RESUMO
The use of electric current in synthetic organic chemistry offers a sustainable tool for the selective reductive synthesis of quinoline N-oxides starting from easily accessible nitro compounds. The reported method employs mild and reagent-free conditions, a simple undivided cell, and constant current electrolysis set-up which provides conversion with a high atom economy. The synthesis of 30 differently substituted quinoline N-oxides was successfully performed in up to 90 % yield. Using CV studies, the mechanism of the selective formation of the quinoline N-oxides was elucidated. The technical relevance of the described reaction could be shown in a 50-fold scale-up reaction.
RESUMO
Although electro-organic synthesis is currently receiving renewed interest because of its potential to enable sustainability in chemical processes to value-added products, challenges in process development persist: For reductive transformations performed in protic media, an inherent issue is the limited choice of metallic cathode materials that can effectively suppress the parasitic hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) while maintaining a high activity toward the targeted electro-organic reaction. Current development trends are aimed at avoiding the previously used HER-suppressing elements (Cd, Hg, and Pb) because of their toxicity. Here, this work reports the rational design of highly porous foam-type binary and ternary electrocatalysts with reduced Pb content. Optimized cathodes are tested in electro-organic reductions using an oxime to nitrile transformation as a model reaction relevant for the synthesis of fine chemicals. Their electrocatalytic performance is compared with that of the model CuSn7Pb15 bronze alloy that has recently been endorsed as the best cathode replacement for bare Pb electrodes. All developed metal foam catalysts outperform both bare Pb and the CuSn7Pb15 benchmark in terms of chemical yield and energetic efficiency. Moreover, post-electrolysis analysis of the crude electrolyte mixture and the cathode's surfaces through inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), respectively, reveal the foam catalysts' elevated resistance to cathodic corrosion.
RESUMO
1H-1-Hydroxyquinolin-4-ones represent a broad class of biologically active heterocycles having an exocyclic N,O motif. Electrosynthesis offers direct, highly selective, and sustainable access to 1-hydroxyquinol-4-ones by nitro reduction. A versatile synthetic route starting from easily accessible 2-nitrobenzoic acids was established. The broad applicability of this protocol was demonstrated on 26 examples with up to 93% yield, highlighted by the naturally occurring antibiotics Aurachin C and HQNO. The practicability and technical relevance were underlined by multigram scale electrolysis.
RESUMO
The electrochemical reduction of nitroarenes allows direct access to manifold nitrogen containing heterocycles. This work reports the simple and direct electro-organic synthesis of 18 different examples of 2H,4H-4-hydroxy-1,4-benzoxazin-3-ones in up to 81% yield. The scalability of the method was demonstrated on a gram-scale.
RESUMO
Cathodic synthesis provides sustainable access to 1-hydroxy- and 1-oxy-quinazolin-4-ones from easily accessible nitro starting materials. Mild reaction conditions, inexpensive and reusable carbon-based electrode materials, an undivided electrochemical setup, and constant current conditions characterise this method. Sulphuric acid is used as a simple supporting electrolyte as well as a catalyst for cyclisation. The broad applicability of this protocol is demonstrated in 27 differently substituted derivatives in high yields of up to 92%. Moreover, mechanistic studies based on cyclic voltammetry measurements highlight a selective reduction of the nitro substrate to hydroxylamine as a key step. The relevance for preparative applications is demonstrated by a 100-fold scale-up for gram-scale electrolysis.
RESUMO
The use of electricity as a traceless oxidant enables a sustainable and novel approach to N,N'-disubstituted indazolin-3-ones by an intramolecular anodic dehydrogenative N-N coupling reaction. This method is characterized by mild reaction conditions, an easy experimental setup, excellent scalability, and a high atom economy. It was used to synthesize various indazolin-3-one derivatives in yields up to 78%, applying inexpensive and sustainable electrode materials and a low supporting electrolyte concentration. Mechanistic studies, based on cyclic voltammetry experiments, revealed a biradical pathway. Furthermore, the access to single 2-aryl substituted indazolin-3-ones by cleavage of the protecting group could be demonstrated.
RESUMO
Targeting early molecular events in intestinal inflammation may represent a useful therapeutic strategy for maintaining remission in inflammatory bowel disease. Recently, we established an intestinal organ culture model (LEL model), which allows to study the initiation of an intestinal inflammatory response in human tissue. In this model, EDTA-mediated depletion of epithelial cells of colonic mucosa results in an instantaneous inflammatory response in resident lamina propria cells, which shows features of intestinal inflammation in vivo. Furthermore, activated immune cells emigrate from the lamina propria onto the luminal side of the basement membrane. Here, we standardize the LEL model and explore its suitability for drug testing. To this end, human mucosal punches of defined surface area were prepared, depleted of epithelial cells, and cultured at an optimized ratio of medium volume/punch area. The intra-assay variability of measurements of inflammatory parameters ranged from 13% for cell migration to 19% for secretion and 30% for tissue gene expression, respectively, of the inflammatory mediators IL-8 and IL-6. Importantly, known suppressive effects of dexamethasone, a drug employed for the treatment of inflammatory bowel diseases, on leucocyte migration, IL8, IL6, and TNF-α production as well as CD86 surface expression by myeloid cells were observed in this model. In conclusion, the present results suggest that the LEL model may represent a useful human experimental system not only for studying initial activation mechanisms in intestinal inflammation but also for evaluating drug compounds for the treatment of mucosal inflammation.
Assuntos
Anti-Inflamatórios/farmacologia , Colo/imunologia , Dexametasona/farmacologia , Doenças Inflamatórias Intestinais/imunologia , Técnicas de Cultura de Órgãos/métodos , Antígeno B7-2/biossíntese , Movimento Celular/imunologia , Colo/citologia , Colo/patologia , Humanos , Inflamação/imunologia , Doenças Inflamatórias Intestinais/patologia , Interleucina-6/biossíntese , Interleucina-6/metabolismo , Interleucina-8/biossíntese , Interleucina-8/metabolismo , Mucosa Intestinal/citologia , Mucosa Intestinal/imunologia , Mucosa Intestinal/patologia , Células Mieloides/imunologia , Fator de Necrose Tumoral alfa/biossíntese , Fator de Necrose Tumoral alfa/metabolismoRESUMO
Resident human lamina propria immune cells serve as powerful effectors in host defense. Molecular events associated with the initiation of an intestinal inflammatory response in these cells are largely unknown. Here, we aimed to characterize phenotypic and functional changes induced in these cells at the onset of intestinal inflammation using a human intestinal organ culture model. In this model, healthy human colonic mucosa was depleted of epithelial cells by EDTA treatment. Following loss of the epithelial layer, expression of the inflammatory mediators IL1B, IL6, IL8, IL23A, TNFA, CXCL2, and the surface receptors CD14, TLR2, CD86, CD54 was rapidly induced in resident lamina propria cells in situ as determined by qRT-PCR and immunohistology. Gene microarray analysis of lamina propria cells obtained by laser-capture microdissection provided an overview of global changes in gene expression occurring during the initiation of an intestinal inflammatory response in these cells. Bioinformatic analysis gave insight into signalling pathways mediating this inflammatory response. Furthermore, comparison with published microarray datasets of inflamed mucosa in vivo (ulcerative colitis) revealed a significant overlap of differentially regulated genes underlining the in vivo relevance of the organ culture model. Furthermore, genes never been previously associated with intestinal inflammation were identified using this model. The organ culture model characterized may be useful to study molecular mechanisms underlying the initiation of an intestinal inflammatory response in normal mucosa as well as potential alterations of this response in inflammatory bowel disease.