Most blogs appear to have a generic period of time, where the posts are as frequent as a British person winning Wimbledon. To get the ball rolling (again) down the mountain of productivity, through the plain of peril to the crown of command, I am posting one of my first ideas for The Stirrer Bar. I thought some aid memoires for drug molecules/tool compounds would be useful for translating molecular structures to biological functions etc. Queue wikipaste...
A blog by two chemists working in chemistry and chemical biology
Tuesday, 9 July 2013
Friday, 29 March 2013
Beware non-benign alkyne
Alkynes will probably feature a lot in this blog due to their bioorthoganol nature – but beware, as a recent paper demonstrates, everything can change in the local environment of a protein.
Sunday, 24 March 2013
The Peterson olefination
There are many different ways to synthesise alkenes in organic synthesis. The problem in many cases, especially those in macrocycles or non-cyclic systems is getting good E/Z selectivity. Several methods are possible however, one of the simplest is the peterson olefination. The reaction allows control of E/Z selectivity by the conditions used to remove the silane.
Wednesday, 6 March 2013
Synthetic polymers self-assembling into catalytic structures
Modern organic chemists have
access to a huge range of different chemical reactions and, these days, even
the most complicated natural product could probably be synthesised if somebody
wanted to. However, nature still does chemistry a hell of a lot better than
even the best organic chemist; enzymes allow even the simplest organism to
catalytically (and often asymmetrically) carry out organic reactions at room
temperature in an aqueous environment. Being able an enzyme’s characteristics artificially
would be, obviously, hugely advantageous. And there are a number of project on-going
particularly using supramolecular chemistry, dendrimers or polymers. Another method, one of the first in
a completely aqueous environment, has been described in a short communication
in Angerwandte by the Palmans group. It utilises a simple polymer functionalised with L-proline allowing it to
diastereoselectively catalyse an aldol reaction with cyclohexanone and
p-nitrobenzaldehyde.
Monday, 25 February 2013
‘Arsenicals’
When I read the title of this paper – Arsenical-maleimide for the Generation of New Targeted Biochemical Reagents – I thought you’ve got to be kidding, but having perused the abstract, I realised that I had much to learn.
Thursday, 21 February 2013
Quite interesting: Sodium bicarbonate
I suspect some people are reading that title thinking “really?” But the fact of the matter is that the synthesis of sodium bicarbonate was the
first triumph of industrial chemistry and therefore the first entry of the private
sector into the chemical arena, something that still sets chemistry apart from
the other major academic sciences, biology and physics; this is one of the
reasons that chemistry is so advanced today.
But why sodium bicarbonate, is it really that important? The
obvious answer is yes, but for things that we all now take for granted; soap
and white cotton shirts. If this still sounds weird the industrial synthesis of
sodium bicaronbate was described in 1856 as “one of the great benefits, if not
the greatest that modern science has bestowed on humanity” but why?
Sunday, 17 February 2013
Reversible covalent inhibitors: the best of both worlds?
What’s not to love about covalent inhibitors? Well,
unfortunately, quite a bit when you start thinking about it. Reversible
inhibitors offer an extra layer of subtlety, they are tuneable, time-dependent and can modulate individual functions of
proteins or biological systems by using several inhibitors in combination. That is as
long as you can make them potent and selective enough; covalent inhibitors tend
to solve the first problem in spades, once you make your covalent bond it’s
staying there usually knocking out the enzyme target. Yet the greatest strength
is the greatest weakness, unfortunately by improving the potency of your
compounds the problems with selectivity are multiplied. If your covalent
inhibitor goes to the wrong protein first well tough; this great if you’re a
beta-lactam antibiotic trying to kill a bacterium, but killing things isn't what tool compounds are for.
But what if you could make a reversible covalent inhibitor?
Potentially you could gain the potency and, if well designed, the selectivity
as well. Maybe this would still be difficult to incorporate into a drug, but as
a basis for a sophisticated tool compound it could be extremely useful. Taunten et.al. have developed such a system that targets the amino acid cysteine.
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