ABSTRACT
Sulfilimines, as potential aza-isosteres of sulfoxides, are valued as building blocks, auxiliaries, ligands, bioconjugation handles, and as precursors to versatile S(VI) scaffolds including sulfoximines and sulfondiimines. Here, we report a thioether imination methodology that exploits O-(diphenylphosphinyl)hydroxyl amine (DPPH). Under mild, metal-free, and biomolecule-compatible conditions, DPPH enables late-stage S-imination on peptides, natural products, and a clinically trialled drug, and shows both excellent chemoselectivity and broad functional group tolerance. This methodological report is extended to an efficient and high-yielding one-pot reaction for accessing free-NH sulfoximines with diverse substrates including ones of potential clinical importance. In the presence of a rhodium catalyst, sulfoxides are S-iminated in higher yields to afford free-NH sulfoximines. S-imination was validated on an oxidatively delicate amatoxin to give sulfilimine and sulfoximine congeners. Interestingly, these new sulfilimine and sulfoximine-amatoxins show cytotoxicity. This method is further extended to create sulfilimine and sulfoximine-Fulvestrant and buthionine analogues.
ABSTRACT
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) constitute an emerging class of anticancer agents that deliver potent payloads selectively to tumors while avoiding systemic toxicity associated with conventional chemotherapeutics. Critical to ADC development is a serum-stable linker designed to decompose inside targeted cells thereby releasing the toxic payload. A protease-cleavable linker comprising a valine-citrulline (Val-Cit) motif has been successfully incorporated into three FDA-approved ADCs and is found in numerous preclinical candidates. Herein, we present a high-yielding and facile synthetic strategy for a Val-Cit linker that avoids extensive protecting group manipulation and laborious chromatography associated with previous syntheses and provides yields that are up to 10-fold higher than by standard methods. This method is easily scalable and takes advantage of cost-effective coupling reagents and high loading 2-chlorotrityl chloride (2-CTC) resin. Modularity allows for introduction of various conjugation handles in final stages of the synthesis. Facile access to such analogues serves to expand the repertoire of available enzymatically cleavable linkers for ADC generation. This methodology empowers a robust and facile library generation and future exploration into linker analogues containing unnatural amino acids as a selectivity tuning tool.