Bacillithiol (BSH) has been prepared on the gram scale from the inexpensive starting material, D-glucosamine hydrochloride, in 11 steps and 8-9% overall yield. The BSH was used to survey the substrate and metal-ion selectivity of FosB enzymes from four Gram-positive microorganisms associated with the deactivation of the antibiotic fosfomycin. The in vitro results indicate that the preferred thiol substrate and metal ion for the FosB from Staphylococcus aureus are BSH and Ni(II), respectively. However, the metal ion selectivity is less distinct with FosB from Bacillus subtilis, Bacillus anthracis or Bacillus cereus.
This Letter describes the continued optimization of an MLPCN probe molecule (ML012) through an iterative parallel synthesis approach. After exploring extensive modifications throughout the parent structure, we arrived at a more highly M1-selective antagonist, compound 13l (VU0415248). Muscarinic subtype selectivity across all five human and rat receptors for 13l, along with rat selectivity for the lead compound (ML012), is presented.
Chemical
synthesis has been described as a central science. Its
practice provides access to the chemical structures of known and/or
designed function. In particular, human health is greatly impacted
by synthesis that enables advancements in both basic science discoveries
in chemical biology as well as translational research that can lead
to new therapeutics. To support the chemical synthesis needs of investigators
across campus, the Vanderbilt Institute of Chemical Biology established
a chemical synthesis core as part of its foundation in 2008. Provided
in this Review are examples of synthetic products, known and designed,
produced in the core over the past 10 years.
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