Enantioselective Synthesis of Brinzolamide (AL-4862), A New Topical Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitor. The "DCAT Route" To Thiophenesulfonamides
Enantioselective Synthesis of Brinzolamide (AL-4862), A New Topical Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitor. The "DCAT Route" To Thiophenesulfonamides
Enantioselective Synthesis of Brinzolamide (AL-4862), A New Topical Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitor. The "DCAT Route" To Thiophenesulfonamides
114 • Vol. 3, No. 2, 1999 / Organic Process Research & Development 10.1021/op9802125 CCC: $18.00 © 1999 American Chemical Society and Royal Society of Chemistry
Published on Web 02/18/1999
Scheme 1 oxidative degradation en route to 4. Another pathway was
suggested by our observation that the N-methylsulfonamide
analogue of 6, upon reaction with NaSBn (DMSO, room
temperature), regenerated thioether 2 (87%) by elimination
of MeNHSO2-. Given the greater electronegativity of the
chlorosulfonyl group, an analogous addition-elimination
might compete during the amination of 4. Conversion of the
carbonyl group to the acid-soluble imine was detected in
small-scale trials; the ketone was regenerated on standing
in the acidic aqueous extract.
In anhydrous media, chlorination of thioethers affords
sulfenyl chlorides.9 Thus 3 was obtained in high yield by
reaction of 2 with Cl2 in toluene, which served well as a
replacement for the hazardous classical solvent CCl4. Toluene
also proved to be the solvent of choice for the subsequent
amination and oxidation steps, enabling a one-flask process
that proved reliable and easy to scale up. Addition of
2-methoxyethylamine to the toluene solution of 3, removal
of excess amine by acid extraction, and treatment of the
resulting solution of sulfenamide 5 with m-CPBA and
aqueous NaHCO310 gave sulfonamide 6. Trituration of the
crude product with hexane dissolved the benzylic byproducts
and precipitated 6 in 72-83% yield.
upon quenching into water. Oxidation of excess thiol in The bromination-reduction-cyclization sequence 6 f
solution with NaOCl was followed by filtration to afford 2 7 f 8a was accomplished as described for the N-methyl
in 95-97% yield on a 15-mol scale. series.1 Treatment of ketone 6 in THF with pyridinium
Conversion of 2 to sulfonamide 6 via sulfonyl chloride 4 bromide perbromide (PBP) and catalytic HBr produced
proved erratic. Addition of gaseous chlorine to 2 in acetic bromo ketone 7, typically accompanied by 10-15% of the
acid-water,4a-c followed by removal of excess Cl2 by air dibromo ketone.11 Crude 7 was reduced with (+)-B-chloro-
stream, resulted in clean formation of sulfonyl chloride 4 diisopinocampheylborane ((+)-Ipc2BCl)12 in THF at ca. -30
(TLC). Sulfenyl chloride 3 was the only intermediate °C, and the resulting bromohydrin was cyclized in situ to
observed. Quenching the reaction mixture into water invari- the thienothiazine 8a. The dibromo ketone proved to be
ably produced an oil (isolated 4 is a low-melting solid). relatively innocuous, as it was found to undergo slow
Alternatively, removal of HOAc by rotary evaporation with reductive debromination to 7 prior to carbonyl reduction.13
moderate warming caused decomposition of 4. Therefore, Consistent with our earlier observations,1 and those of
extractive workup (CH2Cl2-ice cold 2.5% NaOH)4c was used others,12d workup using the recommended12b,c diethanolamine
to provide an acid-free solution of 4. Addition of 2-meth- or acetaldehyde quenches did not adequately segregate the
oxyethylamine produced sulfonamide 6 in 75-78% yield on product 8a from pinene, isopinocampheol, and other organic-
a 2-10-g scale, but on a 50-g scale the yield dropped to soluble byproducts. A tedious chromatographic purification
30-50%. Oxidative chlorination conditions were varieds was necessary. Thienothiazine 8a of 96% ee was thereby
temperature, solvent (CH2Cl2,4d TFA, EtOAc, THF,7 mix- obtained in 55-60% yield from 6. The S configuration
tures), aqueous component (water, HCl at different concen- follows from our previous work in the N-methyl series1 and
trations,4d buffers), chlorine source (NaOCl, NCS), and (9) (a) Drabowicz, J.; Kielbasinski, P.; Mikolajczyk, M. In The Chemistry of
thioether substitution (n-Bu, i-Bu, p-methoxybenzyl)8s Sulfenic Acids and Their DeriVatiVes; Patai, S., Ed.; Wiley: Chichester,
without improvement. The benzyl sulfoxide derived from 2 UK, 1990; p 221. (b) Capozzi, G.; Modena, G.; Pasquato, L. ref 9a, p 403.
(c) Kühle, E. Synthesis 1970, 561; 1971, 563, 617. (d) Kurzer, F.; Powell,
also afforded 4 upon oxidative chlorination; amination then J. R. Organic Syntheses; Wiley: New York, 1963; Collect Vol. IV, p 934.
delivered 6 in yields comparable to those observed above. (10) The presence of aqueous bicarbonate was required for good yields in this
m-CPBA oxidation. Chlorine in aqueous HOAc, while effective for oxidizing
The crude amination mixtures contained numerous com- 3 to 4, was unsatisfactory for oxidizing 5 to 6. Oxone or H2O2 in aqueous
ponents, complicating the interpretation of these results. In HOAc converted 5 to 6 but too slowly to be preparatively useful.
contrast, a ketalized analogue of 4 had undergone amination (11) (a) Use of methanol as solvent decreased dibromination, but concomitant
ketalization proved troublesome: Gaudry, M.; Marquet, A. Organic
with little difficulty.1 The thiophene ring could have suffered Syntheses; Wiley: New York, 1988; Collect Vol. VI, p 193. (b) Phenylt-
rimethylammonium tribromide in THF also converted 6 to 7, plus dibromo
(6) (a) Speziale, A. J. Organic Syntheses; Wiley: New York, 1963; Collect ketone, at a slower rate than PBP: Jacques, J.; Marquet, A. Organic
Vol. IV, p 401. (b) Kofod, H. Organic Syntheses; Wiley: New York, 1963; Syntheses; Wiley: New York, 1988; Collect Vol. VI, p 175.
Collect Vol. IV, p 491. (12) (a) Chandrasekharan, J.; Ramachandran, P. V.; Brown, H. C. J. Org. Chem.
(7) (a) CAUTION: THF and DME undergo delayed exothermic polymerization 1985, 50, 5446. (b) Brown, H. C.; Ramachandran, P. V. Acc. Chem. Res.
upon exposure to Cl2 and are therefore not recommended as solvents for 1992, 25, 16. (c) Dhar, R. K. Aldrichim. Acta 1994, 27(2), 43. (d) Simpson,
oxidative chlorinations. (b) Acetonitrile and DMF are useful water-miscible P.; Tschaen, D.; Verhoeven, T. R. Synth. Commun. 1991, 21, 1705.
chlorination solvents; their utility was not assessed in the present studies. (13) This pathway was confirmed using isolated dibromo ketone, best prepared
(8) The tert-butyl thioether did not form efficiently from DCAT and t-BuSH by condensing 6 with DMF dimethyl acetal (1.2 equiv, MeCN, 60 °C, 70-
in THF-aq NaOH. 80%) and reacting the resulting enaminone with 2 equiv of Br2 in wet THF.