Alison E Wendlandt1, Shannon S Stahl. 1. Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison , 1101 University Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, United States.
Abstract
Quinolines are common pharmacophores present in numerous FDA-approved pharmaceuticals and other bioactive compounds. Here, we report the design and development of new o-quinone-based catalysts for the oxidative dehydrogenation of tetrahydroquinolines to afford quinolines. Use of a Co(salophen) cocatalyst allows the reaction to proceed efficiently with ambient air at room temperature. The utility of the catalytic method is demonstrated in the preparation of a number of medicinally relevant quinolines.
Quinolines are common pharmacophores present in numerous FDA-approved pharmaceuticals and other bioactive compounds. Here, we report the design and development of new o-quinone-based catalysts for the oxidative dehydrogenation of tetrahydroquinolines to afford quinolines. Use of a Co(salophen) cocatalyst allows the reaction to proceed efficiently with ambient air at room temperature. The utility of the catalytic method is demonstrated in the preparation of a number of medicinally relevant quinolines.
Copper amine oxidases contain
a tyrosine-derived o-quinone in their active site
that mediates aerobic oxidation of primary amines to aldehydes (e.g.,
topaquinone, Scheme 1A).[1] Biomimetic o-quinones such as Q1 and Q2 (Scheme 1A; Q2 is proposed to form an o-quinone in situ) have been shown to be effective synthetic catalysts
for aerobic dehydrogenation of primary amines, typically affording
homocoupled imines.[2] Both topaquinone and
the biomimetic quinone catalysts mediate amine oxidation via a “transamination”
pathway, initiated by formation of an imine adduct of the substrate
with the quinone. This mechanism accounts for the highly selective
oxidation of primary over secondary and tertiary amines. We recently
reported that 1,10-phenanthroline-5,6-dione (phd, Scheme 1A) promotes amine oxidation
by a non-biomimetic “addition–elimination” pathway
involving a hemiaminal intermediate (Scheme 1B).[3] This novel mechanism enabled the
substrate scope to be expanded to include secondary amines. Aerobic
dehydrogenation of a number of different nitrogen heterocycles was
achieved by using phd in combination with ZnI2 and pyridinium p-toluenesulfonate (PPTS) as a cocatalyst (Scheme 1C).
Scheme 1
o-Quinone-Catalyzed Dehydrogenation
of Saturated
C–N Bonds
This phd/ZnI2 catalyst system demonstrated
the feasibility
of aerobic secondary amine dehydrogenation, but reactions often required
up to 48 h to reach completion and certain product classes were not
accessible. For example, quinolines are an important class of heterocycles,
but even the parent tetrahydroquinoline underwent dehydrogenation
to quinoline in only 18% yield (Scheme 1C).
Here, we describe an octahedral [Ru(phd)3]2+ catalyst that shows considerably higher activity for amine oxidation,
including successful aerobic dehydrogenation of diverse tetrahydroquinolines
at room temperature with ambient air as the source of O2.[4] This work highlights the modular nature
of the phd o-quinone catalyst that makes it readily
amenable to optimization and adaptation to different applications.
Replacement of iodide with Co(salophen) (salophen = N,N′-bis(salicylidene)-1,2-phenylenediamine)
as a redox cocatalyst contributes significantly to the efficiency
of the reactions.In our initial studies, we compared the previously
optimized phd/ZnI2 catalyst system with simple octahedral
[Fe(phd)3]2+ and [Ru(phd)3]2+complexes in
the oxidation of tetrahydroquinoline to quinoline (Figure 1). The time course traces (Figure 1) show the low activity and conversion of the previously
reported phd/ZnI2 catalyst (red trace); the catalyst loses
activity ∼6–7 h into the reaction after reaching ≤20%
conversion to the quinoline product. The Fe and Rucomplexes (2.5
mol %) were also tested (green and blue traces, respectively). The
use of Bu4NI (1 mol %) as a cocatalyst reflected previous
observations showing that the I–/I3– redox couple promotes aerobic oxidation of the reduced,
hydroquinone form of the phd catalyst.[5] [Fe(phd)3]2+ showed a similar initial rate
to the ZnI2 catalyst, but it exhibited somewhat improved
stability. In contrast, [Ru(phd)3]2+ exhibited
a significant increase in activity and a 93% yield of quinoline was
obtained after 24 h. On the basis of this result, we characterized
[Ru(phd)3](ClO4)2 via X-ray crystallography
(Figure 2).[6,7]
Figure 1
Rate comparison of Zn-,
Fe-, and Ru-based catalyst systems in the
oxidation of tetrahydroquinoline to quinoline.
