Reaction heterogeneity, poor pH control, and catalyst decomposition in the ring-closing metathesis (RCM) of DNA-chemical conjugates lead to poor yields of the cyclized products. Herein we address these issues with a RCM reaction system that includes a novel aqueous solvent combination to enable reaction homogeneity, an acidic buffer system which masks traditionally problematic functional groups, and a decomposition-resistant catalyst which maximizes conversion to the cyclized product. Additionally, we provide a systematic study of the substrate scope of the on-DNA RCM reaction, a demonstration of its applicability to a single-substrate DNA-encoded chemical library that includes sequencing analysis, and the first successful stapling of an unprotected on-DNA [i, i+4] peptide.
Reaction heterogeneity, poor pH control, and catalyst decomposition in the ring-closing metathesis (RCM) of DNA-chemical conjugates lead to poor yields of the cyclized products. Herein we address these issues with a RCM reaction system that includes a novel aqueous solvent combination to enable reaction homogeneity, an acidic buffer system which masks traditionally problematic functional groups, and a decomposition-resistant catalyst which maximizes conversion to the cyclized product. Additionally, we provide a systematic study of the substrate scope of the on-DNA RCM reaction, a demonstration of its applicability to a single-substrate DNA-encoded chemical library that includes sequencing analysis, and the first successful stapling of an unprotected on-DNA [i, i+4] peptide.
Since
the conception of DNA-encoded combinatorial
chemical libraries by Brenner and Lerner,[1] many variations of DNA-encoded chemical screening technologies have
been developed to aid drug discovery efforts.[2] Advancements both in the production of large quantities of synthetic
DNA oligomers[3] and in high-throughput DNA-sequencing
methods[4] now allow for rapid and cost-effective
screens of vast DNA-encoded chemical library (DECL) collections against
biological targets.[5] DECLs are single-pot
chemical libraries consisting of compounds that each possess a covalently
attached, unique DNA sequence “barcode”, which enables
identification of binder compounds by DNA sequencing after multiplexed
target-based screens. Compared to high-throughput compound collections
and screens, DECLs are relatively inexpensive to prepare and use[6] and, most importantly, offer the opportunity
for deeper exploration of chemical space[5] enabled by unprecedented numbers of compounds per DECL—millions
to trillions compared to only hundreds of thousands per HTS chemical
library.[7] Additionally, DECLs have provided
starting points for the development of several clinical candidates[6,8] and are considered by many to have become one of the pillars of
drug discovery.[9] However, while large numbers
are the main advantage of DECLs, the chemical diversity achievable
under its umbrella is limited by the number of effective DNA-compatible
reactions. Currently, only a limited set of DNA-compatible, solution-phase
chemical reactions has been reported,[10−18] and expanding the repertoire of chemical reactions to more effectively
sample chemical space is a major goal within this area.Within
the compendium of synthetic methodologies, the ring-closing metathesis
(RCM) reaction has become a mainstay for the construction of organic
molecules spanning a wide range of structural diversity and complexity.
Accordingly, it has been applied across medicinal, natural product,
and diversity-oriented synthetic endeavors.[19−22] The widespread popularity of
RCM is grounded in several reasons: its broad and well-studied functional
group and substrate tolerance, the commercial availability of a wide
array of air-stable, tunable Ru-based catalysts,[23,24] its successful application in aqueous media,[25,26] and its relevance to the production of drug-like compounds[27,28] as well as novel molecular frameworks for the probing of unexplored
chemical space.[22] DECL productions are
based on combinatorial chemistry, and the RCM reaction would therefore
be a significant enhancement to the technology. Stimulated by our
interest in combining chemical diversity and large numbers for drug
discovery, we became interested in the application of RCM to the production
of DECLs. Our work was not done in a vacuum, however, and the precedents
upon which we built need mentioning.The modification of proteins
using the cross-metathesis (CM) reaction[29] has been demonstrated in aqueous tert-butanol,
using a high excess (10,000 equiv) of MgCl2 as a Lewis
acidic masking agent. Additionally, RCM-stapling of unprotected peptides
has been achieved in water using the water-soluble AquaMet catalyst,
also in the presence of MgCl2 (400 equiv).[30] The Mg2+ ion is believed to act as a mild Lewis
acid, masking coordinating functional groups typically prevalent in
biomolecules.[29,31] Finally Lu et al.[32] reported the use of a third generation Grubbs
catalyst/MgCl2/aq. tert-butanol system
for the on-DNA RCM and cross metathesis (CM) reactions. While the
latter study established that RCM could be achieved on DNA–chemical
conjugates, the reported conditions were not adequate, in our hands,
for the use of RCM in a DECL production.The addressed limitations
of the previously reported work[32] include
a) the insolubility of the Ru catalyst used in aqueous tert-butanol, b) the tendency of phase separation between high-salt (MgCl2) aqueous solutions and tert-butanol leading
to heterogeneity, c) the absence of pH control, d) a narrowly explored
substrate scope, and e) the formation of significant amounts of side
products arising from catalyst decomposition, which limits the yield
of the reaction. Furthermore, we demonstrate 1) the applicability
of the developed conditions to a single-substrate DECL as a way to
test for susceptibility to varying DNA sequences, 2) the maintenance
of DNA integrity post-RCM via sequencing analysis, and 3) the first
successful stapling of an unprotected on-DNA [i, i+4] peptide as an
illustration of the robust functional group tolerance of the developed
conditions.
