β-Lactam antibiotics are one of the most important antibacterial drug classes worldwide. This work will present the first prototype on-DNA β-lactam combinatorial library with novel structures and chemical space properties that would be significant for phenotypic screening to identify the next generation of antibiotics to combat the pervasive problem of bacterial resistance.
1-Iodoalkynes and 1,3-diynes are versatile chemical intermediates and pharmaceutically valuable ingredients. In this study, copper mediated on-DNA alkyne iodination and Cadiot-Chodkiewicz coupling are developed for the first time. This generates diverse, systematic, and unprecedented topographic structural features, which could be invaluable as molecular recognition agents for drug discovery in DEL screening.
An efficient approach for aryl acetylene
DNA-encoded
library (DEL)
synthesis was developed in this study by transition-metal-mediated
inverse Sonogashira reaction of 1-iodoalkyne with boronic acid under
ambient conditions, with moderate to excellent conversions and broad
substrate adaptability for the first time. Compared to palladium-phosphine,
copper iodide performed better in the on-DNA inverse Sonogashira
reaction. Interestingly, substrate diversity can be enhanced by first
interrogating coupling reagents under copper-promoted conditions,
and then revalidating them under palladium-facilitated conditions
for those reagents which failed under the former. This complementary
validation strategy is particularly well-fitted to any DEL validation
studies.
Thiophene and its substituted derivatives are a highly important class of heterocyclic compounds, with noteworthy applications in pharmaceutical ingredients. In this study, we leverage the unique reactivity of alkynes to generate thiophenes on-DNA, using a cascade iodination, Cadiot-Chodkiewicz coupling and heterocyclization. This approach, tackling on-DNA thiophene synthesis for the first time, generates diverse, and unprecedented structural and chemical features, which could be significant motifs in DEL screening as molecular recognition agents for drug discovery.
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