Continuous collective analysis of chemical reactions

The automated synthesis of small organic molecules from modular building blocks has the potential to transform our capacity to create medicines and materials 1 , 2 – 3 . Disruptive acceleration of this molecule-building strategy broadly unlocks its functional potential and requires the integration o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2024-12, Vol.636 (8042), p.374-379
Hauptverfasser: Hu, Maowei, Yang, Lei, Twarog, Nathaniel, Ochoada, Jason, Li, Yong, Vrettos, Eirinaios I., Torres-Hernandez, Arnaldo X., Martinez, James B., Bhatia, Jiya, Young, Brandon M., Price, Jeanine, McGowan, Kevin, Nguyen, Theresa H., Shi, Zhe, Anyanwu, Matthew, Rimmer, Mary Ashley, Mercer, Shea, Rankovic, Zoran, Shelat, Anang A., Blair, Daniel J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The automated synthesis of small organic molecules from modular building blocks has the potential to transform our capacity to create medicines and materials 1 , 2 – 3 . Disruptive acceleration of this molecule-building strategy broadly unlocks its functional potential and requires the integration of many new assembly chemistries. Although recent advances in high-throughput chemistry 4 , 5 – 6 can speed up the development of appropriate synthetic methods, for example, in selecting appropriate chemical reaction conditions from the vast range of potential options, equivalent high-throughput analytical methods are needed. Here we report a streamlined approach for the rapid, quantitative analysis of chemical reactions by mass spectrometry. The intrinsic fragmentation features of chemical building blocks generalize the analyses of chemical reactions, allowing sub-second readouts of reaction outcomes. Central to this advance was identifying that starting material fragmentation patterns function as universal barcodes for downstream product analysis by mass spectrometry. Combining these features with acoustic droplet ejection mass spectrometry 7 , 8 we could eliminate slow chromatographic steps and continuously evaluate chemical reactions in multiplexed formats. This enabled the assignment of reaction conditions to molecules derived from ultrahigh-throughput chemical synthesis experiments. More generally, these results indicate that fragmentation features inherent to chemical synthesis can empower rapid data-rich experimentation. Mass spectrometry fragmentation patterns define analytical barcodes for the rapid, quantitative analysis of high-throughput chemical synthesis experiments.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-024-08211-4