Breakthrough in β-lactam synthesis using nickel catalysts
Researchers shed light on efficient chiral β-lactam production using nickel catalysts that are abundant on Earth
2023-08-24
(Press-News.org)
Led by Director CHANG Sukbok, scientists from the Center for Catalytic Hydrocarbon Functionalizations within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) have made a significant advancement in the synthesis of β-lactam scaffolds, which are structural components frequently found in essential antibiotics such as penicillins and carbapenems. This breakthrough overcomes challenges in β-lactam synthesis to promise streamlined pathways for drug development.
The core chemical structure that makes up penicillins is a four-membered cyclic amide scaffold called chiral β-lactam,which is also frequently found in other types of major antibiotics like carbapenems and cephalosporins. The high-value potential of chiral β-lactam has been recognized in modern science given such relevance to the pharmaceutical products, which consequently evoked much efforts to synthesize them using readily available raw chemicals.
Back in 2019, the IBS group unveiled a catalytic reaction that allowed access to chiral γ-lactams, five-membered amide structures that differ in the ring size from β-lactams. They managed to achieve high enantioselectivity by utilizing chiral iridium catalysts, however, the same approach could not be applied to the synthesis of the four-membered variant, β-lactam.
One major obstacle in accessing β-lactams was, in fact, the outcompeting formation of γ-lactams. Overcoming this critical regioselectivity issue, while achieving high enantioselectivity at the same time, remains highly challenging for the synthesis of β-lactams. In addition, the use of costly rare earth metals can pose limitations in many aspects.
To address these challenges, the IBS research team pioneered a novel catalytic reaction using nickel, which is a far more naturally abundant transition metal. They first tackled the challenge in suppressing the formation of five-membered γ-lactams by harnessing the catalytic properties of nickel-hydride (NiH) species and the alkene dioxazolone substrate. High regioselectivity is achieved toward the desired formation of β-lactam scaffolds under this new catalytic system, whereby the NiH species react more favorably with the dioxazolone motif than with alkene to induce a β-selective carbon-nitrogen bond formation via nickel-amido intermediates.
Enantioselective formation of chiral β-lactams has also become possible through combination with chiral ligands, which can be applied to the synthesis of biorelevant compounds. The researchers at IBS further demonstrated the value of their findings by simpliefied synthesis of a number of β-lactam compounds that previously required more complicated processes. Moreover, the produced β-lactams are estimated to have high market values up to 700 times in comparison to the starting raw materials, and the fact that this can be achieved using low-cost nickel catalyst makes this process highly economically desirable.
What makes this development stand out is its immediate applicability. By employing this method, the team proposed more efficient and simplified synthesis strategies for specific medicines and natural substances. Moreover, they accomplished the synthesis of new compounds that can be potential drug candidates through late-stage functionalization of complex chemical structures.
Director Chang commented, “Through this study, we were able to easily synthesize chiral β-lactam, the backbone of major antibiotics such as penicillin and carbapenem from cheap nickel catalysts and feedstock chemicals.” He added, “Discovery of new pathways to synthesize high-value materials like chiral β-lactam is a significant achievement that can greatly shorten the drug discovery phase.”
END
[Attachments] See images for this press release:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2023-08-24
Lignocellulosic biomass is a renewable feedstock for 2nd-generation biomanufacturing. In particular, efficient co-fermentation of mixed glucose and xylose in lignocellulosic hydrolysates is a key issue in reducing product costs.
However, co-utilization of xylose and glucose in microbes is challenging due to limited xylose assimilation and the glucose repression effect.
Recently, a research group led by Prof. ZHOU Yongjin from the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics (DICP) of the Chinese Academy ...
2023-08-24
Correct and incorrect recommendations inter-mingled in one-third of the chatbot’s responses, making errors more difficult to detect
For many patients, the internet serves as a powerful tool for self-education on medical topics. With ChatGPT now at patients’ fingertips, researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, assessed how consistently the artificial intelligence chatbot provides recommendations for cancer treatment that align with National Comprehensive Cancer Network ...
2023-08-24
Researchers at the University of California San Diego have uncovered a connection between the topography of the human genome and the presence of mutations in human cancer. They found that certain regions of the genome, which exhibit unique features, act as hotspots for the accumulation of mutations.
The findings, published recently in Cell Reports, shed light on how the 3D architecture of the human genome may play a role in the development of various forms of cancer.
The human genome is often visualized as the iconic DNA double helix, composed of long sequences of the letters A, C, G and T. “However, the genome ...
2023-08-24
A pioneering drug for a rare kidney disease prevents organ failure and significantly improves the outcome for patients, new research has confirmed.
Atypical Haemolytic Uraemic Syndrome (aHUS) is a genetic life-threatening condition caused by a defect in the immune system which leads to kidney failure.
Newcastle University, UK, carried out clinical trials into the drug, eculizumab, which eventually led to the NHS approving the treatment for use in patients from 2015.
Now, a study by Newcastle experts, published in Blood, ...
2023-08-24
Fubi is produced by cells as a fusion protein with the ribosomal protein S30, and must be separated from S30 by proteases for functioning ribosomes. In immune cells, this by-product of ribosome production is utilized as a secreted signalling molecule, for example to locally reduce the activity of the maternal immune system in the uterus and to thus enable embryos to implant. How Fubi is specifically recognized by proteases and how they distinguish it from ubiquitin was previously unknown.
First author Rachel O’Dea and Malte Gersch explain their research in detail:
What is the discovery that you made and why is it exciting?
Our team revealed ...
2023-08-24
Associate Professor Tim Thomas and Professor Anne Voss from WEHI (Melbourne, Australia) have been awarded the 2023 UNSW Eureka Prize for Scientific Research.
The prize recognises their groundbreaking research in developing a new class of drugs that can put cancer cells ‘to sleep’ without triggering the harmful side effects caused by conventional cancer treatments, like chemotherapy and radiation.
The Australian Museum Eureka Prizes are among Australia’s most distinguished science awards, honouring excellence across the areas of research and innovation, leadership, science engagement, and school science.
At a glance
Associate Professor Tim Thomas and Professor ...
2023-08-24
More than 1 billion cows around the world will experience heat stress by the end of the century if carbon emissions are high and environmental protection is low, according to new research published today in IOP Publishing’s journal Environmental Research Letters.
This would mean cattle farming would face potentially lethal heat stress in much of the world, including Central America, tropical South America, Equatorial Africa, and South and Southeast Asia. The research also found that rapidly reducing greenhouse gas emissions, as well as keeping cattle production close to current levels, would reduce these impacts by at least 50% in Asia, 63% in South America, and ...
2023-08-24
A new study reports the discovery of hundreds of mummified bees inside their cocoons. These cocoons, produced almost three thousand years ago, were discovered in a new paleontological site discovered on the coast of Odemira, in Portugal.
About 2975 years ago, Pharaoh Siamun reigned in Lower Egypt; in China the Zhou Dynasty elapsed; Solomon was to succeed David on the throne of Israel; in the territory that is now Portugal, the tribes were heading towards the end of the Bronze Age. In particular, on the southwest coast of Portugal, where is now Odemira, something strange and rare ...
2023-08-24
The virulence of a rice-wrecking fungus — and deployment of ninja-like proteins that help it escape detection by muffling an immune system’s alarm bells — relies on genetic decoding quirks that could prove central to stopping it, says research from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln.
A Nebraska team helmed by Richard Wilson hopes that identifying an essential but formerly unknown stage in the fungal takeover of rice cells can accelerate the treatment or prevention of rice blast disease, which ruins up to 30% of global yields each year.
“The response I’ve gotten from people in my field is that they’re very excited, ...
2023-08-24
Researchers at the University of Florida College of Medicine have discovered how common age-related changes in the blood system can make certain colon cancers grow faster. The study, to be published August 24 in the Journal of Experimental Medicine (JEM), also suggests how these effects might be therapeutically targeted to reduce tumor growth and improve patient survival.
As we age, the hematopoietic stem cells that reside in the bone marrow and give rise to all of the body’s different blood cells gradually acquire mutations in their ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Breakthrough in β-lactam synthesis using nickel catalysts
Researchers shed light on efficient chiral β-lactam production using nickel catalysts that are abundant on Earth