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      Target-induced formation of neuraminidase inhibitors fromin vitrovirtual combinatorial libraries

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          Abstract

          Neuraminidase, a key enzyme responsible for influenza virus propagation, has been used as a template for selective synthesis of small subsets of its own inhibitors from theoretically highly diverse dynamic combinatorial libraries. We show that the library building blocks, aldehydes and amines, form significant amounts of the library components resulting from their coupling by reductive amination only in the presence of the enzyme. The target amplifies the best hits at least 120-fold. The dynamic libraries synthesized and screened in such an in vitro virtual mode form the components that possess high inhibitory activity, as confirmed by enzyme assays with independently synthesized individual compounds.

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          Most cited references23

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          Target-oriented and diversity-oriented organic synthesis in drug discovery.

          Modern drug discovery often involves screening small molecules for their ability to bind to a preselected protein target. Target-oriented syntheses of these small molecules, individually or as collections (focused libraries), can be planned effectively with retrosynthetic analysis. Drug discovery can also involve screening small molecules for their ability to modulate a biological pathway in cells or organisms, without regard for any particular protein target. This process is likely to benefit in the future from an evolving forward analysis of synthetic pathways, used in diversity-oriented synthesis, that leads to structurally complex and diverse small molecules. One goal of diversity-oriented syntheses is to synthesize efficiently a collection of small molecules capable of perturbing any disease-related biological pathway, leading eventually to the identification of therapeutic protein targets capable of being modulated by small molecules. Several synthetic planning principles for diversity-oriented synthesis and their role in the drug discovery process are presented in this review.
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            Self-Assembly of a Circular Double Helicate

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              CHEMISTRY: Dynamic Combinatorial Chemistry

              J-M Lehn (2001)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
                PNAS
                Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
                0027-8424
                1091-6490
                March 19 2002
                March 19 2002
                : 99
                : 6
                : 3382-3387
                Article
                10.1073/pnas.052703799
                122532
                11891312
                cd923cd3-4e06-42b0-8587-447012318f82
                © 2002
                History

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