Probing Chemical Space with Alkaloid-Inspired Libraries

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Issue Date
2014-01-19Author
McLeod, Michael C.
Singh, Gurpreet
Plampin, James N., III
Rane, Digamber
Wang, Jenna L.
Day, Victor W.
Aubé, Jeffrey
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, author accepted manuscript
Published Version
https://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v6/n2/full/nchem.1844.htmlRights
Copyright Nature Publishing Group
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Screening of small molecule libraries is an important aspect of probe and drug discovery science. Numerous authors have suggested that bioactive natural products are attractive starting points for such libraries, due to their structural complexity and sp3-rich character. Here, we describe the construction of a screening library based on representative members of four families of biologically active alkaloids (Stemonaceae, the structurally related cyclindricine and lepadiformine families, lupin, and Amaryllidaceae). In each case, scaffolds were based on structures of the naturally occurring compounds or a close derivative. Scaffold preparation was pursued following the development of appropriate enabling chemical methods. Diversification provided 686 new compounds suitable for screening. The libraries thus prepared had structural characteristics, including sp3 content, comparable to a basis set of representative natural products and were highly rule-of-five compliant.
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Citation
McLeod, Michael C. et al. “Probing Chemical Space with Alkaloid-Inspired Libraries.” Nature chemistry 6.2 (2014): 133–140.
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