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      The Oxime Portmanteau Motif: Released Heteroradicals Undergo Incisive EPR Interrogation and Deliver Diverse Heterocycles

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      Accounts of Chemical Research
      American Chemical Society

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          Conspectus

          Selective syntheses are now available for compounds of many classes, based on C-centered radicals, exploiting a diverse range of mechanisms. The prospect for chemistry based around N- and O-centered radicals is probably more favorable because of the importance of heterocycles as biologically active materials. Heteroradical chemistry is still comparatively underdeveloped due to the need for safe and easy ways of generating them. Oxime esters appeared promising candidates to meet this need because literature reports and our EPR spectroscopic examinations showed they readily dissociated on photolysis with production of a pair of N- and O-centered radicals. It soon became apparent that a whole suite of benign oxime-containing molecules could be pressed into service. The bimodality of the oxime motif meant that by suitable choice of functionality the reactions could be directed to yield selectively products from either the N-centered radicals or from the O-centered radicals.

          We found that on one hand photolyses of acetophenone oxime esters of carboxylic acids yielded alicyclics. On the other hand, aromatic and heteroaromatic acyl oximes (as well as dioxime oxalates) afforded good yields of phenanthridines and related heterocycles. Easily prepared oxime oxalate amides released carbamoyl radicals, and pleasingly, β-lactams were thereby obtained. Oxime carbonates and oxime carbamates, available via our novel 1,1'-carbonyldiimidazole (CDI)-based preparations, were accessible alternatives for iminyl radicals and hence for phenanthridine preparations. In their second modes, these compounds proved their value as precursors for exotic alkoxycarbonyloxyl and carbamoyloxyl radicals.

          Microwave-assistance was shown to be a particularly convenient procedure with O-phenyl oxime ethers. The iminyl radicals generated from such precursors with alkene, alkyne, and aromatic acceptor substituents furnished pyrrole, quinoline, phenanthridine, benzonaphthiridine, indolopyridine, and other systems. Microwave irradiations with 2-(aminoaryl)alkanone O-phenyl oximes enabled either dihydroquinazolines or quinazolines to be obtained in very good yields.

          The fine quality of the EPR spectra, acquired during photolyses of all the O-carbonyl oxime types, marked this as an important complement to existing ways of obtaining such spectra in solution. Quantifications enabled SARs to be obtained for key reaction types of N- and O-centered radicals, thus putting mechanistic chemistry in this area on a much firmer footing. Surprises included the inverse gem-dimethyl effect in 5- exo-cyclizations of iminyls and the interplay of spiro- with ortho-cyclization onto aromatics. Insights into unusual 4- exo-cyclizations of carbamoyl radicals showed the process to be more viable than pent-4-enyl 4- exo-ring closure. Another surprise was the magnitude of the difference in CO 2 loss rate from alkoxycarbonyloxyl radicals as compared with acyloxyl radicals. Their rapid 5- exo-cyclization was charted, as was their preferred spiro-cyclization onto aromatics. The first evidence that N-monosubstituted carbamoyloxyls had finite lifetimes was also forthcoming.

          It is evident that oxime derivatives have excellent credentials as reagents for radical generation and that there is ample room to extend their applications to additional radical types and for further heterocycle syntheses. There is also clear scope for the development of preparative procedures based around the alkoxyl and aminyl radicals that emerge downstream from oxime carbonate and oxime carbamate dissociations.

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          Most cited references16

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          Dissociation or Cyclization: Options for a Triad of Radicals Released from Oxime Carbamates

          A set of oxime carbamates having N-alkyl and N,N-dialkyl substituents were prepared via carbonyldiimidazole intermediates. It was shown by EPR spectroscopy that they underwent clean homolysis of their N–O bonds upon UV photolysis. During photolysis of acetophenone O-allylcarbamoyl oxime, the corresponding oxazolidin-2-onylmethyl radical was detected by EPR spectroscopy, providing the first evidence that N-monosubstituted carbamoyloxyl radicals can hold their structural integrity. N,N-Disubstituted carbamoyloxyl radicals dissociated rapidly at the lowest accessible temperatures. Above room temperature, both types of oxime carbamate acted as selective new precursors for aminyl and iminyl radicals. Rate parameters were measured for 5-exo cyclization of N-benzyl-N-pent-4-enylaminyl radicals; the rate constant was smaller than for C-centered and O-centered analogues. Oxime carbamates derived from the volatile diethylamine afforded aryliminyl radicals that proved convenient for phenanthridine preparations.
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            New light-induced iminyl radical cyclization reactions of acyloximes to isoquinolines.

            [reaction: see text] An efficient photochemical approach for the unusual generation of six-membered heterocyclic rings is reported. Iminyl radicals, generated by the irradiation of acyloximes, participate in intramolecular cyclization processes and in intermolecular addition-intramolecular cyclization sequences.
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              Microwave-assisted syntheses of N-heterocycles using alkenone-, alkynone- and aryl-carbonyl O-phenyl oximes: formal synthesis of neocryptolepine.

              This research aimed to provide a new and "clean" synthetic method that would enable both known and novel N-heterocycles to be prepared efficiently. O-Phenyl oximes were found to be excellent precursors for iminyl radicals with a variety of acceptor side chains. Dihyropyrroles were made in good yields from O-phenyl oximes containing pent-4-ene acceptors. The analogous process with a hex-5-enyl acceptor did not yield a dihydropyridine, probably because the 6-exo-trig ring closure of the iminyl radical was too slow to compete with H-atom abstraction. The iminyl radical from a precursor with a pent-4-yne type side chain underwent ring closure followed by rearrangement to afford a pyrrole derivative. Suitably substituted iminyl radicals ring closed readily onto aromatic acceptors, thus enabling several polycyclic systems to be accessed. Quinolines were made from 3-phenylpropanones via their O-phenyl oximes. Syntheses of phenanthridines starting from 2-formylbiphenyls were particularly efficient, and this approach enabled the natural product trisphaeridine to be made. Starting from 2-phenylnicotinaldehyde derivatives, ring closures of the derived iminyl radicals onto the phenyl rings yielded benzo[h][1,6]naphthyridines. Similarly, ring closure onto a phenyl ring from a benzothiophene-based iminyl yielded a benzo[b]thieno[2,3-c]quinoline. By way of contrast, iminyl radical ring closure onto pyridine rings was not observed. However, iminyl radicals did cyclize onto indoles, enabling indolopyridines to be prepared. The latter route was exploited in a short formal synthesis of neocryptolepine starting from 2-((1H-indol-3-yl)methyl)cyclohexanone.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Acc Chem Res
                Acc. Chem. Res
                ar
                achre4
                Accounts of Chemical Research
                American Chemical Society
                0001-4842
                1520-4898
                21 March 2014
                15 April 2014
                : 47
                : 4
                : 1406-1416
                Affiliations
                [1]EaStCHEM School of Chemistry, University of St. Andrews , St. Andrews, Fife KY16 9ST, U.K.
                Author notes
                [* ]E-mail: jcw@ 123456st-and.ac.uk . Tel: 44(0)1334 463864. Fax: 44(0)1334 463808.
                Article
                10.1021/ar500017f
                4012714
                24654991
                9d90c2cf-40b8-477e-92ef-9246feb4954d
                Copyright © 2014 American Chemical Society

                Terms of Use CC-BY

                History
                : 14 January 2014
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                Article
                Custom metadata
                ar500017f
                ar-2014-00017f

                General chemistry
                General chemistry

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