A novel assembly of two structurally related 14-membered ring macrocyclic hepatitis C virus protease inhibitors is presented. Key to their successful construction was an ultimate ring-closing metathesis step on the respective highly functionalized dienyl-ureas. In the case of IDX316, this procedure significantly outperformed the original macrocyclizations in terms of reaction conditions, impurity profile, product isolation, and basic efficiency metrics. Simple nonchromatographic purification methods achieved sub-10-ppm ruthenium content in the isolated product. Overall yields to IDX316 from all five starting materials ranged from 11 to 40%, and the estimated process mass intensity was improved by a factor of 50 relative to the original unscalable discovery-based routes. Application of similar methodology in the case of IDX320 and first scale-up to halfkilogram batch sizes was demonstrated.
Necroptosis is a regulated caspase-independent cell death mechanism that results in morphological features resembling non-regulated necrosis. This form of cell death can be induced in an array of cell types in apoptotic deficient conditions with death receptor family ligands. A series of [1,2,3]thiadiazole benzylamides was found to be potent necroptosis inhibitors (called necrostatins). A structure-activity relationship study revealed that small cyclic alkyl groups (i.e. cyclopropyl) and 2,6-dihalobenzylamides at the 4- and 5-positions of the [1,2,3]thiadiazole, respectively, were optimal. In addition, when a small alkyl group (i.e. methyl) was present on the benzylic position all the necroptosis inhibitory activity resided with the (S)-enantiomer. Finally, replacement of the [1,2,3]thiadiazole with a variety of thiophene derivatives was tolerated, although some erosion of potency was observed.
[reaction: see text] Effective nickel-catalyzed cocycloaddition of nonconjugated diynes with conjugated diynes yields polysubstituted arylalkynes in good to excellent yields with high regio- and chemoselectivity.
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