27th International symposium: Synthesis in organic chemistry

A reaction with potential: an electrosynthesis of 1,3,4-oxadiazoles from N-Acyl hydrazones Luke Chen 1,2 , James Thompson 1 , Craig Jamieson 2 1 GSK Medicines Research Centre, UK, 2 University of Strathclyde, UK This work has established an electrochemical conversion of N -acyl hydrazones to synthesise 2,5-disubstituted 1,3,4-oxadiazoles. The 1,3,4-oxadiazole is a valuable heterocycle with useful medicinal properties. As a stable bioisostere of esters and amides, ubiquitous functional groups in many drugs and bioactive molecules, incorporating the underutilised oxadiazole enables the expansion and exploration of greater chemical space. 1 To highlight this, it is an important component of raltegravir, a top 10 selling anti-HIV drug in 2020. 2 Consequently, efficient methods to access these heterocycles are required. Methodologies to synthesise 1,3,4-oxadiazole analogues have been reported in the literature, such as via oxidative or dehydrative cyclisation reactions. 3,4 However, they are often limited by poor atom economy and the need for highly reactive, toxic, or corrosive reagents. Herein is described an electrochemical oxidation which offers a green and attractive alternative. Stoichiometric use of conventional chemical oxidants, and their associated hazards, have been avoided to convert inexpensive and readily available starting materials into valuable products. Taking an indirect electrolysis approach, this strategy offers advantages to established protocols in that milder conditions can be employed to improve functional group compatibility. Extensive screening efforts have identified hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) mediators, such as DABCO, as the optimum redox catalysts for the reaction. The rapid reaction optimisation was accomplished using the IKA ElectraSyn 2.0, enabling greater accessibility of electrochemistry for synthetic, organic chemists. The operationally simple methodology is also amenable to a one- pot procedure from hydrazone precursors, further simplifying the process. Tolerance for a broad range of relevant functional groups has been demonstrated, with moderate to good yields obtained. This has enabled access to a wide array of medicinally privileged structures which would be valuable additions to a screening collection or as a tool for medicinal chemists, such as for determining structure-activity relationships. Work is ongoing to further explore the substrate scope, harnessing the reactivity to functionalise a wider range of hydrazones. References 1. J. Boström, A. Hogner, A. Llinàs, E. Wellner, and A. T. Plowright, J. Med. Chem. , 2012, 55 , 1817–1830. 2. F. Caputo, S. Corbetta, O. Piccolo, and D. Vigo, Org. Process Res. Dev. , 2020, 24 , 1149–1156. 3. K. D. Patel, S. M. Prajapati, S. N. Panchal, and H. D. Patel, Synth. Commun. , 2014, 44 , 1859– 1875. 4. L. Green, K. Livingstone, S. Bertrand, S. Peace, and C. Jamieson, Chem. Eur. J. , 2020, 26 , 14866–14870.

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