Results and Discussion
Our work relies on three key
findings: 1) a solvent system that allows for homogeneous reaction
conditions with much lower catalyst loading, 2) a nonclassical acidic
“buffer” that not only avoids basicity but also masks
coordinating functional groups—in addition to the effect of
MgCl2, and 3) the use of a decomposition-resistant catalyst, B, that minimizes side reactions and maximizes conversion.
Our developed reaction conditions are presented in Scheme , and our studies toward its
development and application are discussed in the following sections.
Scheme 1
Reaction Conditions and Performance Summary of This Work versus Previously
Reported Work
(i) Grubbs third generation catalyst A and its 2,2′-biphenyldiamine derivative B; (ii) previously reported conditions for the on-DNA RCM and CM reactions;
(iii) our main conditions for the on-DNA RCM and CM reactions; *average
percent conversion for the investigated substrate scope (22 substrates).
Reaction Conditions and Performance Summary of This Work versus Previously
Reported Work
(i) Grubbs third generation catalyst A and its 2,2′-biphenyldiamine derivative B; (ii) previously reported conditions for the on-DNA RCM and CM reactions;
(iii) our main conditions for the on-DNA RCM and CM reactions; *average
percent conversion for the investigated substrate scope (22 substrates).
Development of a Solvent System for Reaction Homogeneity
To enhance the reproducibility of RCM on substrates with variably
sized DNA tags at a range of scales, our initial work focused on developing
a fully homogeneous catalyst–aqueous solvent system combination.
Unfortunately, many conventional RCM catalysts (e.g., Grubbs I, Grubbs
II, Hoveyda–Grubbs I, Hoveyda–Grubbs II, Grela) are
extremely insoluble in most aqueous alcoholic mixtures and were ultimately
found to be unproductive for on-DNA RCM under a variety of conditions.
Ammonium-functionalized RCM catalysts (e.g., Aquamet)[30,33] have high solubility in aqueous solutions but were also unproductive
for on-DNA RCM, presumably due to DNA–ammonium interactions.[34] Even the fast-initiating Grubbs III catalyst A (Scheme ) utilized in the previously reported on-DNA RCM exhibits limited
solubility in alcohols (soluble up to 1 mM in pure tBuOH).
In addition, most nonalcoholic water-miscible solvents (e.g., 1,2-dimethoxyethane
or 1,4-dioxane) are metal-coordinating and generally suppress metathesis.
Informed by reports of conventional RCM in ethyl acetate as solvent,[35] we were pleased to discover methyl acetate as
a much better solvent for both catalysts A and B (∼4 mM). When a methyl acetate/ethanol/water solvent
mixture was used, fully homogeneous reaction mixtures were observed,
even for solutions at high ionic strengths. Due to the fixed solubility
of B in methyl acetate, a reaction concentration of only
0.02 mM was possible to maintain adequate solvent percentages. While
high dilution favors intramolecular metathesis, it can also stress
the catalyst[36]—a trade-off we attempted
to mitigate through the use of the more robust catalyst B. Additionally, a reaction concentration of 0.02 mM would be manageable
during DECL production, which is the central motivation behind our
efforts.
