Guanglong
Sun
,
Min
Lei
* and
Lihong
Hu
*
State Key Laboratory of Drug Research, Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, P. R. China. E-mail: mlei@simm.ac.cn; lhhu@simm.ac.cn
First published on 15th March 2016
A facile and efficient method for the synthesis of alkynones by a Pd-catalyzed carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction starting from aryl iodide, terminal alkyne and chloroform (CHCl3) as the CO source is described. This procedure proves that CHCl3 is a cheap and efficient CO source in the presence of CsOH·H2O as the base. Furthermore, it is applied successfully for the modification of natural products, such as vindoline and tabersonin, to obtain the corresponding products in good yields.
Recently, many methods have been reported for the synthesis of alkynones: (1) oxidation of propargylic alcohols;24–27 (2) reaction of acyl chlorides with terminal alkynes;28–34 (3) reaction of nitriles with terminal alkynes;35 (4) reaction of aldehydes with terminal alkynes;36 (5) carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction;37–41 (6) other methods.42–46 Among all of the methods mentioned above, carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction of aryl iodide, terminal alkyne and CO plays a key role due to its good yields, mild reaction conditions, and excellent functional group tolerance. However, a high CO pressure is always required to achieve efficient carbonylative coupling for the preparation of alkynones. High toxicity and pressure of CO severely limits the using of this method in organic synthesis. In recent years, to avoid using CO directly, several precursors of CO have been reported to replace the CO in organic synthesis.47–51 As shown in Scheme 1, methyldiphenylsilanecarboxylic acid,47,48 phenyl formate49 and 9-methyl-9H-fluorene-9-carbonyl chloride50,51 are applied successfully in organic synthesis as CO precursors. However, the use of these precursors has been limited due to their high prices, especially on a large scale organic synthesis. Therefore, there is a need to search a better precursor of CO for the application in organic synthesis in terms of operational simplicity and economic viability.
During the course of our studies, a Pd(II)-mediated carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction for the synthesis of alkynones using CHCl3 as the CO precursor in the presence of CsOH·H2O was also discovered.52–55 Herein, we describe a Pd(II)-catalyzed carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction of aryl iodide, terminal alkyne and CHCl3 to synthesis of alkynones.
Initially, to exam whether the CHCl3 could be used as CO precursor, we carried out the reaction of iodobenzene 1a, ethynylbenzene 2a, and CHCl3 using Pd(OAc)2 as catalyst, BINAP as ligand and CsOH·H2O as base in toluene. After stirred for 8 h at 80 °C, the desired product 3aa was obtained in 70% yield. This result clearly indicated that CHCl3 could be as CO precursor to synthesis of alkynone. To further improve the efficiency of this reaction, a series of optimization experiments were performed, and the results are summarized in Table 1.
Entry | Ligand | Solvent | Yieldb (%) |
---|---|---|---|
a Reaction conditions: 1a (0.5 mmol), 2a (0.6 mmol), CHCl3 (1.5 mmol), Pd(OAc)2 (2.5 mol%), ligand (10 mol%), CsOH·H2O (5 mmol), solvent (3 mL), 80 °C, 8 h. b Yields were determined by LC-MS; the number in parentheses refers to the yield of isolated 3aa. | |||
1 | — | Toluene | 0 |
2 | BINAP | Toluene | 70 |
3 | dppf | Toluene | 80 |
4 | dppp | Toluene | 76 |
5 | PPh3 | Toluene | 96 (91) |
6 | DPEphos | Toluene | 85 |
7 | CEMTPP | Toluene | 91 |
8 | (2-Furyl)3P | Toluene | 50 |
9 | o-Phenanthroline | Toluene | 15 |
10 | PPh3 | 1,4-Dioxane | 81 |
11 | PPh3 | DMF | 0 |
12 | PPh3 | MeCN | 0 |
13 | PPh3 | EtOH | 5 |
14 | PPh3 | THF | 65 |
Preliminary experiments suggested that the ligands had a significant impact on the yields of 3aa. Hence, various ligands such as BINAP, dppf, dppp, PPh3, DPEphos, CEMTPP, (2-furyl)3P, and o-phenanthroline were applied to promote this coupling reaction. As shown in Table 1, the reaction could not proceed smoothly to obtain the corresponding product 3aa under ligand-free conditions (Table 1, entry 1). All the ligands studied on this reaction showed good ligand effect in terms of the yields of 3aa (50–96%) but o-phenanthroline (15%). By screening of ligands, PPh3 was found to be the superior one than others to obtained 3aa in 96% yield determined by LC-MS and in 91% isolated yield, respectively. Therefore, PPh3 was chosen as the ligand for all further reactions.
Furthermore, to examine the solvent effect, various solvents such as toluene, 1,4-dioxane, DMF, MeCN, EtOH, and THF were applied to this coupling reaction. As shown in Table 1, the reaction could not proceed smoothly in DMF and MeCN and only 5% yield of 3aa was obtained in EtOH (Table 1, entries 11–13). Moderate to excellent yields were obtained when using toluene, 1,4-dioxane, and THF as the solvent (65–96%) (Table 1, entries 5, 81 and 14), and toluene displayed the best solvent effect.
In addition, the other factors, such as catalyst, base and temperature, were also investigated and these contents were provided in ESI.† Having established the optimized reaction conditions, we then carried out the reaction under the similar conditions using aromatic compounds with different leaving groups, such as Br-, Cl-, TsO-, and TfO-, as substrates to replace iodobenzene. In these cases, the results showed that only 1,4-diphenylbuta-1,3-diyne was obtained in 75% yield, and the desired 3aa was not formed (see ESI†).
To explore the generality and scope of the carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction, the reaction of various aryl iodides and phenylacetylene was carried out under the optimized conditions (Table 2). As shown in Scheme 2, ortho, meta and para substituted substrates were chosen to exam the steric hindrance on this reaction. The desired products 3aa–na were obtained in 78–91% yields. These results clearly indicated that the steric hindrance of aryl iodides without significant effect on this carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction. Moreover, both electron-rich and electron-deficient aryl iodides could afford the corresponding alkynones 3aa–na in good yields (78–91%).
We further investigated the reactions of iodobenzene with various terminal alkynes (Table 3). All of the aryl alkynes were coupled with iodobenzene to afford the alkynones 3aa–ah in good yields (86–92%). The reaction of 3-cyclohexyl-1-propyne with iodobenzene proceeded to yield 72% of the desired product 3ai.
In addition, several substituted amino-ethynylbenzenes (2j, 2k and 2l) were selected for this reaction, and some interesting results were obtained (Scheme 2). Normal product 3aj was formed when using 3-(Boc-amino)-ethynylbenzene 2j as starting material. However, only detrifluoroacetyl product 3ak was obtained under similar conditions when using 3-(trifluoroacetyl-amino)-ethynylbenzene 2j. If the amino without any protection group 2l, both 4aa and 3ak were formed in 80% and 10% yields, respectively. These results provided an alternative approach to synthesis corresponding products as needed.
Furthermore, this carbonylative Sonogashira coupling reaction was also applied in natural products (Scheme 3). At first, vindoline and tabersonin were chosen as starting materials, which were iodinated by NIS to form 15-iodo-vindoline 5 and 10-iodo-tabersonin 6.56,57 Then, the reaction of 5 or 6 with phenylacetylene was carried out under standard conditions for 12 h. The corresponding products 15-alkynone-vindoline 7 and 10-alkynone-tabersonin 8 were obtained in 79% and 75% yields, respectively.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Experimental procedures, copies of the 1H and 13C NMR spectra. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ra02424f |
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