6533b823fe1ef96bd127f520

RESEARCH PRODUCT

An efficient and practical synthesis of [2-11C]indole via superfast nucleophilic [11C]cyanation and RANEY® Nickel catalyzed reductive cyclization

Ling MaJacob M. HookerJacob M. HookerSung Won KimMichael J. SchuellerDavid AlexoffWenchao QuAlexander M. NauthAlexander M. NauthDohyun KimSo Jeong LeeSo Jeong LeeJoanna S. FowlerCarina WeberCarina Weber

subject

Indole testNitrileCyanideOrganic ChemistryRadiosynthesisCyanationBiochemistryMedicinal chemistryRaney nickelchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryNucleophileOrganic chemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAcetonitrile

description

A rapid method for the synthesis of carbon-11 radiolabeled indole was developed using a sub-nanomolar quantity of no-carrier-added [(11)C]cyanide as radio-precursor. Based upon a reported synthesis of 2-(2-nitrophenyl)acetonitrile (), a highly reactive substrate 2-nitrobenzyl bromide () was evaluated for nucleophilic [(11)C]cyanation. Additionally, related reaction conditions were explored with the goal of obtaining of highly reactive 2-(2-nitrophenyl)-[1-(11)C]acetonitrile () while inhibiting its rapid conversion to 2,3-bis(2-nitrophenyl)-[1-(11)C]propanenitrile (). Next, a RANEY® Nickel catalyzed reductive cyclization method was utilized for synthesizing the desired [2-(11)C]indole with hydrazinium monoformate as the active reducing agent. Extensive and iterative screening of basicity, temperature and stoichiometry was required to overcome the large stoichiometry bias that favored 2-nitrobenzylbromide () over [(11)C]cyanide, which both caused further alkylation of the desired nitrile and poisoned the RANEY® Nickel catalyst. The result is an efficient two-step, streamlined method to reliably synthesize [2-(11)C]indole with an entire radiochemical yield of 21 ± 2.2% (n = 5, ranging from 18-24%). The radiochemical purity of the final product was >98% and specific activity was 176 ± 24.8 GBq μmol(-1) (n = 5, ranging from 141-204 GBq μmol(-1)). The total radiosynthesis time including product purification by semi-preparative HPLC was 50-55 min from end of cyclotron bombardment.

https://doi.org/10.1039/c5ob01654a