Development of a Brønsted Acidic “Buffer”
To avoid catalyst degradation at basic pH[37] and to enhance the masking of coordinating functional groups, we
sought to include an acidic buffering system. Despite numerous reports
of RCM in the presence of aqueous buffers,[38,39] we found that even modest amounts of common buffers (e.g., phosphate)
or “noncoordinating” buffers[40,41] (e.g., 2-(N-morpholino)ethanesulfonic acid) inhibited
reactivity. Hypothesizing the suppression was due to undesired coordination
of the buffer’s nonhalide conjugate bases to the Ru center,
we considered whether the inclusion of large amounts of NH4Cl could induce an acidic pH without presenting RCM-suppressing buffer
anions. Although not a buffer in the traditional sense, NH4Cl may block Lewis-base interactions via protonation and/or hydrogen-bonding
(e.g., a 4 M aqueous solution of NH4Cl has a pH of ∼5).
Indeed, as illustrated in Table , adding NH4Cl significantly enhances conversion
(e.g., entries 2 vs 9). With a homogeneous solvent system capable
of tolerating high ionic strength in hand, we optimized the proportions
of NH4Cl and MgCl2 for both high conversion
and quality of the LC-MS trace. Ultimately a combination of 20,000
equiv of MgCl2 and 12,000 equiv of NH4Cl for
30 min with 10 equiv of catalyst[42] was
found to be optimal (Table ).
Table 1
Screen for the Optimal
Equivalences of MgCl2 and NH4Clg
All reactions were run with 1 nmol
of 1a.
The
percent conversions
(% conv.) were determined by LC/MS after the quenching procedure,
as described in the Supporting Information.
The MS trace was of higher
quality relative to that of Trial 6 despite a lower conversion.
The MS trace was of higher quality
relative to Trial 10.
The MS signals for those were of lower quality relative to Trial
10.
*Catalyst B instead of A. ΔCatalyst B instead
of A, reaction time 5 min. ¥Catalyst B instead of A, reaction time 60 min.
All reactions were run with 1 nmol
of 1a.The
percent conversions
(% conv.) were determined by LC/MS after the quenching procedure,
as described in the Supporting Information.The MS trace was of higher
quality relative to that of Trial 6 despite a lower conversion.The MS trace was of higher quality
relative to Trial 10.The MS signals for those were of lower quality relative to Trial
10.*Catalyst B instead of A. ΔCatalyst B instead
of A, reaction time 5 min. ¥Catalyst B instead of A, reaction time 60 min.
Application of a Decomposition-Resistant
Catalyst
Despite these encouraging results, conversions remained
limited by the formation of side products. These appeared to originate
in the reduction of one or both olefins, the loss of methylene from
one of the olefins and/or the isomerization of the starting material
to an unreactive internal olefin (see the Supporting Information). Unfortunately, attempts to suppress those undesired
reactions with standard additives such as benzoquinones[36] were unsuccessful (various benzoquinones were
incompatible with NH4Cl and also degraded DNA). While several
catalytic species have been proposed as culprits behind such side
reactions,[37,43,44] a compelling study by Fogg and co-workers[45]—showing that the addition of substoichiometric amounts of
a poisoning ligand limits isomerization—proved to be key to
our discovery of the adequacy of B for our purposes.
Indeed, we found that the addition of 2,2′-biphenyldiamine, C, to A, as shown in Scheme (ii), enhances the percent conversion (see
the Supporting Information). However, we
were aware of another study by Fogg and co-workers[46] which reported the 40% equilibrium yield of decomposition-resistant
catalyst B from A in the presence of C, at RT. We therefore suspected that the in situ formation of B was responsible for the conversion enhancement
observed. The substitution of B for A, as
shown in Scheme (iii),
indeed proved to significantly enhance conversion beyond what an A–C combination could achieve (Tables –4). Since catalyst B was not commercially
available at the time of the study and given its reported synthesis
requires a glovebox,[46] we also studied
alternative reaction conditions involving catalyst A instead
(Scheme ).
Scheme 2
Alternative
Reaction Conditions using
Catalyst A
*The screening results used to
determine the optimal equivalence of C are provided in the Supporting
Information, Table S1. Δ Average
percent conversion for the investigated substrate scope (22 substrates).
Table 2
Ring Size Scope Study
All reactions were
run with 1 nmol of each diene.
