Accessing three-dimensional molecular diversity through benzylic C-H cross-coupling

Pharmaceutical and agrochemical discovery efforts rely on robust methods for chemical synthesis that rapidly access diverse molecules . Cross-coupling reactions are the most widely used synthetic methods , but these methods typically form bonds to C( )-hybridized carbon atoms (e.g., amide coupling,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature Synthesis 2023-10, Vol.2 (10), p.998-1008
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Si-Jie, He, Cyndi Qixin, Kong, May, Wang, Jun, Lin, Shishi, Krska, Shane W, Stahl, Shannon S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pharmaceutical and agrochemical discovery efforts rely on robust methods for chemical synthesis that rapidly access diverse molecules . Cross-coupling reactions are the most widely used synthetic methods , but these methods typically form bonds to C( )-hybridized carbon atoms (e.g., amide coupling, biaryl coupling) and lead to a prevalence of "flat" molecular structures with suboptimal physicochemical and topological properties . Benzylic C( )-H cross-coupling methods offer an appealing strategy to address this limitation by directly forming bonds to C( )-hybridized carbon atoms, and emerging methods exhibit synthetic versatility that rivals conventional cross-coupling methods to access products with drug-like properties. Here, we use a virtual library of >350,000 benzylic ethers and ureas derived from benzylic C-H cross-coupling to test the widely held view that coupling at C( )-hybridized carbon atoms affords products with improved three-dimensionality. The results show that the conformational rigidity of the benzylic scaffold strongly influences the product dimensionality. Products derived from flexible scaffolds often exhibit little or no improvement in three-dimensionality, unless they adopt higher energy conformations. This outcome introduces an important consideration when designing routes to topologically diverse molecular libraries. The concepts elaborated herein are validated experimentally through an informatics-guided synthesis of selected targets and the use of high-throughput experimentation to prepare a library of three-dimensional products that are broadly distributed across drug-like chemical space.
ISSN:2731-0582
2731-0582
DOI:10.1038/s44160-023-00332-4