Discovery of Trypanosoma brucei inhibitors enabled by a unified synthesis of diverse sulfonyl fluorides

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Abstract

Sets of electrophilic probes are generally prepared using a narrow toolkit of robust reactions, which tends to limit both their structural and functional diversity. A unified synthesis of skeletally-diverse sulfonyl fluorides was developed that relied upon photoredox-catalysed dehydrogenative couplings between hetaryl sulfonyl fluorides and hydrogen donor building blocks. A set of 32 diverse probes was prepared, and then screened against Trypanosoma brucei. Four of the probes were found to have sub-micromolar anti-trypanosomal activity. A chemical proteomic approach, harnessing an alkynylated analogue and broad-spectrum fluorophosphonate tools, provided insights into the observed anti-trypanosomal activity, which likely stems from covalent modification of multiple protein targets. It is envisaged that the unified diversity-oriented approach may enable the discovery of electrophilic probes that have value in the elucidation of biological and biomedical mechanisms. (Figure presented.)

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S. Mantilla, B., White, J. S., Mosedale, W. R. T., Gomm, A., Nelson, A., Smith, T. K., & Wright, M. H. (2024). Discovery of Trypanosoma brucei inhibitors enabled by a unified synthesis of diverse sulfonyl fluorides. Communications Chemistry, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-024-01327-8

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