As an orthogonal principle to the established (hetero)aryl halides, we herein highlight the usefulness of CF 2 X (X = Cl, Br, or I) moieties. Using tool compounds bearing CF 2 X moieties, we study their chemical/metabolic stability and their logP/solubility, as well as the role of XB in their small molecular crystal structures. Employing QM techniques, we analyze the observed interactions, provide insights into the conformational flexibilities and preferences in the potential interaction space. For their application in molecular design, we characterize their XB donor capacities and its interaction strength dependent on geometric parameters. Implementation of CF 2 X acetamides into our HEFLibs and biophysical evaluation (STD-NMR/ITC), followed by X-ray analysis, reveals a highly interesting binding mode for fragment 23 in JNK3, featuring an XB of CF 2 Br toward the P-loop, as well as chalcogen bonds. We suggest that underexplored chemical space combined with unconventional binding modes provides excellent opportunities for patentable chemotypes for therapeutic intervention.
■ SIGNIFICANCEStarting from asciminib, we thoroughly characterize the great potential of CF 2 X moieties as strong halogen bond donors with a multitude of experimental and computational methods. While traditionally halogens in drug-like molecules are only attached to (hetero)aryl systems, these new moieties facilitate the escape from planarity into the third dimension. Hence, they provide completely new opportunities to harness the highly directional XB interactions in drug design and discovery.