Analysis of Past and Present Synthetic Methodologies on Medicinal Chemistry: Where Have All the New Reactions Gone?
AstraZeneca (United States) · AstraZeneca (Sweden)
Abstract
An analysis of chemical reactions used in current medicinal chemistry (2014), three decades ago (1984), and in natural product total synthesis has been conducted. The analysis revealed that of the current most frequently used synthetic reactions, none were discovered within the past 20 years and only two in the 1980s and 1990s (Suzuki-Miyaura and Buchwald-Hartwig). This suggests an inherent high bar of impact for new synthetic reactions in drug discovery. The most frequently used reactions were amide bond formation, Suzuki-Miyaura coupling, and SNAr reactions, most likely due to commercial availability of reagents, high chemoselectivity, and a pressure on delivery. We show that these practices result in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.66
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 80
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Chemistry
- Natural product
- Nucleophilic aromatic substitution
- Combinatorial chemistry
- Drug discovery
- Chemoselectivity
- Biochemical engineering
- Organic chemistry