Figure 2
X-ray crystal structure of [Ru(phd)3](ClO4)2 shown with 50% probablility elipsoids. All H atoms
and acetonitrile solvent molecules are omitted for clarity (see Supporting Information).
Rate comparison of Zn-,
Fe-, and Ru-based catalyst systems in the
oxidation of tetrahydroquinoline to quinoline.X-ray crystal structure of [Ru(phd)3](ClO4)2 shown with 50% probablility elipsoids. All H atoms
and acetonitrile solvent molecules are omitted for clarity (see Supporting Information).This [Ru(phd)3]2+/Bu4NI
catalyst
was tested with a series of challenging N-heterocyclic
substrates that had required 48 h to reach completion with the phd/ZnI2 catalyst (Scheme 2). Improved yields and significantly decreased reaction times were
observed in each case, with the most dramatic improvement observed
in the dehydrogenation of tetrahydroquinoline.
Scheme 2
Aerobic N-Heterocycle Dehydrogenation with phd/ZnI2 and [Ru(phd)3](PF6)2/Bu4NI Catalyst Systems
Iodide was previously shown
to mediate aerobic oxidation of the
reduced hydroquinone form of the catalyst, and a catalytic sequence
for the present dehydrogenation reactions is depicted in Scheme 3, where Co-Catred/ox = 3I–/I3–. (It is not known whether dehydrogenation
of the intermediate dihydroquinoline involves the catalyst.) We speculated
that alternative cocatalysts could lead to even better catalytic reactivity.
Bäckvall and others have highlighted the role of cocatalysts
for aerobic oxidation of benzoquinone in multicomponent catalytic
reactions,[8,9] and molecular catecholase mimics have been
identified for aerobic oxidation of hydroquinones.[10] Drawing on these precedents, we tested a number of possible
cocatalysts as replacements for Bu4NI, including Cu(pc),
Fe(pc), Co(salophen), and Co(salpr) (pc = phthalocyanine; salpr =
bis(salicylideneiminato-3-propyl)methylamine).[11] Co(salophen) proved to be particularly effective, enabling
full conversion within 3 h (Figure 3).[12]
Scheme 3
Proposed Catalytic Sequence for [Ru(phd)2]2+-Mediated Dehydrogenation of Tetrahydroquinolines
Figure 3
Rate comparison of different cocatalysts
on the Ru(phd)3-catalyzed aerobic oxidation of tetrahydroquinoline.
Rate comparison of different cocatalysts
on the Ru(phd)3-catalyzed aerobic oxidation of tetrahydroquinoline.Subsequent studies showed that
Co(salophen) enabled the reactions
to proceed efficiently under ambient conditions (at room temperature
with ambient air as the oxidant). The [Ru(phd)3]2+ catalyst structurally resembles Ru-polypyridyl complexescommonly
used as photoactive catalysts, but control experiments show that the
reactions exhibit identical behavior in the presence and absence of
light.[13] In addition, no reaction was observed
in the absence of [Ru(phd)3]2+, suggesting that
Co(salophen) is not a competent dehydrogenation catalyst under these
conditions.This catalyst system was then demonstrated in the
dehydrogenation
of a number of other tetrahydroquinolines (Table 1). 6-Methylquinoline 3 was obtained cleanly after
6 h (91% yield), but the more-electron-rich 6-methoxyquinoline 4 was isolated in only 74% yield and considerable side-product
formation was observed. Excellent yields of this product could be
obtained when the reaction was carried out using 1.0 mol % Bu4NI as the cocatalyst, suggesting that Co(salophen) cocatalystcontributes to side product formation in this reaction. The electron-deficient
6-chloroquinoline 5 was obtained in excellent yield (95%)
with the original [Ru(phd)3]2+/Co(salophen)
catalyst system.
