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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(17): 11866-11875, 2024 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38621677

RESUMO

The available methods of chemical synthesis have arguably contributed to the prevalence of aromatic rings, such as benzene, toluene, xylene, or pyridine, in modern pharmaceuticals. Many such sp2-carbon-rich fragments are now easy to synthesize using high-quality cross-coupling reactions that click together an ever-expanding menu of commercially available building blocks, but the products are flat and lipophilic, decreasing their odds of becoming marketed drugs. Converting flat aromatic molecules into saturated analogues with a higher fraction of sp3 carbons could improve their medicinal properties and facilitate the invention of safe, efficacious, metabolically stable, and soluble medicines. In this study, we show that aromatic and heteroaromatic drugs can be readily saturated under exceptionally mild rhodium-catalyzed hydrogenation, acid-mediated reduction, or photocatalyzed-hydrogenation conditions, converting sp2 carbon atoms into sp3 carbon atoms and leading to saturated molecules with improved medicinal properties. These methods are productive in diverse pockets of chemical space, producing complex saturated pharmaceuticals bearing a variety of functional groups and three-dimensional architectures. The rhodium-catalyzed method tolerates traces of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or water, meaning that pharmaceutical compound collections, which are typically stored in wet DMSO, can finally be reformatted for use as substrates for chemical synthesis. This latter application is demonstrated through the late-stage saturation (LSS) of 768 complex and densely functionalized small-molecule drugs.


Assuntos
Ródio , Catálise , Ródio/química , Preparações Farmacêuticas/química , Preparações Farmacêuticas/síntese química , Hidrogenação , Estrutura Molecular
2.
ACS Cent Sci ; 10(4): 899-906, 2024 Apr 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38680564

RESUMO

With over 10,000 new reaction protocols arising every year, only a handful of these procedures transition from academia to application. A major reason for this gap stems from the lack of comprehensive knowledge about a reaction's scope, i.e., to which substrates the protocol can or cannot be applied. Even though chemists invest substantial effort to assess the scope of new protocols, the resulting scope tables involve significant biases, reducing their expressiveness. Herein we report a standardized substrate selection strategy designed to mitigate these biases and evaluate the applicability, as well as the limits, of any chemical reaction. Unsupervised learning is utilized to map the chemical space of industrially relevant molecules. Subsequently, potential substrate candidates are projected onto this universal map, enabling the selection of a structurally diverse set of substrates with optimal relevance and coverage. By testing our methodology on different chemical reactions, we were able to demonstrate its effectiveness in finding general reactivity trends by using a few highly representative examples. The developed methodology empowers chemists to showcase the unbiased applicability of novel methodologies, facilitating their practical applications. We hope that this work will trigger interdisciplinary discussions about biases in synthetic chemistry, leading to improved data quality.

3.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(43): 18860-18865, 2020 10 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32931084

RESUMO

During the last decade, modern machine learning has found its way into synthetic chemistry. Some long-standing challenges, such as computer-aided synthesis planning (CASP), have been successfully addressed, while other issues have barely been touched. This Viewpoint poses the question of whether current trends can persist in the long term and identifies factors that may lead to an (un)productive development. Thereby, specific risks of molecular machine learning (MML) are discussed. Furthermore, possible sustainable developments are suggested, such as explainable artificial intelligence (exAI) for synthetic chemistry. This Viewpoint will illuminate chances for possible newcomers and aims to guide the community into a discussion about current as well as future trends.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(22): 10173-10183, 2020 06 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32379432

RESUMO

Developing efficient and selective strategies to approach complex architectures containing (multi)stereogenic centers has been a long-standing synthetic challenge in both academia and industry. Catalytic cascade reactions represent a powerful means of rapidly leveraging molecular complexity from simple feedstocks. Unfortunately, carrying out cascade Heck-type reactions involving unactivated (tertiary) alkyl halides remains an unmet challenge owing to unavoidable ß-hydride elimination. Herein, we show that a modular, practical, and general palladium-catalyzed, radical three-component coupling can indeed overcome the aforementioned limitations through an interrupted Heck/allylic substitution sequence mediated by visible light. Selective 1,4-difunctionalization of unactivated 1,3-dienes, such as butadiene, has been achieved by employing different commercially available nitrogen-, oxygen-, sulfur-, or carbon-based nucleophiles and unactivated alkyl bromides (>130 examples, mostly >95:5 E/Z, >20:1 rr). Sequential C(sp3)-C(sp3) and C-X (N, O, S) bonds have been constructed efficiently with a broad scope and high functional group tolerance. The flexibility and versatility of the strategy have been illustrated in a gram-scale reaction and streamlined syntheses of complex ether, sulfone, and tertiary amine products, some of which would be difficult to access via currently established methods.

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