precursor (8) would undergo SEAr, upon generation of the aryne 9, to afford 5,6-dihydrophenanthridine derivatives 10. Given the propensity for such frameworks to undergo oxidation there would also be potential to access the corresponding phenanthridinones 11. Importantly, by using the oSAT precursor it removes the harsher reaction conditions of previous reports and should facilitate a wider range of aryl amine nucleophiles 6, especially those containing useful functional handles. Furthermore, tethering the aryne at nitrogen enables more facile synthesis of the starting materials, compared to linking via C–C bonds,6a,b thereby expediting the preparation of structural analogues.
To test this cyclisation hypothesis, benzylic oSAT precursor 7a was tethered to N-methyl aniline to afford precursor 12, which was then subjected to our standard aryne-forming conditions previously used with this tether (Scheme 2a).11b Unfortunately, this afforded a mixture of compounds and no clear evidence of cyclisation to dihydrophenanthridine 13 nor phenanthridinone 14. Intriguingly, a significant by-product was observed in the 1H NMR spectrum of the crude reaction mixture that suggested intermolecular attack at the aryne was taking precedence over the desired intramolecular process (although we were unable to isolate a clean sample for characterisation).12 With a goal to promote the cyclisation and suppress undesired intermolecular reactivity, a modified aryne precursor 17 was developed (Scheme 2b). It was rationalised that a p-methoxy substituent in 17 should increase reactivity by inductively polarising the aryne towards nucleophilic addition ortho to the tether – as supported by Garg and Houk's aryne distortion model13 – in addition to providing increased stabilisation of the resulting aryl anion.8a To this end, the novel p-methoxybenzyl aryne precursor 17 was prepared in four steps from commercially available 2-bromo-isovanillin 15 with no purification of the intermediates required.
With the second generation aryne tether 17 in hand, the corresponding N-methyl aniline precursor 18a was then subjected to the conditions used for attempted cyclisation of 12. Gratifyingly, the new aryne tether promoted significant intramolecular reaction, affording dihydrophenanthridine 19a in 50% yield and the corresponding phenanthridinone 20a in 23% yield, with a marked decrease in deleterious N-arylation (8% by-product) (entry 1, Table 1). Having addressed the issue of overall reactivity, attention turned to optimising the reaction conditions to avoid mixtures of cyclisation products (see Table 1 for selected optimisation experiments). Evaluation of some common o-SAT activators (entries 2–5) identified CsF in acetonitrile and KF/18-crown-6 in THF as promoting cyclisation to the dihydrophenanthridine 19a in good yields, albeit with phenanthridinone and by-product still present. Encouragingly, replacing THF with DME led to an excellent yield of the desired dihydrophenanthridine 19a, with only trace amounts of the phenanthridinone 20a and no evidence of the competing intermolecular by-product (entries 5 & 6). Further investigations found that lowering the reaction temperature and concentration both decreased the overall yield (entries 7 and 8). Finally, increasing concentration led to more of the competing intermolecular N-arylation and subsequent erosion of the dihydrophenanthridine yield (entry 9).
