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Distributed Drug Discovery, Part 3: Using D3...
Journal article

Distributed Drug Discovery, Part 3: Using D3 Methodology to Synthesize Analogs of an Anti-Melanoma Compound

Abstract

For the successful implementation of Distributed Drug Discovery (D(3)) (outlined in the accompanying Perspective), students, in the course of their educational laboratories, must be able to reproducibly make new, high quality, molecules with potential for biological activity. This article reports the successful achievement of this goal. Using previously rehearsed alkylating agents, students in a second semester organic chemistry laboratory performed a solid-phase combinatorial chemistry experiment in which they made 38 new analogs of the most potent member of a class of antimelanoma compounds. All compounds were made in duplicate, purified by silica gel chromatography, and characterized by NMR and LC/MS. As a continuing part of the Distributed Drug Discovery program, a virtual D(3) catalog based on this work was then enumerated and is made freely available to the global scientific community.

Authors

Scott WL; Audu CO; Dage JL; Goodwin LA; Martynow JG; Platt LK; Smith JG; Strong AT; Wickizer K; Woerly EM

Journal

ACS Combinatorial Science, Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 34–43

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

January 12, 2009

DOI

10.1021/cc800185z

ISSN

2156-8952

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