Ugi reaction

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The Ugi reaction is a multi-component reaction in organic chemistry involving a ketone or aldehyde, an amine, an isocyanide and a carboxylic acid to form a bis-amide.[1][2][3] The reaction is named after Ivar Karl Ugi, who first published this reaction in 1962.

The Ugi reaction
The Ugi reaction

The Ugi reaction is exothermic and usually complete within minutes of adding the isocyanide. High concentration (0.5M - 2.0M) of reactants give the highest yields. Polar, aprotic solvents, like DMF, work well. However, methanol and ethanol have also been used successfully. This uncatalyzed reaction has an inherent high atom economy as only a molecule of water is lost and chemical yield in general are high. Recent research has shown that the Ugi reaction is accelerated in water.[4]

Several reviews have been published.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11]

Reaction mechanism

In the Ugi reaction, the initial reaction is the formation of an imine (1) from the amine and the ketone. Subsequent reaction of the imine with the isocyanide and the carboxylic acid gives intermediate 2, which rearranges via an acyl transfer into the bis-amide 3. The exact mechanism of the trimolecular reaction to form intermediate 2 is not known.[citation needed]

The mechanism of the Ugi reaction
The mechanism of the Ugi reaction

The reaction can also be performed with a pre-formed imine. This results in an increased yield.[citation needed]

One plausible reaction mechanism is depicted below:[12]

Detailed Ugi mechanism
Detailed Ugi mechanism

Amine 1 and ketone 2 form the imine 3 with loss of one equivalent of water. Proton exchange with carboxylic acid 4 activates the iminium ion 5 for nucleophilic addition of the isocyanide 6 with its terminal carbon atom to nitrilium ion 7. A second nucleophilic addition takes place at this intermediate with the carboxylic acid anion to 8. The final step is a Mumm rearrangement with transfer of the R4 acyl group from oxygen to nitrogen. Note that in the related Passerini reaction (lacking the amine) the isocyanide reacts directly with the carbonyl group but other aspects of the reaction are the same. All reaction steps are reversible except for the Mumm rearrangement, which drives the whole reaction sequence.

Variations

Combination of reaction components

The usage of bifunctional reaction components greatly increases the diversity of possible reaction products. Likewise, several combinations lead to structurally interesting products. The Ugi reaction has been applied in combination with an intramolecular Diels-Alder reaction [13] in an extended multistep reaction.

A reaction in its own right is the Ugi-Smiles reaction with the carboxylic acid component replaced by a phenol. In this reaction the Mumm rearrangement in the final step is replaced by the Smiles rearrangement [14].

Ugi Diels Alder reaction Ugi-Smiles-reaction
Ugi-Diels-Alder reaction Ugi-Smiles reaction

Another combination (with separate workup of the Ugi intermediate) is one with the Buchwald-Hartwig reaction [15]. In the Ugi-Heck reaction a Heck aryl-aryl coupling takes place in a second step [16]

Ugi Buchwald-Hartwig reaction Ugi-Heck reaction
Ugi-Buchwald-Hartwig reaction [17] Ugi-Heck reaction [18]

Combination of amine and carboxylic acid

Several groups have used β-amino acids in the Ugi reaction to prepare β-lactams.[19] This approach relies on acyl transfer in the Mumm rearrangement to form the four-membered ring. The reaction proceeds in moderate yield at room temperature in methanol with formaldehyde or a variety of aryl aldehydes. For example, p-nitrobenzaldehyde reacts to form the β-lactam shown in 71% yield as a 4:1 diastereomeric mixture:

An example of the use of the Ugi reaction to form a beta-lactam
An example of the use of the Ugi reaction to form a beta-lactam

Combination of carbonyl compound and carboxylic acid

Zhang et al.[20] have combined aldehydes with carboxylic acids and used the Ugi reaction to create lactams of various sizes. Short et al.[21] have prepared γ-lactams from keto-acids on solid-support.

Applications

Chemical libraries

The Ugi reaction is one of the first reactions to be exploited explicitly to develop chemical libraries. These chemical libraries are sets of compounds that can be tested repeatedly. Using the principles of combinatorial chemistry, the Ugi reaction offers the possibility to synthesize a great number of different compounds in one reaction, by the reaction of various ketones (or aldehydes), amines, isocyanides and carboxylic acids. These libraries can then be tested with enzymes or living organisms to find new active pharmaceutical substances. One drawback is the lack of chemical diversity of the products. Using the Ugi reaction in combination with other reactions enlarges the chemical diversity of possible products.

Examples of Ugi reaction combinations:

Pharmaceutical industry

Crixivan can be prepared using the Ugi reaction.[23]

Additionally, many of the caine-type anesthetics are synthesized using this reaction. Examples include lidocaine and bupivacaine.

