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Patrick An Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry 3/e Chapter 14 COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY

Patrick An Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry 3/e Chapter 14 COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY Part 1: Sections 14.1 – 14.4. Contents Part 1: Sections 14.1 – 14.4 1. Definition 2. Solid Phase Techniques 2.1. Advantages 2.2. Requirements 2.3. Examples of Solid Supports (2 slides)

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Patrick An Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry 3/e Chapter 14 COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY

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  1. Patrick An Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry 3/e Chapter 14 COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY Part 1: Sections 14.1 – 14.4

  2. Contents Part 1: Sections 14.1 – 14.4 1. Definition 2. Solid Phase Techniques 2.1. Advantages 2.2. Requirements 2.3. Examples of Solid Supports (2 slides) 2.4. Anchor or linker 2.4.1. Merrifield resin for peptide synthesis (chloromethyl group) 2.4.2. Wang resin (2 slides) 2.4.3. Rink resin (2 slides) 2.4.4. Dihydropyran resin (2 slides) 3. Parallel Synthesis 3.1. Houghton’s Tea Bag Procedure 3.2. Automated parallel synthesis (2 slides) 3.3. Automated parallel synthesis of all 27 tripeptides from 3 amino acids (2 slides) 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis (21 slides) [41 slides]

  3. 1. DEFINITION • The automated synthesis of a large number of compounds in a short time period using a defined reaction route and a large variety of reactants • Normally carried out on small scale using solid phase synthesis and automated synthetic machines • Parallel synthesis • Single product formed in each reaction vessel • Useful for SAR and drug optimisation • Synthesis of mixtures • Mixtures of compounds formed in each reaction vessel • Useful for finding lead compounds

  4. 2. SOLID PHASE TECHNIQUES • Reactants are bound to a polymeric surface and modified whilst still attached. Final product is released at the end of the synthesis • 2.1 Advantages • Specific reactants can be bound to specific beads • Beads can be mixed and reacted in the same reaction vessel • Products formed are distinctive for each bead and physically distinct • Excess reagents can be used to drive reactions to completion • Excess reagents and by products are easily removed • Reaction intermediates are attached to bead and do not need to be isolated and purified • Individual beads can be separated to isolate individual products • Polymeric support can be regenerated and re-used after cleaving the product • Automation is possible

  5. 2. SOLID PHASE TECHNIQUES 2.2 Requirements • A resin bead or a functionalised surface to act as a solid support • An anchor or linker • A bond linking the substrate to the linker. The bond must be stable to the reaction conditions used in the synthesis • A means of cleaving the product from the linker at the end • Protecting groups for functional groups not involved in the synthesis

  6. 2. SOLID PHASE TECHNIQUES 2.3 Examples of Solid Supports • Partially cross-linked polystyrene beads hydrophobic in nature • causes problems in peptide synthesis due to peptide folding • Sheppard’s polyamide resin - more polar • Tentagel resin - similar environment to ether or THF • Beads, pins and functionalised glass surfaces

  7. Swelling Starting material, reagents and solvent Linkers 2. SOLID PHASE TECHNIQUES 2.3 • Beads must be able to swell in the solvent used, and remain • stable • Most reactions occur in the bead interior

  8. 2. SOLID PHASE TECHNIQUES 2.4 Anchor or linker • A molecular moiety which is covalently attached to the solid support, and which contains a reactive functional group • Allows attachment of the first reactant • The link must be stable to the reaction conditions in the synthesis but easily cleaved to release the final compound • Different linkers are available depending on the functional group to be attached and the desired functional group on the product • Resins are named to define the linker e.g. Merrifield • Wang • Rink

  9. Linker Release from solid support Peptide 2.4.1 Merrifield resin for peptide synthesis (chloromethyl group)

  10. Linking functional group Linker Bead Linker 2.4.2 Wang resin

  11. piperidine deprotection 2.4.2 Wang resin Carboxylic acid Carboxylic acid

  12. Linking functional group Linker 2.4.3 Rink resin

  13. cleavage 2.4.3 Rink resin Carboxylic acid Primary amide

  14. Linking functional group Linker 2.4.4 Dihydropyran resin

  15. 2.4.4 Dihydropyran resin Alcohol Alcohol

  16. 3. Parallel Synthesis Aims • To use a standard synthetic route to produce a range of analogues, with a different analogue in each reaction vessel, tube or well • The identity of each structure is known • Useful for producing a range of analogues for SAR or drug optimisation

  17. 22 3. Parallel Synthesis 3.1 Houghton’s Tea Bag Procedure • Each tea bag contains beads and is labelled • Separate reactions are carried out on each tea bag • Combine tea bags for common reactions or work up procedures • A single product is synthesised within each teabag • Different products are formed in different teabags • Economy of effort - e.g. combining tea bags for workups • Cheap and possible for any lab • Manual procedure and is not suitable for producing large quantities of different products

  18. 3. Parallel Synthesis 3.2 Automated parallel synthesis AUTOMATED SYNTHETIC MACHINES

  19. Wells 3. Parallel Synthesis 3.2 Automated parallel synthesis • Automated synthesisers are available with 42, 96 or 144 reaction vessels or wells • Use beads or pins for solid phase support • Reactions and work ups are carried out automatically • Same synthetic route used for each vessel, but different reagents • Different product obtained per vessel

  20. 3. Parallel Synthesis 3.3 Automated parallel synthesis of all 27 tripeptides from 3 amino acids ETC

  21. 3. Parallel Synthesis 3.3 Automated parallel synthesis of all 27 tripeptides from 3 amino acids 27 TRIPEPTIDES 27 VIALS

  22. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis Aims • To use a standard synthetic route to produce a large variety of different analogues where each reaction vessel or tube contains a mixture of products • The identities of the structures in each vessel are not known with certainty • Useful for finding a lead compound • Capable of synthesising large numbers of compounds quickly • Each mixture is tested for activity as the mixture • Inactive mixtures are stored in combinatorial libraries • Active mixtures are studied further to identify active component

  23. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method • Example • - Synthesis of all possible dipeptides using 5 amino acids • Standard methods would involve 25 separate syntheses Combinatorial procedure involves five separate syntheses using a mix and split strategy

  24. Split Gly Ala Phe Val Ser

  25. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method Synthesis of all possible tripeptides using 3 amino acids

  26. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  27. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  28. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method MIX

  29. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method SPLIT

  30. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  31. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  32. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  33. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method MIX

  34. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method SPLIT

  35. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  36. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  37. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method

  38. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method No. of Tripeptides 9 9 9

  39. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method No. of Tripeptides 9 9 9 27 Tripeptides 3 Vials

  40. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method TEST MIXTURES FOR ACTIVITY

  41. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method Synthesise each tripeptide and test

  42. 4. Mixed Combinatorial Synthesis The Mix and Split Method HEXAPEPTIDES 20 AMINO ACIDS etc. 34 MILLION PRODUCTS (1,889,568 hexapeptides / vial)

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