A new, highly chemo-and enantio-selective catalytic hetero-Diels-Alder reaction of conjugated dienes containing allylic C-H bonds with carbonyl compounds has been developed; with the use of (9-(-)-BINOL-AlMe (BINOL = 1,l'-bi-2-naphthol) as a catalyst, simple conjugated dienes react with glyoxylate esters, giving the (R)-enantiomer of the hetero-Diels-Alder adduct as the major product with up to 97% ee.The hetero-Diels-Alder (HDA) reaction of conjugated dienes with carbonyl compounds is a fundamental reaction in organic chemistry.' The reaction of a conjugated diene having an allylic C-H bond with an electron deficient aldehyde can take two different reaction courses, leading to the formation of both the HDA product and the hetero-ene product [eqn. ( l)].'-' Great EWG = electron-withdrawing group
A combinatorial split-and-mix library of peptide isosters based on a Diels-Alder reaction was synthesized as a "one-bead-two-compounds" library and encoded by ladder synthesis for facile analysis by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry. In the "one-bead-two-compounds" library approach, each bead contains a library member as a putative protease inhibitor along with a fluorescence-quenched substrate for the protease. When the library was screened with CPB2.8 DeltaCTE, a recombinant cysteine protease from L. mexicana, several beads containing compounds with inhibitory activity could be selected from the library and analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS for structure elucidation. Two types of inhibitors were revealed. One novel class of inhibitors had the bicyclic Diels-Alder product isosteric element incorporated internally in a peptide, while the other type was an N-terminal alpha,beta-unsaturated ketone Michael acceptor used as starting material for the Diels-Alder reaction. Selected hit sequences and constructed consensus sequences based on the observed frequencies of amino acids in different subsites were resynthesized and assayed in solution for inhibitor activity and were shown to have IC(50) values in the high nanomolar to low micromolar range.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.