2-Bromo-1,3-butadienes
are demonstrated to be effective substrates
for tandem Diels–Alder/transition metal cross-coupling reaction
sequences. Intermolecular cycloaddition of a 2-bromo-1,3-diene with
activated dienophiles proceeded under Lewis acid catalysis in generally
high yields with good to excellent endo diastereoselectivity.
The resulting vinyl bromide cycloadducts underwent subsequent Stille
and Suzuki cross-couplings under standard conditions in good yields.
Both the Diels–Alder and cross-coupling steps were highly tolerant
of a range of functionalities and protecting groups. The use of the
bromine substituent as both a cycloaddition directing group and cross-coupling
nucleofuge avoids extra steps required to install and remove the more
commonly used silyl enol ethers and enol sulfonates for each transformation
and gives full control of the alkene regiochemistry throughout the
reaction sequence. The 2-bromo-1,3-dienes were conveniently prepared
in three steps from readily available aldehydes and established as
hydrolytically stable and practical synthetic intermediates.
The unexpected synthesis of industrially important N-vinyl amides directly from aldehydes and a,b-unsaturated N-vinyl amides from esters is reported. This reaction probably proceeds through an initial [3+ +2] azide-enolate cycloaddition involving av inyl azide generated in situ. As urvey of the reaction scope and preliminary mechanistic findings supported by quantum computational analysis are reported, with implications for the future development of atom-efficient amide synthesis.I ntriguingly,t his study suggests that (cautious) reevaluation of azidoethene as as ynthetic reagent may be warranted. Scheme 2. Azide-enolate [3+ +2] cycloaddition reactions implicated in amide and triazoline synthesis. LDA = lithium diisopropylamide, LHMDS = lithium hexamethyldisilazide. Scheme 1. Industrially important N-vinyl amides 1 and 2. [3a]
Norbormide [5-(α-hydroxy-α-2-pyridylbenzyl)-7-(α-2-pyridylbenzylidene)-5-norbornene-2,3-dicarboximide] (NRB), an existing but infrequently used rodenticide, is known to be uniquely toxic to rats but relatively harmless to other rodents and mammals. However, as an acute vasoactive, NRB has a rapid onset of action which makes it relatively unpalatable to rats, often leading to sublethal uptake and accompanying bait shyness. A series of NRB-derived pro-toxicants (3a - i, 4a - i, and 5a - i) were prepared in an effort to 'mask' this acute response and improve both palatability and efficacy. Their synthesis, in vitro biological evaluation (vasocontractile response in rat vasculature, stability in selected rat media) and palatability/efficacy in Sprague-Dawley, wild Norway, and wild ship rats is described. Most notably, pro-toxicant 3d was revealed to be free of all pre-cleavage vasoconstrictory activity in rat caudal artery and was subsequently demonstrated to release NRB in the presence of rat blood, liver, and pancreatic enzymes. Moreover, it consistently displayed a high level of acceptance by rats in a two-choice bait-palatability and efficacy trial, with accompanying high mortality. On this evidence, fatty acid ester prodrugs would appear to offer a promising platform for the further development of NRB-derived toxicants with enhanced palatability and efficacy profiles.
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