The percent conversions (% conv.) were determined by LC/MS after
quenching, as described in the Supporting Information.
Ring sizes in
terms of number of member atoms; reaction conditions: green = main
reaction conditions, blue = alternative #2, black = alternative #1,
and red = Lu et al.
Table 4
Additional Substrate Scope Study
As in Table .
Ring sizes in terms of number of member
atoms; reaction conditions: green = main reaction conditions, blue
= alternative #2, black = alternative #1, and red = Lu et al.
Alternative
Reaction Conditions using
Catalyst A
*The screening results used to
determine the optimal equivalence of C are provided in the Supporting
Information, Table S1. Δ Average
percent conversion for the investigated substrate scope (22 substrates).All reactions were
run with 1 nmol of each diene.The percent conversions (% conv.) were determined by LC/MS after
quenching, as described in the Supporting Information.Ring sizes in
terms of number of member atoms; reaction conditions: green = main
reaction conditions, blue = alternative #2, black = alternative #1,
and red = Lu et al.Of
note, reactions within DECLs are typically performed on nano- to micromole
scales, and mass spectrometry is the main method of characterization.
Therefore, to further corroborate the formation of the putative cyclized
product, we developed a chemical derivatization protocol through OsO4-mediated dihydroxylation, which reveals the number of olefins
present (Scheme ).
Results of the dihydroxylation of the post-RCM reaction mixture of 1a were consistent with the formation of the cyclized product
as the major product (see the Supporting Information).
Scheme 3
Confirmation of Ring Formation via Chemical Modification
We next turned to applying these
four conditions—the
previously reported conditions from Lu et al. (Scheme , (ii), our main reaction conditions (Scheme , (iii), and the
two alternative conditions (Scheme )—to a series of substrate scope studies (Tables –4). Overall, while the conditions reported by Lu
et al. exhibit comparable conversions for simple substrates, significant
differences were observed for those containing unfavorable coordinating
functional groups.We first investigated the ring-size scope
of the reaction (Table ). Although all four conditions generally produced similar results,
the tBuOH/MgCl2 system significantly underperformed
in the case of 3a. This may stem from the presence of
the glycol chain within this substrate. Of note, these reactions were
complete after only 30 min at room temperature, which is remarkable
given it can take days and high temperatures for rings of comparable
size to close in organic media.[24]To investigate
the functional group tolerance of the four reaction conditions, we
synthesized a series of substrates differentiated only by substitution
at a single position (Table ). Using substrate 4a (R = H) as benchmark, we
were able to demonstrate the remarkable functional group tolerance
of our main reaction conditions. Indeed, functional groups such as
the carboxylic acid of 8a or the amine of 13a—groups typically protected in organic-phase RCM—exhibited
at least half the conversion obtained for reference compound 4a. This suggests that the incorporation of NH4Cl exerts an acidic masking effect, consistent with other reports
of RCM in the presence of acidic additives.[47,48] In contrast, the previously reported unbuffered MgCl2/BuOH condition exhibited significant
sensitivity to the indole of 5a, the thiopheneof 7a, the carboxylic acid of 8a, and the phenol
of 10a.
Table 3
Functional Group
Tolerance Study
As in Table ; reaction conditions:
green = main reaction conditions, blue = alternative #2, black = alternative
#1, and red = Lu et al.; nd = not determined. Note that no thiol-containing
substrate was included due to dimerization via disulfide formation
between DNA conjugates.
As in Table ; reaction conditions:
green = main reaction conditions, blue = alternative #2, black = alternative
#1, and red = Lu et al.; nd = not determined. Note that no thiol-containing
substrate was included due to dimerization via disulfide formation
between DNA conjugates.We also tested a series of on-DNA compounds designed to investigate
other DECL-relevant substrate features (Table ). While we had previously
observed that internal olefins were unreactive to our RCM conditions,
we sought to assess the impact of small substituents in β-methyl 14a and α-methyl 15a. When compared to
the analogous unsubstituted 1a, 14a and 15a were cyclized in modest conversions, suggesting a low-tolerance
for steric-encumbrance at or near the olefin. The presence of an allylic
chalcogen is known to enhance RCM efficiency through a preassociation
effect.[49] However, comparable conversions
were observed for alkyl 16a and related allyl ether 17a. The proximity of coordinating groups to the olefin may
also inhibit successful cyclization. Although all four RCM conditions
effected negligible cyclization on 18a and 19a—bearing a proximally located pyridyl and sulfonamide, respectively—a
modest amount of cyclization was observed for 21a—exhibiting
a more distally located pyrimidine. Homoallylic alcohols are a potential
substrate series for on-DNA RCM, as the water-compatible allylation
of aldehydes is well-known.[50] Homoallyl
alcohols 20a and 22a were successfully cyclized,
although sterically encumbered 20a afforded lower conversion.
