6(5H)-phenanthridinone derivatives, as an important class of alkaloids, have broad application value in drug development and functional material synthesis. In this study, a nickel-catalyzed synthetic strategy was developed, using 2-bromobenzamide compounds as starting materials. Through an intermolecular cyclization reaction, a series of 6(5H)-phenanthridinone derivatives bearing amide substituents was efficiently constructed. The optimal reaction system was identified: Ni(acac)2/Zn as the catalyst, PCy3 as the ligand, toluene as the solvent, Cs2CO3 as the base, under an argon atmosphere at 150 °C for 12 h. The target products were obtained in yields up to 88%. Further substrate scope exploration demonstrated the excellent generality of this method, successfully synthesizing 21 derivatives with various substitution patterns, achieving yields ranging from 51% to 92%, and showing good compatibility with multiple functional groups such as alkyl, aryl, and heterocyclic moieties. Importantly, the reaction remained stable during gram-scale experiments, successfully yielding the desired compound at 85%. This work not only provides an approach for the precise construction of the 6(5H)-phenanthridinone framework but also opens an efficient pathway for the controlled synthesis of amide-substituted derivatives.
Xiao et al. (Thu,) studied this question.