A general method for the synthesis of azabiaryls 19a-t by a one-pot procedure involving a Directed ortho metalation (DoM)-boronation-Suzuki-Miyaura cross coupling sequence is described. Aside from the three isomeric pyridyl carboxamides 15a-c, chloro-, fluoro-, and O-carbamoyl pyridines are adapted to this method providing a range of azabiaryls (Table 2). The method has an advantage in that it avoids the recognized difficult isolation of pyridyl boronic acids and their instability toward deboronation. The efficient synthesis of hydroxypicolinamides 12-14 (Scheme 3) by a one-pot metalation-boronation-oxidation sequence with the LDA-B(OiPr)3 in situ procedure that avoids self-condensation of incipient ortho-metalated species (Scheme 2) is delineated. The conversion of azabiaryls 19b,e,h,l into azafluorenones 20b,e,h,l by a directed remote metalation protocol is demonstrated (Table 3). A comprehensive survey of pyridyl boronates, of considerable interest in contemporary heterocyclic synthetic chemistry, is given (Figure 1).
Acridinediones have previously been shown to have potent antimalarial activity. A series of sulfur isosteres of acridinediones have been synthesized and evaluated for their inhibition of the Plasmodium falciparum cysteine protease falcipain and for their antimalarial activity. A number of these phenothiazines inhibited falcipain and demonstrated activity against cultured P. falciparum parasites at low micromolar concentrations. We propose that the compounds exerted their antimalarial effects by two mechanisms, one of which involves the inhibition of falcipain and a consequent block in parasite degradation of hemoglobin. These compounds and related phenothiazines are worthy of further study as potential antimalarial agents.
Diverse models of intramolecular
charge transfer (ICT) have been
proposed for interpreting the origin of the charge-transfer (CT) state
in donor–acceptor (D–A) dyes. However, a large variety
of fused-heterocyclic dyes containing a pseudo-aromatic ring in the
rigid structure have shown to be incompatible with them. To approximate
a solution within the ICT concept, we reported a novel ICT model called
partially aromatized intramolecular charge transfer (PAICT). PAICT
involves the generation of a CT state from an ICT that occurred within
a pre-excited D–A fused-heterocyclic structure possessing a
pseudo-aromatic or unstable aromatic ring as the acceptor moiety.
The model was proposed from the multiple-emissive mesomeric D–A N
1
-aryl-2-(trifluoromethyl)benzo[b][1,8]naphthyridin-4(1H)-one, whose excited
mesomeric states, which are defined by the aromatic and pseudo-aromatic
forms of the pyrindin-4(1H)-one ring, led to a common
partial aromatized CT state upon excitation via PAICT. The latter
was supported through theoretical calculations on the excited mesomeric
states, one-dimensional (1D) and two-dimensional (2D) excitation–emission
measurements in different solvents, and the detection of three excited
states by lifetime measurements upon 370 nm excitation. The existence
of mesomerism was supposed from: (i) two overlapping bands at 370–390
(or 400–420 nm) in UV–vis spectra, (ii) the direct interaction
between the pyridinic nitrogen of one molecule and the carbonylic
oxygen of the other found in the solid state and, (iii) the detection
of three excited states by lifetime measurements. The PAICT opens
new perspectives for interpreting the charge-transfer phenomenon in
fused-heterocyclic dyes, in particular, those containing a pseudo-aromatic
or unstable aromatic ring as an acceptor moiety.
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