Litcius/Paper detail

DNA-Encoded Chemistry: Drug Discovery from a Few Good Reactions

Patrick R. Fitzgerald, Brian M. Paegel

2020Chemical Reviews208 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Click chemistry, proposed nearly 20 years ago, promised access to novel chemical space by empowering combinatorial library synthesis with a "few good reactions". These click reactions fulfilled key criteria (broad scope, quantitative yield, abundant starting material, mild reaction conditions, and high chemoselectivity), keeping the focus on molecules that would be easy to make, yet structurally diverse. This philosophy bears a striking resemblance to DNA-encoded library (DEL) technology, the now-dominant combinatorial chemistry paradigm. This review highlights the similarities between click and DEL reaction design and deployment in combinatorial library settings, providing a framework for the design of new DEL synthesis technologies to enable next-generation drug discovery.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryChemoselectivityScope (computer science)Chemical spaceClick chemistryDrug discoveryCombinatorial chemistryNanotechnologyComputational biologyComputer scienceOrganic chemistryBiochemistryProgramming languageBiologyMaterials scienceCatalysisClick Chemistry and ApplicationsChemical Synthesis and AnalysisMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research