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Imines, acylation hydrolysis

Whereas pyrroles normally undergo substitution at the C-2 position, 1-arylsulfonylpyrroles display a tunable reactivity in Friedel-Crafts acylations, wherein substitution occurs at C-3 in the presence of "hard acids" such as aluminum chloride but mainly at C-2 when catalyzed by weaker acids <81TL4899,81TL4901>. An alternative route to 3-aroylpyrroles 38 has been introduced via irradiation of 1-acetyl- or 1-phenylsulfonylpyrrole (36) with arenethiocarboxamides <96H(43)463>. The proposed mechanism involves formation and scission of a thietane intermediate 37, followed by hydrolysis of the resultant imine. [Pg.101]

Asymmetric hydrogenation of a cyclic enamide (Approach B) had very sparse literature precedents [7]. It should also be noted that preparation of these cyclic imines and enamides is not straightforward. The best method for the synthesis of cyclic imines involves C-acylation of the inexpensive N-vinylpyrrolidin-2-one followed by a relatively harsh treatment with refluxing 6M aqueous HC1, which accomplishes deprotection of the vinyl group, hydrolysis of the amide, and decarboxylation (Scheme 8.6) [8]. [Pg.227]

As early as the 1960s, some syntheses based on the addition of nucleophilic reagents (vinyl magnesium bromide, HCN, isonitrile) on A-acyl trifluoroacetaldi-mines (fluoral imine) have appeared. The acidic function is further introduced by an appropriate oxidation or hydrolysis. These approaches have allowed preparation of higher fluoroalkylated homologues of trifluoroalanine and of nonracemic trifluor-oalanines (vide infra). However, preparation of the acyl imine of fluoral is rather... [Pg.148]

Hydrolysis of enol esters 0-83 Reduction of acyl halides 0-84 Reduction of carboxylic acids, esters, or anhydrides 0-85 Reduction of amides 0-95 Alkylation and hydrolysis of imines, alkylation of aldehydes 0-97 Alkylation and hydrolysis of dithi-anes... [Pg.1270]

Carboxylic acids generated in acylation reactions have been effectively sequestered by ion pair formation with Amberlite IRA-68 ion exchange resin.29 3 Similarly, 4-nitrophenoxide formed in acylations of 4-nitrophenyl esters has been captured by anion exchange with the quaternary ammonium hydroxide resin 12.31 An exception to ion pair-mediated sequestration of byproducts is the polyamine functionalized resin 3 that was shown to covalently sequester the (3-methoxy enone hydrolysis byproduct from Danishefsky s diene via imine formation.23... [Pg.156]

As free DHAs are highly unstable compounds that readily undergo hydrolysis, they have generally been synthesized as their A-acyl derivatives or carboxylic esters and amides. For this reason DHAs occur in nature primarily as A-acyl derivatives or as part of a peptide sequence. Free DHAs 2 (Scheme 1) have not been characterized most probably they exist as imines 1 and consequently they readily undergo hydrolysis to give the corresponding a-oxo acid 3 and ammonia. [Pg.637]

A more direct access to imidoyllithiums was to perform the lithiation of imidoyl chlorides 72 with lithium and substoichiometric amounts of naphthalene at low temperatures so that intermediates 73 were generated (Scheme 19)65,81. Aldehydes, ketones and acyl chlorides have been used as electrophilic reagents to afford imines 74 or the corresponding ketones, depending on the hydrolysis conditions. [Pg.151]

Similarly, acylation of imine 22 with nicotinoyl chloride afforded enamide 27 when one mole of the acid chloride was used, whereas acylation with an excessive amount of the acid chloride yielded the already cyclized dihydroazaberbine (28) in good yield, which was also obtained from the enamide by acylation (67). Hydrolysis of 28 afforded the corresponding azaberbine (26) (Scheme 26) (6 7). [Pg.207]

Low-valent metal salts have been used to bring about reductive cleavage of oximes. Corey and Rich-man used chromium(II) acetate to convert O-acetyl ketoximes into imines, which were hydrolyzed to ketones. " Aqueous titanium(III) chloride and vanadium(II) salts also reduce oximes again, the imines are usually hydrolyzed in situ, but some hindered imines, such as compound (37), are isolable." A method of preventing hydrolysis is to carry out the reduction in anhydrous conditions in the presence of an acylating agent. The products of such reactions, when applied to oximes of enolizable ketones, are en-amides. For example, these ketoximes are converted into A/-formylenamines when heated in acetonitrile with anhydrous titanium(III) acetate and acetic formic anhydride cyclohexanone oxime gives the en-amide (38 97% Scheme 22)." This type of reduction has been used by Barton and coworkers to prepare enamides from steroidal oximes. They reported that the reaction could be performed by acetic... [Pg.393]

Compared to imines, better yields and higher quantum efficiencies are usually observed with oxime acetates, semicarbazides, acyl hydrazones and oxime benzoates. In addition, the rearranged products are less, or not at all, prone to hydrolysis. [Pg.883]

Vilsmeier acylation of pyrroles, formylation with dimethylformamide/phosphoryl chloride in particnlar, is a generally applicable process. The actual electrophilic species is an Al,Al-diaIkyl-chloromethyleneiminium cation (the chloride is available commercially as a solid). " Here again, the presence of a large pyrrole-A-substituent perturbs the intrinsic a-selectivity, formylation of A-tritylpyrrole favonring the P-position by 2.8 1 and trifluoroacetylation of this pyrrole giving only the 3-ketone " the nse of bulky iV-silyl substituents allows P-acylation with the possibility of subsequent removal of the N-snbstituent." The final intermediate in a Vilsmeier reaction is an iminium salt requiring hydrolysis to prodnce the isolated product aldehyde. When a secondary lactam is used, hydrolysis does not take place and a cyclic imine is obtained." ... [Pg.299]


See other pages where Imines, acylation hydrolysis is mentioned: [Pg.64]    [Pg.979]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.788]    [Pg.238]    [Pg.384]    [Pg.597]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.890]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.669]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.553]    [Pg.1036]    [Pg.428]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.487]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.431]    [Pg.68]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.110 ]




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