| Literature DB >> 28968504 |
Yuka Takahashi1, Hirotaka Ikeda2, Yuki Kanase1, Kosho Makino1, Hidetsugu Tabata1, Tetsuta Oshitari1, Satoshi Inagaki2, Yuko Otani2, Hideaki Natsugari1, Hideyo Takahashi1, Tomohiko Ohwada2.
Abstract
The conformational properties of N-acyl azoles (imidazole, pyrazole, and triazole) were examined. The N-2',4',6'-trichlorobenzoyl azoles were stable in methanol at room temperature, and no hydrolyzed products were observed over 7 days in the presence of 5% trifluoroacetic acid or 5% triethylamine in CDCl3. The high stability may be explained by the double-bond amide character caused by the steric hindrance due to the ortho-substituents in the benzoyl group. While specific E-amide preferences were observed in N-acyl pyrazoles/triazoles, the amides of the imidazoles gave a mixture of E and Z. One of the conceivable ideas to rationalize this conformational preference may be repulsive interaction between two sets of lone-pair electrons on the pyrazole 2-nitrogen (nN) and the carbonyl oxygen atoms (nO) in the Z-conformation of N-acyl pyrazoles/triazoles. However, analysis of orbital interactions suggested that in the case of the E-conformation of N-acyl pyrazoles, such electron repulsion is small because of distance. The interbond energy calculations suggested that the Z-conformer is involved in strong vicinal σ-σ repulsion along the amide linkage between the σN1N2 and σC1C2 orbitals in the anti-periplanar arrangement and between the σN1C5 and σC1C2 orbitals in the syn-periplanar arrangement, which lead to the overwhelming E-preference in N-acyl pyrazoles/triazoles. In the case of N-acyl imidazoles, similar vicinal σ-σ repulsions were counterbalanced, leading to a weak preference for the E-conformer over the Z-conformer. The chemically stable and E-preferring N-acyl azoles may be utilized as scaffolds in future drug design.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28968504 DOI: 10.1021/acs.joc.7b01759
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Org Chem ISSN: 0022-3263 Impact factor: 4.354