Table 1
Substrate
Scopea
Conditions: tetrahydroquinoline
(1.0 mmol), [Ru(phd)3](PF6)2 (25.5
mg, 0.025 mmol), Co(salophen) (18.7 mg, 0.05 mmol) in MeCN (4.0 mL),
air, rt. Isolated yields (yields in parentheses determined by 1H NMR).
Performed
in the dark.
Standard conditions,
but Bu4NI (3.7 mg, 0.01 mmol) used instead of Co(salophen)
and 1
atm O2 instead of air.
MeOH solvent.
Conditions: tetrahydroquinoline
(1.0 mmol), [Ru(phd)3](PF6)2 (25.5
mg, 0.025 mmol), Co(salophen) (18.7 mg, 0.05 mmol) in MeCN (4.0 mL),
air, rt. Isolated yields (yields in parentheses determined by 1HNMR).Performed
in the dark.Standard conditions,
but Bu4NI (3.7 mg, 0.01 mmol) used instead of Co(salophen)
and 1
atm O2 instead of air.MeOH solvent.Substitution
at the 2, 3, and 4 positions was well-tolerated: 4-methylquinoline 6 (97%) and 3-methylquinoline 7 (92%) were obtained
after short reaction times (5–6 h). The sterically hindered
2-methylquinoline 8 (83%) was obtained after slightly
longer reaction time if MeOH was used as the solvent instead of MeCN.[14] Other effective 2-substituted tetrahydroquinoline
substrates included 2-butyl, 2-phenyl, and 2-styrenyl derivatives,
affording quinolines 10, 11, and 12 in 82%, 87%, and 60% yields, respectively. The medicinally relevant
4-(p-fluorophenyl)-7-methylquinoline 16, an intermediate en route to nM 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor[15]17, was obtained in 65% yield,
and the advanced intermediate 18 toward BRD4 inhibitor[16]19 was obtained in 96% yield.When probing the reactivity of polycyclic substrate 20 (Scheme 4), both dehydrogenation and benzylic
oxygenation occurred to afford product 21 in 68% isolated
yield. This reaction provides concise access to the indeno[2,1-c]quinoline substructure present in numerous biologically
active compounds,[17] including antiprotozoal
agent 22(18) and phase II topoisomerase
inhibitor TAS-103.[19]
Scheme 4
Synthesis of Indeno[2,1-c]quinoline 21
Reactions
conditions: tetrahydroquinoline 20 (221.3 mg, 1.0 mmol),
Ru(phd)3(PF6)2 (25.5 mg, 0.025 mmol),
Co(salophen) (18.7 mg, 0.05
mmol) in MeCN (4.0 mL), stirring under air balloon at room temperature.
Synthesis of Indeno[2,1-c]quinoline 21
Reactions
conditions: tetrahydroquinoline 20 (221.3 mg, 1.0 mmol),
Ru(phd)3(PF6)2 (25.5 mg, 0.025 mmol),
Co(salophen) (18.7 mg, 0.05
mmol) in MeCN (4.0 mL), stirring under air balloon at room temperature.In conclusion, these results demonstrate the
utility of [Ru(phd)3]2+ as a novel o-quinone catalyst
for dehydrogenation of N-heterocycles. The results
show that the substitutionally inert Ru2+ ion is more effective
than Zn2+ in activating phd toward secondary amine dehydrogenation.
Replacement of iodide with Co(salophen) as a redox cocatalyst to promote
aerobic oxidation of the hydroquinone catalyst leads to substantial
improvement in catalyst activity and enables the reactions to proceed
under ambient conditions. The modular nature of the catalyst system
described here has important implications for future studies targeting
other aerobic quinone-mediated oxidation reactions.
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