Finally we applied these conditions to the CM of 5-hexenoic acid with
the CM-favored thioether substrate[51]23a. All four conditions provided the CM product in moderate
to good conversion (Scheme ).
Scheme 4
On-DNA Cross Metathesis (CM)
The
reaction was run with 1 nmol of 23a. A 50 mM stock solution
of the 5-hexenoic acid building block was prepared in ethanol. The
percent conversions (% conv.) were determined by LC/MS after the quenching
procedure, as described in the Supporting Information. Reaction conditions: green = main reaction conditions, blue = alternative
#2, black = alternative #1, and red = Lu et al.
On-DNA Cross Metathesis (CM)
The
reaction was run with 1 nmol of 23a. A 50 mM stock solution
of the 5-hexenoic acid building block was prepared in ethanol. The
percent conversions (% conv.) were determined by LC/MS after the quenching
procedure, as described in the Supporting Information. Reaction conditions: green = main reaction conditions, blue = alternative
#2, black = alternative #1, and red = Lu et al.As in Table .Ring sizes in terms of number of member
atoms; reaction conditions: green = main reaction conditions, blue
= alternative #2, black = alternative #1, and red = Lu et al.Certain on-DNA reactions exhibit
sensitivity to the length of the DNA-tag, which may be due to differences
in solubility and/or intermolecular DNA interactions. To test the
viability of our new RCM conditions on a late-stage DECL substrate,
we prepared 56-bp dsDNA substrate 24a from 17-bp dsDNA
substrate 1a. Application of our main reaction conditions
(Scheme , iii) to 24a afforded 24b at 69% conversion, which was
close to the 78% conversion observed for 1a (Scheme ). After an adapted
precipitation procedure to minimize chaotropic effects (see the Supporting Information), the 56-bp dsDNA was
obtained in 20% yield (quantified by Bioanalyzer electropherogram
analysis). Although the 56-bp dsDNA was the dominant component within
the post-RCM reaction mixture, small amounts of larger DNA segments
were observed (see the Supporting Information), which may arise from intermolecular metathesis. These may require
removal by HPLC during full-scale DECL synthesis.
Scheme 5
Application of the
Main Reaction Conditions to a 56-bp DNA Substrate and to a Single-Substrate
DECL
(i)The reaction was run with 5 nmol
of 24a. (ii) The reaction was run with 5 nmol of the
single-substrate DECL.
Application of the
Main Reaction Conditions to a 56-bp DNA Substrate and to a Single-Substrate
DECL
(i)The reaction was run with 5 nmol
of 24a. (ii) The reaction was run with 5 nmol of the
single-substrate DECL.The application of
newly developed
on-DNA conditions to a pilot DECL and subsequent analysis by DNA sequencing
are useful tests prior to beginning a full DECL production. To investigate
the potential for DNA base-related effects, we prepared a small single-substrate
DECL of ∼47,000 unique 56-bp dsDNA sequences from substrate 1a. This DECL was built through a three-cycle “split-and-pool”
approach, featuring three cycles of splitting into portions, performing
36 ligations of unique dsDNA tags, and pooling. All DNA tags used
within a cycle were of identical molecular weight, and thus the DECL
was observed as a single ensemble mass after purification by HPLC
(see the Supporting Information). The application
of our main reaction conditions to the DECL resulted in the observable
loss of MW = 28 (loss of ethylene from RCM cyclization). Additionally,
sequenced samples of the DECL before and after the RCM reaction showed
no significant differences, thus ascertaining DNA integrity post-RCM
(see the Supporting Information).In addition to the synthesis of small-molecule macrocycles, RCM has
also been used to prepare stapled peptides—linear peptides
conformationally constrained through an intramolecular linkage—to
simulate protein–protein interactions.[52] To test the relevance of our reaction conditions for the production
of on-DNA stapled peptides, we synthesized substrates 25a and 26a through copper-catalyzed azide–alkyne
cycloaddition of an alkynylated [i, i+4] SRC stapled peptide precursor
known to bind the coactivator region of ERα.[53] The application of our main reaction conditions to both
substrates provided the stapled peptide in moderate conversions while,
in the case of 25a, significantly outperforming the conditions
reported by Lu et al. (Scheme )—the comparison was not studied for 26a. To further corroborate the successful production of the stapled
peptide, adapted samples of a control, peptide 26a, and
stapled peptide 26b were tested within a homogeneous
time-resolved fluorescence (HTRF) assay for binding to the coactivator
region of ERα. Both 26a and 26b displayed
a dose-dependent HTRF response, and significantly enhanced coactivator
region binding was observed for stapled peptide 26b (see
the Supporting Information). It is noteworthy
that DECL technology is analogous to phage display libraries.[54] However, our methodology is particularly useful
for incorporating unnatural amino acids such as the α-methyl-α-pentenyl
amino acid required for RCM stapling. Although highly specialized
systems for incorporating unnatural amino acids for phage display
have been reported,[55] there have been no
reports of making stapled peptides by phage display.
