The presence of an
aromatic ring, a
ketone and a
γ-lactam moiety, gives to isatin the rare potential to be used as both an
electrophile and a
nucleophile: indeed, it undergoes an enormous number of reactions, such as N-substitutions,
electrophilic aromatic substitution at positions C-5 and C-7 of the phenyl ring,
nucleophilic additions onto the C-3
carbonyl group,
chemoselective reductions,
oxidations,
ring-expansions and
spiro-annulations. Because of this unique reactivity, isatin is considered one of the most valuable
building blocks in
organic synthesis.
N-Substitution The
N-functionalization of the isatin core can be readily obtained by the
deprotonation of the amino moiety, forming the corresponding
sodium or
potassium salt, and subsequent addition of an
electrophile (e.g. alkyl or acyl
halides). On the other hand,
N-arylation is usually achieved by
cross-coupling reactions with
aryl halides using
copper or
palladium catalysts.
Ring expansion In the field of
organic synthesis,
ring expansions are considered valuable reactions since they allow the obtainment medium-size ring (7-9 atoms) which are difficult to synthesize through "classical" methods. To date, only few articles concerning the ring expansion of isatin derivatives has been reported. The first one is an acid-catalyzed one-pot
multicomponent reaction involving isatins, aminouracils, and isooxazolones to form isoxazoquinolines, important
scaffolds in
medicinal chemistry. In another one-pot
multicomponent reaction, a unique two-carbon expansion has been achieved by reacting isatin with indene-1,3-dione and N-substituted
pyridinium bromide to form dibenzo[b,d]azepin-6-ones.
C-2/C-3 nucleophilic addition Isatin suffers
nucleophilic addition on
carbonyls at
C-2 and
C-3 positions. The
regioselectivity of the process strongly depends both on the
substrate (properties of the
substituents on the isatin core, especially those bonded to the nitrogen atom) and the reaction conditions (
solvent, temperature etc.). In some cases the
nucleophilic addition could be followed by secondary reactions (
e.g. cyclization,
ring expansion,
ring opening etc.)
Oxidation The oxidation of isatin using
hydrogen peroxide (
Baeyer–Villiger oxidation) or
chromic anhydride yields
isatoic anhydride, a compound widely used either in
herbicide products and in
medicinal chemistry. The use of
peroxydisulfuric acid gives rise to
1,4‑benzoxazine compounds. This represents the
indigo pigment's red component and a highly effective
cytotoxic compound.
Reduction Reduction of the non-amide carbonyl group obviously occurs to give
oxindole, respectively. ==See also==