The 1,2-addition of lithium phenylacetylide (PhCCLi) to quinazolinones was investigated using a combination of structural and rate studies. (6)Li, (13)C, and (19)F NMR spectroscopies show that deprotonation of quinazolinones and phenylacetylene in THF/pentane solutions with lithium hexamethyldisilazide affords a mixture of lithium quinazolinide/PhCCLi mixed dimer and mixed tetramer along with PhCCLi dimer. Although the mixed tetramer dominates at high mixed aggregate concentrations and low temperatures used for the structural studies, the mixed dimer is the dominant form at the low total mixed aggregate concentrations, high THF concentrations, and ambient temperatures used to investigate the 1,2-addition. Monitoring the reaction rates using (19)F NMR spectroscopy revealed a first-order dependence on mixed dimer, a zeroth-order dependence on THF, and a half-order dependence on the PhCCLi concentration. The rate law is consistent with the addition of a disolvated PhCCLi monomer to the mixed dimer. Investigation of the 1,2-addition of PhCCLi to an O-protected quinazolinone implicates reaction via trisolvated PhCCLi monomers.
The process development and kilogram-scale synthesis of beclabuvir (BMS-791325, 1) is described. The convergent synthesis features the use of asymmetric catalysis to generate a chiral cyclopropane fragment and coupling with an indole fragment via an alkylation. Subsequent palladium-catalyzed intramolecular direct arylation efficiently builds the central seven-membered ring. The target was prepared in 12 linear steps with five isolations in an overall yield of 8%.
The process development for the synthesis
of BMS-986020 (1) via a palladium catalyzed tandem borylation/Suzuki
reaction
is described. Evaluation of conditions culminated in an efficient
borylation procedure using tetrahydroxydiboron followed by a tandem
Suzuki reaction employing the same commercially available palladium
catalyst for both steps. This methodology addressed shortcomings of
early synthetic routes and was ultimately used for the multikilogram
scale synthesis of the active pharmaceutical ingredient 1. Further evaluation of the borylation reaction showed useful reactivity
with a range of substituted aryl bromides and iodides as coupling
partners. These findings represent a practical, efficient, mild, and
scalable method for borylation.
A first-generation strategy for construction of (+)-nodulisporic acids A (1) and B (2) is described. The strategy entails union of the eastern and western hemisphere subtargets via the indole synthesis protocol developed in our laboratory. Subsequent elaboration of rings E and F, however, revealed the considerable acid instability of the C(24) hydroxyl, thereby preventing further advancement. Nonetheless, preparation of the heptacyclic core of (+)-nodulisporic acids A and B, the total synthesis of (+)-nodulisporic acid F, the simplest member of the nodulisporic acid family, and elaboration of the heptacyclic core of (-)-nodulisporic acid D were achieved.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.