Spiro Compounds. Группа авторов
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Название: Spiro Compounds

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Химия

Серия:

isbn: 9781119567653

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СКАЧАТЬ due to the presence of a quaternary carbon center. While chirality is often found in evolutionary optimized, complex natural product‐derived drugs (e.g. Griseofulvin 5, Ivermectin 8), early examples of synthetic spirocyclic drugs (e.g. fluspirilene 13) are achiral. The introduction of stereogenic centers allows higher structural complexity and diversity across the three dimensions, and it has been suggested to be advantageous for the discovery of ligands targeting biological receptors, such as an enzyme active site or a protein–protein interaction (PPI) interface [22]. Equally important is the control of their configuration for achieving optimal interaction with the chiral target receptor. It is well illustrated by the contrasted potencies and/or pharmacologies of various stereoisomers of a wide range of chiral drugs [23, 24], including the infamous thalidomide [25]. Controlling the stereochemical outcome, hence chirality of spirocycles, has been a major focus of synthetic organic chemists in the last decade, and this is reflected by the exponentially growing number of articles in organic chemistry journals reporting the syntheses of increasingly complex spirocyclic systems. Overall, spirocycles have gained increasing popularity in modern drug discovery, and the recent development of robust synthetic methodologies have made them an integral part of the medicinal chemists’ arsenal of pharmacophores for the development of small synthetic molecules targeting therapeutically important biological pathways. This brief chapter captures several important literature examples that illustrate some key applications of spirocycles for the development of bioactive molecules of relevance to the pharmaceutical sector. The breadth of synthetic methods available for the preparation of a wide range of spirocycles will be discussed in the subsequent chapters.

Schematic illustration of a chemical reaction depicting the comparison of substituted biaryl and spiro[3,4]octane scaffolds. Schematic illustration of the chemical structure of examples of saturated spirocyclic ring systems frequently encountered in drug discovery.

      The constrained and directional exit vectors projected from “spiro” scaffolds allow fine‐tuning the relative orientations of functional groups within bioactive molecules in order to achieve optimal molecular interaction with a target receptor. Such rigidity can also be exploited for the bioisosteric replacement and conformational restriction of flexible moieties in biomolecules, hence reducing detrimental entropic penalties for binding [28]. Spirocycles have also been used to modulate physicochemical properties and pharmacokinetics of biomolecules, including aqueous solubility and metabolic stability [26, 27, 29]. A number of reports have also highlighted that a high sp2/aromatic content is generally detrimental to the physicochemical properties of drug candidates [26, 27, 30, 31].