See also

References

  1. Ugi, I; Meyr, R.; Fetzer, U.; Steinbrückner, C. (1959). "Versuche mit Isonitrilen". Angew. Chem. 71: 386. doi:10.1002/ange.19590711110.
  2. Ugi, I; Steinbrückner, C. (1960). "Über ein neues Kondensations-Prinzip". Angew. Chem. 72: 267–268. doi:10.1002/ange.19600720709.
  3. Ugi, I. (1962). "The α-Addition of Immonium Ions and Anions to Isonitriles Accompanied by Secondary Reactions". Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English. 1 (1): 8–21. doi:10.1002/anie.196200081.
  4. Pirrung, M. C.; Sarma, K. D. (2004). "Multicomponent Reactions Are Accelerated in Water". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 126: 444–445. doi:10.1021/ja038583a.
  5. Ugi, I., Lohberger S., Karl R. The Passerini and Ugi Reactions, Chapter 4.6, Comprehensive Organic Synthesis 1991, 2, 1083-1109. ISBN 0-08-040593-2, Pergamon, Oxford, 10196 pages (Review)
  6. Ugi, I.; Werner, B.; Dömling, A. (2003). "The Chemistry of Isocyanides, their MultiComponent Reactions and their Libraries" (PDF). Molecules. 8: 53–66.
  7. Banfi, L., and Riva, R. (2005). The Passerini Reaction. Organic Reactions, Vol. 65 L. E. Overman Ed. Wiley. (ISBN 0-471-68260-8)
  8. Tempest P.A. (2005). "Recent advances in heterocycle generation using the efficient Ugi multiple-component condensation reaction". Current Opinion in Drug Discovery & Development. 8 (6): 776–788.
  9. Ugi I., Heck S. (2001). "The multicomponent reactions and their libraries for natural and preparative chemistry". Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening. 4 (1): 1–34.
  10. Bienayme H, Hulme C, Oddon G, Schmitt P (2000). "Maximizing synthetic efficiency: Multi-component transformations lead the way". Chemistry- A European Journal. 8 (16): 3321–3329. doi:10.1002/1521-3765(20000915)6:18<3321::AID-CHEM3321>3.0.CO;2-A.
  11. Dömling A., Ugi I. (2000). "Multicomponent Reactions with Isocyanides". Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English. 39 (18): 3168–3210. doi:10.1002/1521-3773(20000915)39:18<3168::AID-ANIE3168>3.0.CO;2-U.
  12. S. E. Denmark and Y. Fan (2005). "Catalytic, Enantioselective α-Additions of Isocyanides: Lewis Base Catalyzed Passerini-Type Reactions". Journal of Organic Chemistry. 70 (24): 9667–9676. doi:10.1021/jo050549m.
  13. Complexity-Enhancing Acid-Promoted Rearrangement of Tricyclic Products of Tandem Ugi 4CC/Intramolecular Diels-Alder ReactionAlexei Ilyin, Volodymyr Kysil, Mikhail Krasavin, Irina Kurashvili, and Alexandre V. Ivachtchenko J. Org. Chem.; 2006; 71(25) pp 9544 - 9547; (Note) doi:10.1021/jo061825f
  14. Direct Access to Heterocyclic Scaffolds by New Multicomponent Ugi-Smiles Couplings Laurent El Kaim, Marie Gizolme, Laurence Grimaud, and Julie Oble Org. Lett.; 2006; 8(18) pp 4019 - 4021; (Letter) doi:10.1021/ol061605o
  15. Rapid Access to Oxindoles by the Combined Use of an Ugi Four-Component Reaction and a Microwave-Assisted Intramolecular Buchwald-Hartwig Amidation Reaction Florence Bonnaterre, Michèle Bois-Choussy, and Jieping Zhu Org. Lett.; 2006; 8(19) pp 4351 - 4354; (Letter) doi:10.1021/ol061755z
  16. Synthesis of Functionalized Quinolines via Ugi and Pd-Catalyzed Intramolecular Arylation Reactions Zhibo Ma, Zheng Xiang, Tuoping Luo, Kui Lu, Zhibin Xu, Jiahua Chen, and Zhen Yang J. Comb. Chem; 2006; 8(5) pp 696 - 704; (Article) doi:10.1021/cc060066b
  17. Second part microwave accelerated reaction with Pd(dba)2 and phosphine ligand Me-Phos
  18. The Heck step takes place with palladium(II) acetate, dppf ligand potassium carbonate and tetra-n-butylammonium bromide in dimethylformamide
  19. Gedey, S.; Van der Eycken, J.; Fülöp, F. (2002). "Liquid-Phase Combinatorial Synthesis of Alicyclic β-Lactams via Ugi Four-Component Reaction". Organic Letters. 4: 1967–1969. doi:10.1021/ol025986r.
  20. Zhang, J.; Jacobson, A.; Rusche, J. R.; Herlihy, W. (1999). "Unique Structures Generated by Ugi 3CC Reactions Using Bifunctional Starting Materials Containing Aldehyde and Carboxylic Acid". Journal of Organic Chemistry. 64: 1074–1076. doi:10.1021/jo982192a.
  21. Short K. M., Mjalli A. M. M. (1997). "A solid-phase combinatorial method for the synthesis of novel 5- and 6-membered ring lactams". Tetrahedron Letters. 38: 359–362. doi:10.1021/ol048791n.
  22. Xiang, Z.; Luo, T.; Cui, J.; Shi, X.; Fathi, R.; Chen, J.; Yang, Z. (2004). "Novel Pd-II-mediated cascade carboxylative annulation to construct benzo[b]furan-3-carboxylic acids". Organic Letters. 6: 3155–3158. doi:10.1021/ol048791n.
  23. Rossen, K.; Pye, P. J.; DiMichele, L. M.; Volante, R. P.; Reider, P. J. (1998). "An efficient asymmetric hydrogenation approach to the synthesis of the Crixivan® piperazine intermediate". Tetrahedron Letters. 39: 6823–6826. doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(98)01484-1.

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