O'Halloran, Neil (2009) The synthesis and structural characterisation of novel 4- and 5- membered nitrogen heterocycles derived from azoacetates. PhD thesis, Dublin City University.
Abstract
Azo-drugs are among the earliest fully synthetic chemotherapeutic agents known (Prontosil 1935).
However the synthesis and application of phenylazo compounds in the area of medicinal chemistry
has largely been restricted to derivatives of primary aromatic amines. This has been due, in the most
part, to a perceived view that azo compounds not containing two aromatic groups are unstable. The
syntheses of a number of novel heterocycles including important medicinal structures directly
linked to an arylazo moiety are reported. The literature survey introduces a range of four and five
membered heterocycles with established pharmaceutical activity. In particular the attention is drawn
to molecules containing the azo functional group. This thesis contains a chapter detailing the
introduction of a variety of alkyl and aryl groups into novel �-lactam molecules bearing the arylazo
and arylazoxy functional groups. The succeeding chapter investigates the role of the azocarbinol
group as an intermediate in the rearrangement of azoacetates to N-acyl hydrazides. The
deacetylation reactions of azoacetates derived from L-threonine are also described. This work
resulted in the synthesis of novel oxazolidinone and hydantoin species, also with phenylazo
attachments. The final chapter describes the incorporation of a cyanide unit into heterocyclic
compounds through intermolecular cyclisations of a range of substituted azoacetates when
potassium cyanide is employed as base. It is shown that the azo group may be incorporated into the
cyclic system to produce pyrazoles, or as an exocyclic pendant group attached to a 2-
iminopyrrolidin-5-one; X-ray crystal structures of these compounds are reported. The 2-
iminopyrrolidin-5-one was easily modified to produce the corresponding pyrrolidine-2,5-dione
(succinimide) derivative. All of the heterocycles reported were generated from azoacetates derived
from simple, cheap and readily available starting materials (ethylacetoacetate and L-threonine), thus
showing azoacetates to be versatile and valuable building blocks in the field of heterocyclic
chemistry.
Metadata
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
---|---|
Date of Award: | March 2009 |
Refereed: | No |
Supervisor(s): | James, Paraic |
Subjects: | Physical Sciences > Chemistry |
DCU Faculties and Centres: | DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Science and Health > School of Chemical Sciences |
Use License: | This item is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. View License |
ID Code: | 2353 |
Deposited On: | 02 Apr 2009 15:13 by Kieran Nolan . Last Modified 19 Jul 2018 14:43 |
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