Miniaturised high-throughput experimentation (HTE) is widely employed in industrial and academic laboratories for rapid reaction optimisation using material-limited, multifactorial reaction condition screening. In fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD), common toolbox reactions such as the Suzuki-Miyaura and Buchwald-Hartwig cross couplings can be hampered by the fragment's intrinsic heteroatom-rich pharmacophore which is required for ligand-protein binding. At Astex, we are using microscale HTE to speed up reaction optimisation and prevent target down-prioritisation. By identifying catalyst/base/solvent combinations which tolerate unprotected heteroatoms we can rapidly optimise key cross-couplings and expedite route design by avoiding superfluous protecting group manipulations. However, HTE requires extensive upfront training, and this modern automated synthesis technique largely differs to the way organic chemists are traditionally trained. To make HTE accessible to all our synthetic chemists we have developed a semi-automated workflow enabled by pre-made 96-well screening kits, rapid analytical methods and in-house software development, which is empowering chemists at Astex to run HTE screens independently with minimal training.
Enabling synthesis in fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD): microscale high-throughput optimisation of the medicinal chemist's toolbox reactions.
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作者:Townley Chloe, Branduardi Davide, Chessari Gianni, Cons Benjamin D, Griffiths-Jones Charlotte, Hall Richard J, Johnson Christopher N, Ochi Yuji, Whibley Stuart, Grainger Rachel
| 期刊: | RSC Medicinal Chemistry | 影响因子: | 3.600 |
| 时间: | 2023 | 起止号: | 2023 Nov 24; 14(12):2699-2713 |
| doi: | 10.1039/d3md00495c | ||
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