4.6 Article

Electrophilicity: the dark-side of indole chemistry

Journal

ORGANIC & BIOMOLECULAR CHEMISTRY
Volume 11, Issue 32, Pages 5206-5212

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3ob40735g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FIRB Project Futuro in Ricerca
  2. PRIN Project, Progettazione e Sviluppo di Nuovi Sistemi Catalitic Innovativi (MIUR, Rome) [PRIN 20099PKHH_004]
  3. Universita di Bologna

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Indole is by far one of the most popular heterocyclic scaffolds in nature. The intriguing and challenging molecular architectures of polycyclic, naturally occurring indolyl compounds constitute a continuous stimulus for development in organic synthesis. The field had a formidable boom across the new millennium when catalysis started revolutionizing the chemistry of indole, providing always more convincing and sustainable solutions to the selective decoration of this pharmacophore. A common guideline of these approaches relies on the intrinsic overexpression of electron density of the indole core. Despite less diffusion, the dark-side of indole reactivity, electrophilicity, has been also elegantly documented with direct applications towards the realization of specific interatomic connections that would be difficult to obtain by means of conventional indole reactivity. The present Perspective article summarizes the major findings that brought the research area from the pioneering findings of the 60s to the state of the art.

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