| Literature DB >> 21067169 |
Lisa A Marcaurelle1, Eamon Comer, Sivaraman Dandapani, Jeremy R Duvall, Baudouin Gerard, Sarathy Kesavan, Maurice D Lee, Haibo Liu, Jason T Lowe, Jean-Charles Marie, Carol A Mulrooney, Bhaumik A Pandya, Ann Rowley, Troy D Ryba, Byung-Chul Suh, Jingqiang Wei, Damian W Young, Lakshmi B Akella, Nathan T Ross, Yan-Ling Zhang, Daniel M Fass, Surya A Reis, Wen-Ning Zhao, Stephen J Haggarty, Michelle Palmer, Michael A Foley.
Abstract
An aldol-based build/couple/pair (B/C/P) strategy was applied to generate a collection of stereochemically and skeletally diverse small molecules. In the build phase, a series of asymmetric syn- and anti-aldol reactions were performed to produce four stereoisomers of a Boc-protected γ-amino acid. In addition, both stereoisomers of O-PMB-protected alaninol were generated to provide a chiral amine coupling partner. In the couple step, eight stereoisomeric amides were synthesized by coupling the chiral acid and amine building blocks. The amides were subsequently reduced to generate the corresponding secondary amines. In the pair phase, three different reactions were employed to enable intramolecular ring-forming processes: nucleophilic aromatic substitution (S(N)Ar), Huisgen [3+2] cycloaddition, and ring-closing metathesis (RCM). Despite some stereochemical dependencies, the ring-forming reactions were optimized to proceed with good to excellent yields, providing a variety of skeletons ranging in size from 8- to 14-membered rings. Scaffolds resulting from the RCM pairing reaction were diversified on the solid phase to yield a 14 400-membered library of macrolactams. Screening of this library led to the discovery of a novel class of histone deacetylase inhibitors, which display mixed enzyme inhibition, and led to increased levels of acetylation in a primary mouse neuron culture. The development of stereo-structure/activity relationships was made possible by screening all 16 stereoisomers of the macrolactams produced through the aldol-based B/C/P strategy.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21067169 PMCID: PMC3004530 DOI: 10.1021/ja105119r
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419