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Indole electrophilic oxidation

Donor substituents on the vinyl group further enhance reactivity towards electrophilic dienophiles. Equations 8.6 and 8.7 illustrate the use of such functionalized vinylpyrroles in indole synthesis[2,3]. In both of these examples, the use of acetyleneic dienophiles leads to fully aromatic products. Evidently this must occur as the result of oxidation by atmospheric oxygen. With vinylpyrrole 8.6A, adducts were also isolated from dienophiles such as methyl acrylate, dimethyl maleate, dimethyl fumarate, acrolein, acrylonitrile, maleic anhydride, W-methylmaleimide and naphthoquinone. These tetrahydroindole adducts could be aromatized with DDQ, although the overall yields were modest[3]. [Pg.84]

Epoxides and aziridines are also capable of electrophilic subsitution of indoles. Indolylmagncsium bromide and cyclohexene oxide react to give 3-(lrans-2-hydroxycyclohexyl)indole[14]. Reaction of indoles with epoxides also occurs in the presence of Lewis acids. For example, indole reacts with methyl 2S,3R-epoxybutanoate at C3 with inversion of configuration[15]. [Pg.106]

Because Pd(II) salts, like Hgtll) salts, can effect electrophilic metallation of the indole ring at C3, it is also possible to carry out vinylation on indoles without 3-substituents. These reactions usually require the use of an equiv. of the Pd(ll) salt and also a Cu(If) or Ag(I) salt to effect reoxidation of the Pd. As in the standard Heck conditions, an EW substitution on the indole nitrogen is usually necessary. Entry 8 of Table 11.3 is an interesting example. The oxidative vinylation was achieved in 87% yield by using one equiv. of PdfOAcfj and one equiv. of chloranil as a co-oxidant. This example is also noteworthy in that the 4-broino substituent was unreactive under these conditions. Part B of Table 11.3 lists some other representative procedures. [Pg.111]

The oxidation of 3-substituted indole to oxindoles can also be done with a mixture of DMSO and cone, hydrochloric acid[6-9]. This reaction probably involves a mechanism similar to the halogenation with a protonated DMSO molecule serving as the electrophile[10]. [Pg.153]

From the preceding examples it can be seen that oxidants and electrophilic reagents attack pyrroles and furans at positions 2 and 5 in the case of indoles the common point of attack is position 3. Thus autoxidation of indoles e.g. 99) gives 3-hydroperoxy-3H-indoles (e.g. 100). Lead tetraacetate similarly reacts at the 3-position to give a 3-acetoxy-3H-indole. Ozone and other oxidants have been used to cleave the 2,3-bond in indoles (Scheme 30) (81BCJ2369). [Pg.58]

The key step in syntheses of if/-quebrachamine (122-127) and if/-dihydro-cleavamine (12S) is the oxidation of tertiary amines with mercuric acetate to cyclic imonium salts, which give rise to an intramolecular electrophilic attack on an indole. [Pg.326]

A series of oxidative rearrangements of tetrahydro-j8-carbolines may be rationalized on the basis of a general reaction of 2,3-disub-stituted indoles which was recently recognized by Taylor. Attack at the 4a-position of the tetrahydrocarboline (341) by an electrophile yields the indolenine derivative 342, which is in equilibrium with the isomeric species 342a. Compounds of structure 342 and 342a can undergo a variety of reactions leading to different products. [Pg.166]

Indolizine is much more basic than indole (p Ta = 3.9 vs. —3.5), and the stability of the cation makes it less reactive and resistant to acid-catalyzed polymerization. Protonation occurs at C-3, although 3-methylindolizine protonates also at C-l. Introduction of methyl groups raises the basicity of indolizines. Electrophilic substitutions such as acylation, Vilsmeyer formylation, and diazo-coupling all take place at C-3. Nitration of 2-methylindolizine under mild conditions results in substitution at C-3, but under strongly acidic conditions it takes place at C-l, presumably via attack on the indolizinium cation. However, the nitration of indolizines often can provoke oxidation processes. [Pg.370]

The nitrosonium cation can serve effectively either as an oxidant or as an electrophile towards different aromatic substrates. Thus the electron-rich polynuclear arenes suffer electron transfer with NO+BF to afford stable arene cation radicals (Bandlish and Shine, 1977 Musker et al., 1978). Other activated aromatic compounds such as phenols, anilines and indoles undergo nuclear substitution with nitrosonium species that are usually generated in situ from the treatment of nitrites with acid. It is less well known, but nonetheless experimentally established (Hunziker et al., 1971 Brownstein et al., 1984), that NO+ forms intensely coloured charge-transfer complexes with a wide variety of common arenes (30). For example, benzene, toluene,... [Pg.224]

The double iron-mediated arylamine cyclization provides a highly convergent route to indolo[2,3-fc]carbazole (Scheme 16). Double electrophilic substitution of m-phenylenediamine 34 by reaction with the complex salt 6a affords the diiron complex 35, which on oxidative cyclization using iodine in pyridine leads to indolo[2,3-b]carbazole 36 [98].Thus,ithasbeen demonstrated that the bidirectional annulation of two indole rings can be applied to the synthesis of indolocarbazoles. [Pg.127]

These compounds are less common than indole (benzo[ ]pyrrole). In the case of benzo[i>]furan the aromaticity of the heterocycle is weaker than in indole, and this ring is easily cleaved by reduction or oxidation. Electrophilic reagents tend to react with benzo[Z ]furan at C-2 in preference to C-3 (Scheme 7.21), reflecting the reduced ability of the heteroatom to stabilize the intermediate for 3-substitution. Attack in the heterocycle is often accompanied by substitution in the benzenoid ring. Nitration with nitric acid in acetic acid gives mainly 2-nitrobenzo[Z ]furan, plus the 4-, 6- and 7-isomers. When the reagent is in benzene maintained at 10 °C, both 3- and 2-nitro[ ]furans are formed in the ratio 4 1. Under Vilsmeier reaction conditions (see Section 6.1.2), benzo[Z ]furan gives 2-formylbenzo[6]furan in ca. 40% yield. [Pg.111]


See other pages where Indole electrophilic oxidation is mentioned: [Pg.168]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.617]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.632]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.1070]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.353]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.969]    [Pg.408]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.398]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.312]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.361]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.318 ]




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3- indoles, oxidative

Electrophilic oxidation

Indole oxidation

Oxidants electrophilic

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