Generation, cycloadditions, and tautomerism of n-acyl munchnones

Generation, cycloadditions, and tautomerism of n-acyl munchnones

Tetrahedron Letters,Vol.29,No.l7,pp Printed in Great Britain 2027-2030,1988 0040-4039/88 $3.00 + .OO Pergamon Press plc GENERATION, CYCLOADDITIONS,...

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Tetrahedron Letters,Vol.29,No.l7,pp Printed in Great Britain

2027-2030,1988

0040-4039/88 $3.00 + .OO Pergamon Press plc

GENERATION, CYCLOADDITIONS, AND TAUTOMERISM OF N-AWL MUNCHNONES Richard

G. Wilde*1

Contribution from the S. M. McElvain Laboratory of Organic Chemistry, Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706 N-acyl Abstract: acylationldesilylation equilibrated

munchnones reaction of

through

ring-chain

were generated 5-siloxyoxazoles.

valence

for

tautomerism

the first time by These munchnones

and

afforded

two

a novel partially

cycloadducts

with DMAD. In the course of our studies in the 1,3-dipolar cycloadditions of thioaldehydes.2 we briefly investigated N-acyl “munchnones” (l),a class of stabilized azomethine ylides that had yet to be reported in the literature.3 Past experience in this laboratory with azomethine ylides4 and related findings in generation of 1,3-dipoles in general5 suggested a silicon-mediated approach. We wish to report our findings in this area. 5-Siloxyoxazoles (2) were prepared according to the procedure of Takei et al.6 Methylene chloride solutions of 2 were treated with various acid halides at -780C. Upon

slow

warming

concomitant were

to OoC,

desilylation

trapped

with cycloadducts

fair

yields

to good

stable the

and

(Scheme

fluoride, and were obtained

easier

sequence

mediated dimethyl

intermediate than benzoyl Better yields

is

the

to handle probably

oxazoles by

the

were halide

acylated counterion.

acetylenedicarboxylate

extruded I).7

at

nitrogen The

dioxide

to

Benzoyl

chloride

gave

afford yields

N-acyl

the

important;

analogous acylation

trimethylsiloxy preceeds

munchnones and

pyrroles

the

(3) in

if not better,

generally cleaner. which were more

compounds.

desilylation

underwent

in situ,

as good,

the reactions using the chloride were with the t-butyldimethylsiloxy oxazoles, than

N-acyl

(DMAD)

carbon

and

to

Timing generate

of the

1,3-dipoles. Results of the experiment employing non-acetylenic dipolarophiles (such as N-acyl thiocarbonyl compounds or N-phenyl maleimide) were not promising. cycloaddition. It munchnones appear to be relatively unreactive 1,3-dipoles for stands to reason that replacing an alkyl group on the nitrogen with an acyl group will

2027

2028

Scheme

I

R

DMAD

Scheme II

G

11

B

R’

R

Ph Ph Me Me Me Me H

H H H H Me Me Me

Me3 Me3 tBuMe2 tBuMe2 tBuMe2 tBuMe2 tBuMe2

X

Y&l&J

a

Ph Ph Me Et0 Me EiO Et0

13 13 45 51 77 55 67

F

a Cl Cl Cl Q

la

It

-

I

0 0

H H H H Me

DMAD

lb

-co2 R



1”’GX3 Ph Ph Me Me H

Me3 tBuMe2 tBuMc2 tBuMe2 tBuMe2

Me Me Ph Ph Me

a a

a F a

10 39 36 9 56

5 7 9 1 5

2029

lower the electron density over the azallyl system. The MO energies will be lower, and the HOMO(dipole)-LUMO(dipolarophile) gap will increase. The reason why DMAD was a successful trapping agent could be that a reversible addition step was driven by loss Doubly-bonded dipolarophiles do not enjoy this of CO2 to give the aromatic pyrrole. advantage. A second piece of evidence for unusual dipole reactivity was the isolation of two pyrrole products from reactions employing substrates where the substituents on the oxazole and the acylating agent were not the same (ie. R # G; Scheme II). Apparently, the N-acyl munchnone intermediate was equilibrating through ring-chain valence tautomerism. Behavior of this sort has been observed earlier for N-alkyl munchnones by Huisgen et al.8 They reported trapping the amidoketene intermediate with certain imines in [2+2] cycloadditions at 1OOoC. In our reactions, the tautomerism was evident The at lower temperatures, probably due to the presence of the extra acyl group. product ratios from the reactions employing phenyl-substituted oxazole + acetyl The chloride and methyl-substituted oxazole + benzoyl halides were not the same. equilibrium of isomeric N-acyl munchnones was slow in relation to the rates of We did not detect trapping and subsequent CO2 loss, which was irreversible. isomerization product (1 b) in the cases where ethyl chloroformate was used as the acylating agent (G = OEt). Presumably, the equilibria heavily favor the product with carbamate functionality over that with ethoxy substitution on the ring. The Other activation schemes employing siloxyoxazoles were investigated. oxazoles 2 could be N-alkylated with methyl triflate, and cesium fluoride desilylation generated the “normal”-type munchnones (Scheme III), which were trapped in situ with DMAD and thiobenzophenone. Reaction of the oxazoles with other activating reagents, such as trimethylsilyl chloride or toluenesulfonic chloride, gave small yields of cycloadducts with DMAD. Scheme III

2. CsF 11%

2030

Thus, a novel route to N-acyl munchnones by acylation/desilylation was investigated. The sequence was somewhat analogous to the method of Achiwa5a for generation of acyclic N-acyl azomethine ylides. The munchnones exhibited a ringchain valence tautomerism and gave two different pyrrole cycloadducts with acetylenic dipolarophiles. They were unreactive toward doubly-bonded dipolarophiles. Acknowledgements:

discussion

RGW thanks Prof. Edwin Vedejs for guidance during the preparation of this manuscript.

and helpful

References:

1) NIH PHS Postdoctoral Fellow, 1987-89. Current address: Roger Adams Labs, School of Chemical Sciences, University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign, 1209 W. California St., Urbana, IL 61801. 2) Vedejs, E.; Wilde, R. G. J. Org. Chem. 1986, 51, 117. 3) For a review on N-alkyl munchnones, consult: Potts, K. T. 1,3-D ipolar Cycloaddition Chemistry, A. Padwa, ed.; Chapter 8; John Wiley, Inc.: New York, 1984. 4) (a) Vedejs, E.; Larsen, S.; West, F. G. J. Org. Chem. 1985, 50, 2170. (b) Review: Vedejs, E.; West, F. G. Chem. Rev. 1986, 86, 941. 5) (a) Achiwa, K.; Sekiya, M. Heterocycles 1983, 20, 167. (b) Cunico, R. F.; Bedell, L. J. Org. Chem. 1983,48, 2780. (c) Robl, J. A.; Hwu, J. R. J. Org. Chem. 1985, 50, 5913. (d) Padwa, A.; Koehler, K. F. J. Chem. Sot., Chem. Commun. 1986, 789. 6) Takagaki, H.; Yasuda, N.; Anoka, M.; Takei, H. Chem. Lett. 1979, 183. 7) The products were characterized to our satisfaction on the basis of NMR, IR, and mass spectra. 8) (a) Huisgen, R.; Funke, E.; Schaefer, F. C.; Knot-r, R. Angew. Chem., Znt. Ed. Engl. 1967, 6, 367. (b) Bayer, H. 0.; Huisgen, R.; Knorr, R.; Schaefer, F. C. Chem. Ber. 1970, ZO3, 2581. (c) Funke, E.; Huisgen, R. Ibid. 1971, 104, 3222.

(Received

in USA 9 December 1987)