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Late‐Stage Amination of Drug‐Like Benzoic Acids: Access to Anilines and Drug Conjugates through Directed Iridium‐Catalyzed C−H Activation

Erik Weis, Magnus J. Johansson, Belén Martín‐Matute

2021Chemistry - A European Journal24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The functionalization of C-H bonds, ubiquitous in drugs and drug-like molecules, represents an important synthetic strategy with the potential to streamline the drug-discovery process. Late-stage aromatic C-N bond-forming reactions are highly desirable, but despite their significance, accessing aminated analogues through direct and selective amination of C-H bonds remains a challenging goal. The method presented herein enables the amination of a wide array of benzoic acids with high selectivity. The robustness of the system is manifested by the large number of functional groups tolerated, which allowed the amination of a diverse array of marketed drugs and drug-like molecules. Furthermore, the introduction of a synthetic handle enabled expeditious access to targeted drug-delivery conjugates, PROTACs, and probes for chemical biology. This rapid access to valuable analogues, combined with operational simplicity and applicability to high-throughput experimentation has the potential to aid and considerably accelerate drug discovery.

Topics & Concepts

IridiumDrugCatalysisAminationChemistryBenzoic acidConjugateStage (stratigraphy)Combinatorial chemistryMedicinal chemistryOrganic chemistryPharmacologyMedicineBiologyPaleontologyMathematical analysisMathematicsHistone Deacetylase Inhibitors ResearchCatalytic C–H Functionalization MethodsChemical Synthesis and Analysis
Late‐Stage Amination of Drug‐Like Benzoic Acids: Access to Anilines and Drug Conjugates through Directed Iridium‐Catalyzed C−H Activation | Litcius