This Review describes the increasing demand for organic synthesis to facilitate fragment-based drug discovery (FBDD), focusing on polar, unprotected fragments. In FBDD, X-ray crystal structures are used to design target molecules for synthesis with new groups added onto a fragmentviaspecific growth vectors. This requires challenging synthesis which slows down drug discovery, and some fragments are not progressed into optimisation due to synthetic intractability. We have evaluated the output from Astex's fragment screenings for a number of programs, including urokinase-type plasminogen activator, hematopoietic prostaglandin D2 synthase, and hepatitis C virus NS3 protease-helicase, and identified fragments that were not elaborated due, in part, to a lack of commercially available analogues and/or suitable synthetic methodology. This represents an opportunity for the development of new synthetic research to enable rapid access to novel chemical space and fragment optimisation.
CITATION STYLE
St. Denis, J. D., Hall, R. J., Murray, C. W., Heightman, T. D., & Rees, D. C. (2021, March 1). Fragment-based drug discovery: opportunities for organic synthesis. RSC Medicinal Chemistry. Royal Society of Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1039/d0md00375a
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