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Chemistry Forums for Students => Organic Chemistry Forum => Topic started by: schen on June 19, 2013, 12:37:43 PM

Title: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: schen on June 19, 2013, 12:37:43 PM
I am working on the SAR study of the Indole molecule. I have trouble with the deprotonation of the Hydrogen attached to the Indole Nitrogen. I have tried using NaH with Ar protection, lower temperature and also room temperature. I've also used K2CO3. But both of them don't work for my compound. But the reference shows that it is a simple step. I emailed the author of the paper requesting supplementary information. But haven't heard back.

Has anyone worked on similar reaction? Can you walk me through this.
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: camptzak on June 19, 2013, 02:42:27 PM
I have never done this personally, but it sounds like you need a stronger base. maybe butyl lithium or something like that
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: schen on June 19, 2013, 04:33:54 PM
The reason I did not use butyl lithium yet is because it is a very strong base and I am afraid it will degrade the Starting material in my reaction, as it has amide substituent. It also requires very low temperature, around -78 Centigrade and Nitrogen gas protection. I am not sure if I can try using Butyl Lithium. But if nothing else works, I may try using it.

Thank you for the suggestion!
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: TwistedConf on June 19, 2013, 05:17:48 PM
I have tried using NaH with Ar protection,

What do you mean by this?

NaH will deprotonate indole.

Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: schen on June 19, 2013, 06:03:05 PM
My compound is not core Indole ring, it has an amide bond with a proton attached to the Nitrogen and a teristary amino group as substituents.
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: Benzene on June 19, 2013, 11:10:30 PM
Could you show us the compound?
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: schen on June 20, 2013, 12:32:06 PM
Attached is the structure of my compound
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: schen on June 20, 2013, 12:38:07 PM
Sorry ignore the above structure. This is the compound I am working on
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: camptzak on June 20, 2013, 02:41:19 PM
maybe try deiethyimide? something bulky and very basic. I would take care not to break the amide bond.
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: Dan on June 20, 2013, 03:10:52 PM
Two questions:

1. I assume you are trying to do something with the deprotonated indole - what is the reaction you are trying to do? An alkylation?

2. How do you know the indole was not deprotonated?
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: schen on June 20, 2013, 03:43:35 PM
@camptzak, I am trying to do acylation reaction. If I use the diethylimide, it may react with benzylchloride.

@dan,  I am trying to do acylation. I monitor the reaction using TLC and base on the TLC and NMR results, I can still see the starting material and several other small spots in TLC and many impurity peaks in the spectrum. So I assume the deprotonation did not take place and that is the reason the assumed product did not form.

Is there any way I can monitor the reaction and know that the indole was deprotonated?
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: Dan on June 20, 2013, 04:13:17 PM
@dan,  I am trying to do acylation.

Acylation of indoles is commonly achieved with with triethylamine/DMAP or other N bases - I would check the literature and try that. Reagents like BuLi or LDA are not usually required.

You could also try something more sophisticated, like this (http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.201203976/abstract).

Quote
it may react with benzylchloride

Benzyl chloride is an alkylating agent (installs a benzyl group) - do you mean benzoyl chloride?
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: Doc Oc on June 20, 2013, 06:43:26 PM
Reactions with indole nitrogens are very challenging.  The lone pair of the nitrogen is involved in the aromaticity of the ring and is therefore highly non-nucleophilic.  Alkylations and acylations more often occur at the C-3 position.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indole#Chemical_reactions_of_indole

As for your dilemma, I'm sorry but I don't have any suggestions.  Can you proceed forward without acylating it knowing now that it's not very reactive?  You'd just need to watch out for reaction at the C-3.
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: camptzak on June 20, 2013, 08:57:34 PM
Reactions with indole nitrogens are very challenging.  The lone pair of the nitrogen is involved in the aromaticity of the ring and is therefore highly non-nucleophilic.  Alkylations and acylations more often occur at the C-3 position.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indole#Chemical_reactions_of_indole

As for your dilemma, I'm sorry but I don't have any suggestions.  Can you proceed forward without acylating it knowing now that it's not very reactive?  You'd just need to watch out for reaction at the C-3.

I hope I am not confusing things but if you deprotonate the nitrogen, won't one electron pair be involved in the aromaticity and one pair not be involved in the aromaticity?
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: TwistedConf on June 20, 2013, 09:02:12 PM
The lone pair of the nitrogen is involved in the aromaticity of the ring and is therefore highly non-nucleophilic.

Irrelevant since we're talking about derivatizing the anion.

Alkylations and acylations more often occur at the C-3 position.

Not if you generate the sodium (NaH) anion, as mentioned in the article you linked.  I've never had a problem alkylating an indole nitrogen this way.

Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: Dan on June 21, 2013, 06:03:55 AM
Alkylations and acylations more often occur at the C-3 position.

There is a large volume of literature demonstrating that indoles can be N-benzoylated in very high yields using triethylamine/DMAP, as well as procedures using NaH, hydoxide/PTC. There is a similar body of examples for N-benzylation (usually using NaH, hydroxide or carbonate bases). I really don't think the reaction in question is going to be as difficult as you suggest.

An example: N-Benzoylation of 5-methylindole (http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jm00078a013) with BzCl/NEt3/DMAP in 96% yield (see scheme 1, reaction 8 :rarrow: 9)

An example: N-Benzylation of indole (http://pubs.acs.org/doi/suppl/10.1021/ol302070t/suppl_file/ol302070t_si_001.pdf) with BnCl/KOH in 92% yield (compound 3e on pS9)
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: TwistedConf on June 21, 2013, 07:11:42 AM
I really don't think the reaction in question is going to be as difficult as you suggest.

Right---  In general, it's not.  The original poster is most likely having trouble with his reagents/technique or running into something unexpected with all the other functionality there.

In the original message you mentioned working from a paper.  Can you post the reference?
Title: Re: Deprotonation from the Indole Nitrogen
Post by: schen on June 21, 2013, 01:04:18 PM
@Dan ..Thanks for the reference and yes it is Benzoyl chloride not Benzyl Chloride.

@Doc Oc.. I am working on the Structure Activity Relationship study of the molecule and by acylation, my hypothesis is that it will have better biological activity than the lead compound. So, I can not continue further without acylation.

@ Camptzak... I assume that one pair of electrons will be involved with in the molecule and the other pair will be readily available for reaction, making it Nucleophilic. But I am having trouble with deprotonation, were I am struck at.