“…The synthesis of N-heterocyclic compounds is an extremely important branch of heterocyclic chemistry, and the study of these compounds has become a long-term concern due to their widespread presence in natural products, pharmaceutically active components, and functional materials. 1–3 Pyrazole[5,1-α]isoquinoline and pyrazole[1,5-α]quinoline are critical structural motifs widely present in biologically active molecules, such as Aurora A inhibitor I , CB1 cannabinoid receptor antagonist II , dopamine D4 receptor antagonist III , anti-tumour agent IV , phosphodiesterase 10A inhibitor V , anti-proliferative compound VI , and GPR109A agonist agent VII (Fig. 1).…”