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Chirality: a key parameter in chemical probes

Chirality: a key parameter in chemical probes
Chirality: a key parameter in chemical probes

Many small molecule bioactive and marketed drugs are chiral. They are often synthesised from commercially available chiral building blocks. However, chirality is sometimes incorrectly assigned by manufacturers with consequences for the end user ranging from: experimental irreproducibility, wasted time on synthesising the wrong product and reanalysis, to the added cost of purchasing the precursor and resynthesis of the correct stereoisomer. Further on, this could lead to loss of reputation, loss of funding, to safety and ethical concerns due to potential in vivo administration of the wrong form of a drug. It is our firm belief that more stringent control of chirality be provided by the supplier and, if needed, requested by the end user, to minimise the potential issues mentioned above. Certification of chirality would bring much needed confidence in chemical structure assignment and could be provided by a variety of techniques, from polarimetry, chiral HPLC, using known chiral standards, vibrational circular dichroism, and x-ray crystallography. A few case studies of our brushes with wrong chirality assignment are shown as well as some examples of what we believe to be good practice.

2633-0679
716-721
McGown, Andrew
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Nafie, Jordan
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Otayfah, Mohammed
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Hassell-Hart, Storm
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Tizzard, Graham J.
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Coles, Simon J.
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Banks, Rebecca
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Marsh, Graham P.
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Maple, Hannah J.
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Kostakis, George E.
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Proietti Silvestri, Ilaria
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Colbon, Paul
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Spencer, John
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McGown, Andrew
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Nafie, Jordan
59e81e45-ddbc-424a-939d-1c8f24db82b9
Otayfah, Mohammed
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Hassell-Hart, Storm
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Tizzard, Graham J.
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Coles, Simon J.
3116f58b-c30c-48cf-bdd5-397d1c1fecf8
Banks, Rebecca
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Marsh, Graham P.
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Maple, Hannah J.
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Kostakis, George E.
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Proietti Silvestri, Ilaria
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Colbon, Paul
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Spencer, John
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McGown, Andrew, Nafie, Jordan, Otayfah, Mohammed, Hassell-Hart, Storm, Tizzard, Graham J., Coles, Simon J., Banks, Rebecca, Marsh, Graham P., Maple, Hannah J., Kostakis, George E., Proietti Silvestri, Ilaria, Colbon, Paul and Spencer, John (2023) Chirality: a key parameter in chemical probes. RSC Chemical Biology, 4 (10), 716-721. (doi:10.1039/d3cb00082f).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Many small molecule bioactive and marketed drugs are chiral. They are often synthesised from commercially available chiral building blocks. However, chirality is sometimes incorrectly assigned by manufacturers with consequences for the end user ranging from: experimental irreproducibility, wasted time on synthesising the wrong product and reanalysis, to the added cost of purchasing the precursor and resynthesis of the correct stereoisomer. Further on, this could lead to loss of reputation, loss of funding, to safety and ethical concerns due to potential in vivo administration of the wrong form of a drug. It is our firm belief that more stringent control of chirality be provided by the supplier and, if needed, requested by the end user, to minimise the potential issues mentioned above. Certification of chirality would bring much needed confidence in chemical structure assignment and could be provided by a variety of techniques, from polarimetry, chiral HPLC, using known chiral standards, vibrational circular dichroism, and x-ray crystallography. A few case studies of our brushes with wrong chirality assignment are shown as well as some examples of what we believe to be good practice.

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Accepted/In Press date: 1 August 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 August 2023
Published date: 4 October 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: M. O. thanks University of Jazan, Jazan, Saudi Arabia for financial support for a PhD studentship. J. S., A. M., and G. E. K. are grateful to the University of Sussex for HEIF Business Collaboration & Commercialisation 2023 funding. J. S. and S. H. H. would like to thank EPSRC for funding (EP/P026990/1). We thank the reviewers and Drs Brett Stevenson (Sygnature) and Klaus Rumpel (Boehringer-Ingelheim) for stimulating comments.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483729
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483729
ISSN: 2633-0679
PURE UUID: a095b7e8-4d45-47e8-9235-0a915eaf5d68
ORCID for Graham J. Tizzard: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1577-5779
ORCID for Simon J. Coles: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8414-9272

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Date deposited: 03 Nov 2023 18:01
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:54

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Contributors

Author: Andrew McGown
Author: Jordan Nafie
Author: Mohammed Otayfah
Author: Storm Hassell-Hart
Author: Simon J. Coles ORCID iD
Author: Rebecca Banks
Author: Graham P. Marsh
Author: Hannah J. Maple
Author: George E. Kostakis
Author: Ilaria Proietti Silvestri
Author: Paul Colbon
Author: John Spencer

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