Entry | Activator | Solvent | T (°C) | Yieldb (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
19a | 20a | By-product | ||||
a Reaction conditions: aryl amine (1.0 equiv.), activator (2.0 equiv.), additive (2.0 equiv.), solvent [0.01 M], 16 h, N2 atmosphere. b 1H NMR yield vs. dibromomethane internal standard, isolated yield in parentheses, all reactions proceeded to full conversion after 16 h. c 1.0 M in THF. d 0.002 M. e 0.05 M. | ||||||
1 | KF 18-crown-6 | DME:MeCN (3:1) | 90 | 50 | 23 | 8 |
2 | CsF | MeCN | 90 | 69 | 2 | 7 |
3 | CsF | PhMe:MeCN | 90 | 64 | 10 | 11 |
4 | TBAFc | THF | 90 | 36 | — | — |
5 | KF 18-crown-6 | THF | 90 | 69 | 10 | 5 |
6 | KF 18-crown-6 | DME | 90 | 84(82) | 2 | — |
7 | KF 18-crown-6 | DME | 70 | 69 | 2 | 5 |
8 | KF 18-crown-6 | DMEd | 90 | 69 | — | 9 |
9 | KF 18-crown-6 | DMEe | 90 | 46 | — | 35 |
Having optimised the reaction conditions, attention turned to investigating substrate scope. Pleasingly, a range of substituted aniline derivatives were found to undergo cyclisation in generally good to excellent yields (Scheme 3). 4-Substituted anilines were evaluated first, with the electron-rich 4-methoxy derivative affording the corresponding dihydrophenanthridine 19b in 98% yield. The halogenated series showed an interesting trend, with the 4-iodo and 4-fluoro precursors undergoing efficient cyclisation to 19c (67%) and 19f (70%), respectively, however, the 4-bromo and 4-chloro derivatives furnished 19d and 19e in more moderate yields (52% and 48%). With the electron deficient 4-fluoro analogue proving highly amenable to the cyclisation, it was encouraging to observe that the 4-nitroaniline precursor also underwent the transformation to generate the corresponding electron-poor dihydrophenanthridine 19g in 34% yield. These are particularly noteworthy as most reports of intramolecular SEAr with arynes rely on markedly electron rich aromatic systems. A comparison of the propensity for cyclisation of the 3-methyl (18h) and 2-methylaniline (18i) precursors revealed a key role played by sterics. 3-Methylaniline 18h afforded the corresponding dihydrophenanthridine 19h in an excellent 83% yield, whereas only a trace of the 2-methyl analogue was observed. This suggested that 19i experiences significant 1,5-strain in the transition state required for cyclisation; instead favouring a mixture of the N-arylation by-product and an intramolecular dearomative aryne Diels–Alder cycloaddition.14 Interestingly, the more conformationally rigid indoline (18k) and tetrahydroquinoline (18l) precursors underwent efficient SEAr to furnish the corresponding tetracyclic products, 19k and 19l, respectively. It was noted that the THQ-derived framework afforded 19l in 76% yield by 1H NMR spectroscopic analysis; however, during attempted purification it proved susceptible to oxidation, leading to an isolated mixture (1:1.2) of 19l and the corresponding phenanthridinone.
Having established the formation of dihydrophenanthridines from a range of electron rich and electron deficient aryl amines, we next investigated whether the product selectivity could be reversed to instead access phenanthridinones. During the initial optimisation studies, dihydrophenathridine 19a had been found to be susceptible to partial oxidation upon exposure to air, whilst 19l had part-oxidised during purification. This afforded mixtures of the dihydrophenanthridines and phenanthridinones; however a discrete second oxidative step was always required to effect complete conversion. With a view to accessing the phenanthridinone derivatives in a single step from the analogous aryl amine precursors 18, the reaction was performed in the presence of a range of oxidants, with most attempts affording mixtures of the two cyclisation products. However, it was extremely pleasing to observe that when 18a and 18l were exposed to the previously optimised cyclisation conditions, only in air rather than under an inert atmosphere, it resulted in a complete switch of selectivity to exclusively afford the corresponding phenanthridin-6(5H)-ones 20a and 20l in 62% and 79% yields respectively (Scheme 4).15
Finally, N-benzyl (18m) and N-allyl (18n) aniline precursors were also found to be amenable to cyclisation (Scheme 5). Given the increased potential for subsequent protecting group cleavage, the comparable yields obtained for the analogous N-benzyl (19m, 85%), N-allyl (19n, 69%) and N-Me (19a, 82%) dihydrophenanthridines were particularly encouraging for the synthetic utility of the method.
Scheme 5 5,6-Dihydrophenanthridines bearing alternative N-protecting groups. Reaction conditions are as shown in Scheme 3. Yields of isolated products throughout. |
In conclusion, the cyclisation of aryl amines onto N-tethered arynes has been developed under mild reaction conditions using a novel silylaryl triflate precursor. This enabled the new biaryl linkage to be generated by SEAr using both electron rich and poor aryl amines and furnished a range of phenanthridine derivatives with handles for subsequent functionalisation. Selective access to dihydrophenanthridines or the corresponding phenanthridinones is dependent upon a simple switch between anaerobic and aerobic reaction environments.
We are grateful to the EPSRC (EP/M026221/1, CRJ), QMUL (studentships to FIMI & AYRW), CSC (studentship to WS) and DAAD RISE (GB-CH-3538, studentship to MU) for financial support. We thank the National Mass Spectrometry Facility at Swansea University.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3cc03027j |
‡ These authors contributed equally to this work. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |