Chemists find a way to escape from flatland
Press release issued: 8 June 2014 A new method for coupling together secondary and tertiary boronic esters to aromatic compounds which preserves the 3-D shape of the boronic ester is described by researchers from the University of Bristol today. The method could have widespread application in the development of new, more effective drugs. The method, discovered by Professor Varinder Aggarwal and colleagues in the School of Chemistry , fills a major gap in the Nobel prize-winning Suzuki-Miyaura reaction. Over a third of all potential pharmaceuticals tested have employed this particular carbon-carbon (C-C) bond forming reaction. However, in the past, it has been limited to the creation of achiral, aromatic compounds, a class of essentially flat molecules which are now widely regarded as a major contributing factor to the failure of millions of biomolecules tested. Thus, there is a major drive in the pharmaceutical industry to 'escape from flatland' as awareness grows of the importance of creating biomolecules with 3-D architectures which have much greater clinical success. While many reliable methods are available for the easy synthesis of boronic esters with specific 3-D shape, there has been no way of using them to create useful C-C bonds to aromatic units.


