Expanding the Medicinal Chemist Toolbox: Comparing Seven C(sp2)–C(sp3) Cross-Coupling Methods by Library Synthesis

Despite recent advances in the field of C­(sp2)–C­(sp3) cross-couplings and the accompanying increase in publications, it can be hard to determine which method is appropriate for a given reaction when using the highly functionalized intermediates prevalent in medicinal chemistry. Thus a study was do...

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Veröffentlicht in:ACS medicinal chemistry letters 2020-04, Vol.11 (4), p.597-604
Hauptverfasser: Dombrowski, Amanda W, Gesmundo, Nathan J, Aguirre, Ana L, Sarris, Katerina A, Young, Jonathon M, Bogdan, Andrew R, Martin, M. Cynthia, Gedeon, Shasline, Wang, Ying
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Despite recent advances in the field of C­(sp2)–C­(sp3) cross-couplings and the accompanying increase in publications, it can be hard to determine which method is appropriate for a given reaction when using the highly functionalized intermediates prevalent in medicinal chemistry. Thus a study was done comparing the ability of seven methods to directly install a diverse set of alkyl groups on “drug-like” aryl structures via parallel library synthesis. Each method showed substrates that it excelled at coupling compared with the other methods. When analyzing the reactions run across all of the methods, a reaction success rate of 50% was achieved. Whereas this is promising, there are still gaps in the scope of direct C­(sp2)–C­(sp3) coupling methods, like tertiary group installation. The results reported herein should be used to inform future syntheses, assess reaction scope, and encourage medicinal chemists to expand their synthetic toolbox.
ISSN:1948-5875
1948-5875
DOI:10.1021/acsmedchemlett.0c00093