Fundamentals of Medicinal Chemistry

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a synthesis. The silicon chip and beads are placed in a container known as acan

that is porous to the reagents used in the synthesis. Each can is closed and

treated as though it were one bead in a mix and split synthesis. The cans are

divided into the required number of aliquots corresponding to the number of

building blocks used in the initial step of the synthesis. Each batch of cans is

reacted with its own building block and the chip is irradiated with the appropri-

ate radio signal for that building block. The mix and split procedure is followed

and at each step the chips in the batch are irradiated with the appropriate radio

signal. At the end of the synthesis the prepared library compound is cleaved

from the chip, which is interrogated to determine the history of the compound

synthesized on the chip. The method has the advantage of producing larger

amounts of the required compounds than the normal mix and split approach

because the same compound is produced on all the beads in a can.

6.4 Combinatorial synthesis in solution


The main problem with preparing libraries using solution chemistry is the diffi-

cultyofremovingunwantedimpuritiesateachstepinthesynthesis.Consequently,

many of the strategies used for the preparation of libraries using solution chemis-

try are directed to the purification of the products of each steps of the synthesis.

This and other practical problems has usually restricted the use of solution

combinatorial chemistry to synthetic pathways consisting of two or three steps.

Combinatorial synthesis in solution can be used to produce libraries that

consist of single compounds or mixtures using traditional organic chemistry.

Single compound libraries are prepared using the parallel synthesis technique

(see section 6.2.1). Libraries of mixtures are formed by separately reacting each

of the members of a set of similar compounds with the same mixture of all the

members of the second set of compounds. Consider, for example, a combinator-

ial library of amides formed by reacting a set of five acid chlorides (A

1

–A

5

) with

ten amines (B

1

–B

10

). Each of the five acid chlorides is reacted separately with

an equimolar mixture of all ten amines and each of the amines is reacted with an

equimolar mixture of all the acid chlorides (Figure 6.14). This produces a library

consisting of a set of five mixtures based on individual acid halides and 10

mixtures based on individual amines. This means that each compound in the

library is prepared twice, once from the acid chloride set and once from the

amine set. Consequently, determining the most biologically active of the mix-

tures from the acid halide set will define the acyl part of the most active amide

and similarly identifying the most biologically active of the amine based

COMBINATORIAL SYNTHESIS IN SOLUTION 127

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