DNA-compatible direct oxidative coupling using various sulfur/selenium sources has been achieved, featuring pre-functionalization-free substrates and transition metal-free condition.Sulfur/selenium-containing electron-rich arenes (ERAs) exist in a wide range of both approved and investigational drugs with diverse pharmacological activities. These unique chemical structures and bioactive properties, if combined with the emerging DNA-encoded chemical library (DEL) technique, would facilitate drug and chemical probe discovery. However, it remains challenging, as there is no general DNA-compatible synthetic methodology available for the formation of C–S and C–Se bonds in aqueous solution. Herein, an in-solution direct oxidative coupling procedure that could efficiently integrate sulfur/selenium into the ERA under mild conditions is presented. This method features simple DNA-conjugated electron-rich arenes with a broad substrate scope and a transition-metal free process. Furthermore, this synthetic methodology, examined by a scale-up reaction test and late-stage precise modification in a mock peptide-like DEL synthesis, will enable its utility for the synthesis of sulfur/selenium-containing DNA-encoded libraries and the discovery of bioactive agents.
CITATION STYLE
Yang, S., Zhao, G., Gao, Y., Sun, Y., Zhang, G., Fan, X., … Li, Y. (2022). In-solution direct oxidative coupling for the integration of sulfur/selenium into DNA-encoded chemical libraries. Chemical Science, 13(9), 2604–2613. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1sc06268a
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