A new N -silyl sulfinylamine reagent allows the rapid preparation of a broad range of (hetero)aryl, alkenyl, and alkyl primary sulfinamides, using Grignard, organolithium, or organozinc reagents to introduce the carbon fragment. Treatment of these primary sulfinamides with an amine in the presence of a hypervalent iodine reagent leads directly to NH-sulfonimidamides. This two-step sequence is straightforward to perform and provides a modular approach to sulfonimidamides, allowing ready variation of both reaction components, including primary and secondary amines.
Sulfur functional groups are common motifs in bioactive molecules. Sulfonamides are most prevalent but related aza-derivatives, in which oxygen atoms are replaced by imidic nitrogens, such as sulfoximines and sulfonimidamides, are gaining attraction. Despite this activity, the double aza-variants of sulfonamides, termed sulfondiimidamides, are almost completely absent from the literature. The reason for this is poor synthetic accessibility. Although a recent synthesis has established sulfondiimidamides as viable motifs, the length of the route and the capricious nature of the key sulfondiimidoyl fluoride intermediates mean that direct application to discovery chemistry is challenging. Herein, we describe a two-step synthesis of sulfondiimidamides, exploiting a hypervalent iodine-mediated amination as the key step. The starting materials are organometallic reagents, an unsymmetrical sulfurdiimide, and amines. The method allowed >40 examples to be prepared, including derivatives of three sulfonamide-based drugs. The operational simplicity, broad scope, and concise nature make this route attractive for discovery chemistry applications.
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