Elmes, Alfred Roy2024-08-132024-08-1319731973https://hdl.handle.net/1828/17702In Part 1 of this thesis, synthetic endeavours leading to the acrylic ester [56] are presented o This compound, resembling the precursor secodine [52] is postulated as having a resemblance to the dihydropyridine or dihydropyridinium intermediates implicated as being involved in the later stages in biosynthesis of the major indole alkaloid families. A suggestion is made that the new compound [56] would be a more appropriate precursor than secodine for experimental bio-evaluation. Synthesis was specifically directed at obtaining the alcohol [86], from which the expectedly unstable acrylic ester [56] could be generated in one step under carefully controlled conditions. N-[β{3(2-Carbomethoxylmethylindolyl)}ethyl]-3-acetyl-l,4,5,6-tetrahydropyridine [70] was prepared by condensation of 3-acetylpyridine with the appropriate tryptophyl derivative, followed by reduction. All attempts to alkylate in the ester side chain of [70] using methyl formate and subsequent reduction were without success. Two basic alternative routes leading to [86] were followed. One involved prior elaboration of the ester side chain, to the alcohol [88]. The alcohol group was then protected by benzylation before attempting to introduce the ethyl bridge at C-3 of the indole nucleus, condense with 3-acetylpyridine, and catalytically reduce the pyridinium salt yielding [86]. In the other method, the alcohol group of methyl 3(S-hydroxyethyl)indole-2-acetate was 3uitably protected, either as the tetrahydropyranyl or benzyl ether, and attempts made to alkylate in the ester side chain as with [70]. The second investigation concerns the generation of 1,4-dihydropyridines from the corresponding pyridinium compounds having the stabilising 3-acetyl function. This research is related in another direction again, to the implicated biointermediate(s). Reduction of N-[β-(3-indolyl)ethyl]-3-acetylpyridinium bromide [102] with sodium hydrosulphite, gave the rather unstable N-[β(3-indolyl)ethyl]-3-acetyl-1,4-dihydropyridine [103]. Reaction of the bromide salt [102] with potassium cyanide in alcohol gave the relatively more stable cyano adduct [104]. These dihydropyridines were stable to base, but very labile to dilute acid, undergoing transformation to a mixture of products. The nature of these products in the case of the indole substituted compounds is not known with certainty.138 pagesAvailable to the World Wide WebSynthetic approaches to an indole alkaloid precursorThesis