A general synthetic strategy for antirhine alkaloids was developed in this study. The cyanide-catalyzed imino-Stetter reaction of ethyl 2-aminocinnamate and 4-bromopyridine-2-carboxaldehyde afforded the corresponding indole-3-acetic acid derivative. Subsequent formation of the six-membered C ring followed by trans-selective installation of the two-carbon unit at C-15 provided rapid access to the key intermediate. Stereoselective installation of substituents at C-20 allowed the total syntheses of (±)-antirhine, (±)-18,19-dihydroantirhine, and their 20-epimers, all of the known natural products in the antirhine family.
Total syntheses of the antirhine alkaloids are described. The cyanide-catalyzed imino-Stetter reaction of the aldimine derived from ethyl 2-aminocinnamate and 4-bromopyridine-2-carboxaldehyde provided a 2-pyridinyl substituted indole-3-acetate, which was further converted into the corresponding indoloquinolizidinium intermediate through C-ring formation. Subsequent trans-selective installation of the homoallylic alcohol side-chain at C-15 in the resulting indoloquinolizidinium allowed the total syntheses of antirhine and its known epimer.
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