RESUMEN
The exceptionally mild conditions of a titanium(III)-catalyzed cyclization reaction paired with a convenient acid/base extraction have enabled the straightforward synthesis, isolation, and direct N-functionalization of amino heterocycles such as 3-aminoindoles and -pyrroles. The unprotected heterocycles are ideal building blocks for the installation of aminated indoles and pyrroles into target molecules, but their sensitivity has previously impeded their synthesis by modern catalytic methods. This full paper presents the development and extended scope of the new cyclization methodology. The transformation of the products into fused bis-indoles is also demonstrated along with the discovery of an unusual palladium-catalyzed reductive biphenyl coupling reaction. The titanium(III)-catalyzed cyclization has also been applied to the synthesis of substituted 3-iminoindolines, which are of potential interest for applications in natural product synthesis and exhibit tunable blue-to-green fluorescence properties.
RESUMEN
A titanium(III)-catalyzed radical cyclization to unprotected 3-aminoindoles, 3-aminopyrroles, or 3-iminoindolines is reported. The reaction is non-hazardous, scalable, and allows facile isolation of the free products by extraction. The method is demonstrated on a large substrate scope and it further allows the direct installation of various nitrogen protecting groups or the synthesis of building blocks for peptide chemistry in a single sequence. Fused bisindoles can be directly accessed from the cyclization products.
RESUMEN
The titanium(III)-catalyzed cross-coupling between ketones and nitriles provides an efficient stereoselective synthesis of α-hydroxyketones. A detailed mechanistic investigation of this reaction is presented, which involves a combination of several methods such as EPR, ESI-MS, X-ray, in situ IR kinetics, and DFT calculations. Our findings reveal that C-C bond formation is turnover-limiting and occurs by a catalyst-controlled radical combination involving two titanium(III) species. The resting state is identified as a cationic titanocene-nitrile complex and the beneficial effect of added Et3N·HCl on yield and enantioselectivity is elucidated: chloride coordination initiates the radical coupling. The results are fundamental for the understanding of titanium(III)-catalysis and of relevance for other metal-catalyzed radical reactions. Our conclusions might apply to a number of reductive coupling reactions for which conventional mechanisms were proposed before.