Scheme 6
RCM Stapling
of an
Unprotected [i, i+4] Peptide Connected to DNA via Two Different Linkers
Each reaction was run with 1 nmol of material. The percent conversion
(% conv.) was determined by LC/MS after the quenching procedure, as
described in the Supporting Information. Reaction conditions: green = main reaction conditions, and red
= Lu et al.
RCM Stapling
of an
Unprotected [i, i+4] Peptide Connected to DNA via Two Different Linkers
Each reaction was run with 1 nmol of material. The percent conversion
(% conv.) was determined by LC/MS after the quenching procedure, as
described in the Supporting Information. Reaction conditions: green = main reaction conditions, and red
= Lu et al.
Conclusions
In
summary, we have developed a RCM reaction system promoting homogeneity,
minimization of side reactions, and masking of coordinating functional
groups and 1) studied and contrasted its applicability to a diverse
range of substrates, 2) ensured its compatibility to DNA through the
successful cyclization of a single-substrate DECL, and 3) demonstrated
its functional group tolerance through the production of the first
on-DNA stapled peptide. We believe this work will allow for the integration
of the well-documented capacity of RCM to generate chemical diversity
into DECLs. Efforts to apply this work toward the production of RCM-based
DECLs and their screening are ongoing within these laboratories and
will be reported in due course.
Experimental Procedures
Each RCM substrate was constructed from a 17-bp dsDNA DNA headpiece
(see the Supporting Information for structure)
and was purified by HPLC due to RCM-inhibiting effects induced by
residual chemical building block impurities. Procedural details for
all four RCM methods are included in the Supporting Information. Additionally, while reaction mixtures involving
17-bp dsDNA tagged substrates were fully homogeneous, those with longer
dsDNA tags (56 bp dsDNA) tended to be slightly cloudy. While this
did not appear to affect the reaction conversion, a specific precipitation
procedure was required to obtain suitable DNA recovery (see the Supporting Information). For application to substrates
with DNA tags of alternative sizes (>56-bp) or composition, adjustments
may be required to ensure substrate solubility.
Authors: Philip A Harris; Bryan W King; Deepak Bandyopadhyay; Scott B Berger; Nino Campobasso; Carol A Capriotti; Julie A Cox; Lauren Dare; Xiaoyang Dong; Joshua N Finger; LaShadric C Grady; Sandra J Hoffman; Jae U Jeong; James Kang; Viera Kasparcova; Ami S Lakdawala; Ruth Lehr; Dean E McNulty; Rakesh Nagilla; Michael T Ouellette; Christina S Pao; Alan R Rendina; Michelle C Schaeffer; Jennifer D Summerfield; Barbara A Swift; Rachel D Totoritis; Paris Ward; Aming Zhang; Daohua Zhang; Robert W Marquis; John Bertin; Peter J Gough Journal: J Med Chem Date: 2016-02-23 Impact factor: 7.446
Authors: Carolyn S Higman; Daniel L Nascimento; Benjamin J Ireland; Stephan Audörsch; Gwendolyn A Bailey; Robert McDonald; Deryn E Fogg Journal: J Am Chem Soc Date: 2018-01-24 Impact factor: 15.419