The ACS Green Chemistry Institute® Pharmaceutical Roundtable has assembled an updated list of key research areas to highlight transformations and reaction media where more sustainable technologies would be most impactful.
In recent years,
there has been a growing interest in therapeutic
peptides within the pharmaceutical industry with more than 50 peptide
drugs on the market, approximately 170 in clinical trials, and >200
in preclinical development. However, the current state of the art
in peptide synthesis involves primarily legacy technologies with use
of large amounts of highly hazardous reagents and solvents and little
focus on green chemistry and engineering. In 2016, the ACS Green Chemistry
Institute Pharmaceutical Roundtable identified development of greener
processes for peptide API as a critical unmet need, and as a result,
a new Roundtable team formed to address this important area. The initial
focus of this new team is to highlight best practices in peptide synthesis
and encourage much needed innovations. In this Perspective, we aim
to summarize the current challenges of peptide synthesis and purification
in terms of sustainability, highlight possible solutions, and encourage
synergies between academia, the pharmaceutical industry, and contract
research organizations/contract manufacturing organizations.
Most of today's use of transition metal-catalyzed cross-coupling chemistry relies on expensive quantities of palladium (Pd). Here we report that nanoparticles formed from inexpensive FeCl3 that naturally contains parts-per-million (ppm) levels of Pd can catalyze Suzuki-Miyaura reactions, including cases that involve highly challenging reaction partners. Nanomicelles are employed to both solubilize and deliver the reaction partners to the Fe-ppm Pd catalyst, resulting in carbon-carbon bond formation. The newly formed catalyst can be isolated and stored at ambient temperatures. Aqueous reaction mixtures containing both the surfactant and the catalyst can be recycled.
A review that highlights water as the logical reaction medium in which organic chemistry can be practiced. The key roles that water can play in directing reaction outcomes, including impacting mechanistic features, are discussed using selected examples.
We present the first base-free Fe-catalyzed ester reduction applying molecular hydrogen. Without any additives, a variety of carboxylic acid esters and lactones were hydrogenated with high efficiency. Computations reveal an outer-sphere mechanism involving simultaneous hydrogen transfer from the iron center and the ligand. This assumption is supported by NMR experiments.
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