33799-96-1Relevant articles and documents
Visible Light-Driven Efficient Synthesis of Amides from Alcohols using Cu?N?TiO2 Heterogeneous Photocatalyst
Singha, Krishnadipti,Ghosh, Subhash Chandra,Panda, Asit Baran
supporting information, p. 657 - 662 (2021/02/02)
Amides were synthesized from alcohols and amines in high yields using an in situ generated active ester of N-hydroxyimide with our developed Cu?N?TiO2 catalyst at room temperature using oxygen as a sole oxidant under visible light. The catalyst can be easily prepared, robust, and recycled four times without a considerable change in catalytic activity. This developed protocol applies to a wide substrate scope and has good functional group tolerance. The application of this amidation reaction has been successfully demonstrated for the synthesis of moclobemide, an antidepressant drug, and an analog of the itopride drug on a gram scale.
Discovery of quinuclidine modulators of cellular progranulin
Burnett, Duane A.,Chen, Angela Y.-P.,Koenig, Gerhard,Lanter, James C.,Williamson, Toni,Blain, Jean-Fran?ois
supporting information, (2021/06/30)
Phenotypic screening of an annotated small molecule library identified the quinuclidine tetrahydroisoquinoline solifenacin (1) as a robust enhancer of progranulin secretion with single digit micromolar potency in a murine microglial (BV-2) cell line. Subsequent SAR development led to the identification of 29 with a 38-fold decrease in muscarinic receptor antagonist activity and a 10-fold improvement in BV-2 potency.
Diprotonative stabilization of ring-opened carbocationic intermediates: conversion of tetrahydroisoquinoline to triarylmethanes
Kurouchi, Hiroaki
supporting information, p. 8313 - 8316 (2020/08/17)
Superacid-promoted conversion of tetrahydroisoquinolines to triarylmethanes via tandem reactions of C-N bond scission, Friedel-Crafts alkylation, C-O bond scission, and electrophilic aromatic amidation was developed. Dication formation was important for stabilizing the ring-opened carbocationic intermediate, which is a new role for diprotonation in reaction mechanisms. This journal is