Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Click Chemistry : A ‘Click’ away from discovery. David Marcoux Charette’s Laboratories February 6 th.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Click Chemistry : A ‘Click’ away from discovery. David Marcoux Charette’s Laboratories February 6 th."— Presentation transcript:

1 Click Chemistry : A ‘Click’ away from discovery. David Marcoux Charette’s Laboratories February 6 th

2 Table of Contents 1.Introduction 2.Concept of ‘Click Chemistry’ 3.‘Click Reaction’ 4.‘Click Application’ 5.‘Click Conclusion’

3 Table of Contents 1.Introduction 2.Concept of ‘Click Chemistry’ 3.‘Click Reaction’ 4.‘Click Application’ 5.‘Click Conclusion’

4 Chemistry of Life

5 Nature’s Chemistry

6 Chemist’s Chemistry

7

8 Drug Discovery

9 Nature’s Chemistry

10 Sharpless Point of View

11 Table of Contents 1.Introduction 2.Concept of ‘Click Chemistry’ 3.‘Click Reaction’ 4.‘Click Application’ 5.‘Click Conclusion’

12 K. Barry Sharpless BA, Dartmouth College (T. A. Spencer), 1963 PhD, Stanford University (E. E. van Tamelen), 1968 postdoctoral, Stanford University (J. P. Collman), 1968 postdoctoral, Harvard University (K. Bloch), 1969 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1970–7, 1980–90 Arthur C. Cope Professor, 1987–90 Stanford University, 1977–80 The Scripps Research Institute, W. M. Keck Prof, 1990– Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology of TSRI, 1996– Kitasato University, Visiting Professor, 2002– 1976 : Catalytic amino and dihydroxylation 1979 : Asymetric dihyroxylation 1980 : Catalytic asymetric epoxydation 1987 : Catalytic asymetric dihydroxylation 1996 : Catalytic asymetric aminodihydroxylation 2001 : Click Chemistry 2001 : Nobel laureate (with Knowles and Noyori)

13 K. Barry Sharpless Award for Creative Work in Organic Synthesis, 1983 Arthur C. Cope Scholar, 1986 Harrison Howe Award, Rochester Section, 1987 Remsen Award, Maryland Section, 1989 Arthur C. Cope Award, 1992 San Diego Scientist of the Year, San Diego Section, 1992 Roger Adams Award in Organic Chemistry, 1997 Top 75 Contributors to the Chemical Enterprise, 1998 Richards Medal, Northeastern Section, 1998 Carothers Award, Delaware Section, 1999 Allan Day Award, Philadelphia Organic Chemists Club, 1985 Dr. Paul Janssen Prize, Belgium, 1986 (1st recipient) Prelog Medal, ETH, Switzerland, 1988 Sammet Award, Göthe University, Frankfurt-am-Main, 1988 Chemical Pioneer Award, American Institute of Chemists, 1988 Scheele Medal, Swedish Academy of Pharma Sciences, 1991 Tetrahedron Prize (with Noyori), 1993 Centenary Lectureship Medal, Royal Society of Chemistry, 1993 Cliff Hamilton Award, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, 1995 King Faisal Prize for Science, Saudi Arabia, 1995 Microbial Chemistry Medal, Kitasato Institute, Tokyo, 1997 Harvey Science & Technology Prize, Israel Inst of Tech, 1998 Rylander Award, Organic Reactions Catalysis Society, 2000 Chemical Sciences Award, National Academy of Sciences, 2000 Chiralty Medal, Italian Chemical Society, 2000 Rhone Poulenc Medal, Royal Society of Chemistry, 2000 Benjamin Franklin Medal, Franklin Institute, Philadelphia, 2001 Wolf Prize (with Kagan & Noyori), Weizmann Institute, 2001 John Scott Medal Award, City of Philadelphia, 2001 ISI Highly Cited Researchers Database, original member, 2001 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (with Knowles & Noyori), 2001 Distinguished Professor (Hon), Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, 2002

14 Click Chemistry

15

16

17 Starting Materials

18 Benign Solvent

19 ‘CLICK REACTIONS’

20 Solid-Phase Synthesis

21 Table of Contents 1.Introduction 2.Concept of ‘Click Chemistry’ 3.‘Click Reaction’ 4.‘Click Application’ 5.‘Click Conclusion’

22 Hantzsch Ester Synthesis

23 Epoxidation

24 Dihydroxylation

25 Small Rings Opening

26

27

28 Beta-Lactam Clavulanic acid

29 Small Rings Opening

30 Tetrazole

31 Tetrazole

32 Tetrazole

33

34 Tetrazole

35 Tetrazole

36

37

38 Polyfunctionalized Tetrazole

39 « Cream of the Crop »

40 1,4 and 1,5 Triazole

41 Sources of Cu(I)

42

43 Mechanism

44 1,5 Triazole

45

46

47 Mechanism

48

49 Table of Contents 1.Introduction 2.Concept of ‘Click Chemistry’ 3.‘Click Reaction’ 4.‘Click Application’ 5.‘Click Conclusion’

50 Multi-Step Click Chemistry

51

52 In Situ Click Chemistry

53

54

55

56

57 Polymer Chemistry

58

59 Biology

60 Biology

61 Biology

62 Column Wang resinImmobilised initiator “clickable” polymer Multivalent ligand Lectin conjugate “click”

63 Column Reagent and conditions Reagent and conditions: a) 2-bromo-2-methyl-propionyl bromide, triethylamine, DMAP, CH 2 Cl 2, b) methacrylic acid 3- trimethylsilanyl-prop-2-ynyl ester, Cu(I)Br/ N-(n-propyl)-2 pyridylmethanimine, toluene, 60 ºC, c) TBAF·3H 2 O, acetic acid, THF, -20 to 25 ºC d) (PPh 3 ) 3 Cu(I)Br,  -(3-azido-1-propyl)-D-mannose, DIPEA, 60 ºC.

64 Click Columns

65 Click-Click Chemistry

66 Click Conclusion Nice concept to facilitate drug discovery Revisited Chemistry Lots of applications We will continue to hear about it

67 Click Conclusion Click can now be used as –A noun : click –Verb : clicking –Adverb : clickable –Click-Click


Download ppt "Click Chemistry : A ‘Click’ away from discovery. David Marcoux Charette’s Laboratories February 6 th."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google