Sulfenylnitrene-Mediated Nitrogen-Atom Insertion into Pyrroles, Indoles, and Imidazoles

26 September 2024, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Given the prevalence of nitrogen-containing heterocycles in FDA-approved drugs, selectively incorporating a single nitrogen atom emerges as a promising scaffold-hopping approach to enhance chemical diversity in drug discovery libraries. In this study, we harness the distinct reactivity of sulfenylnitrenes, which insert a single nitrogen atom to transform readily available pyrroles, indoles, and imidazoles into synthetically challenging pyrimidines, quinazolines, and triazines, respectively. Our additive-free method for skeletal editing employs easily accessible, benchtop-stable sulfenylnitrene precursors over a broad temperature range (–30 to 150 ºC). This chemical approach is compatible with diverse functional groups, including oxidation-sensitive functionalities like phenols and thioethers, and has been applied to various natural products, amino acids, and pharmaceuticals. Furthermore, we have conducted mechanistic studies and explored regioselectivity outcomes through DFT calculations.

Keywords

Scaffold Hopping
Skeletal Editing
Late Stage Functionalization
Sulfenylnitrenes
Nitrogen Atom Insertion
Single Atom Logic
Nitrene
Ring Expansion
N-Heterocycles

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Supporting Information file, which has all material/methods, DSC analyses, computational and NMR data
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Supplementary weblinks

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