News Release

Chemical synthesis: new strategy for skeletal editing on pyridines

Chemists at the University of Münster realised “chemical surgery” on ring-shaped compounds / Results published in “Nature Chemistry”

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Münster

Skeletal editing

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The skeletal editing of pyridines is a useful technique in organic synthesis, and one which is promising as regards the development of new drugs. The process resembles an operation on a molecule, "surgically" removing one fragment and skilfully attaching another one.

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Credit: University of Münster – Studer working group

In the field of chemistry, so-called skeletal editing is seen as a method suitable for changing ring-shaped structures precisely by swapping individual atoms. A team of researchers led by Prof. Armido Studer from the Institute of Organic Chemistry at the University of Münster has now introduced a new strategy for converting carbon-nitrogen atom pairs in pyridines – a ring-shaped compound frequently used as a synthesis building block – into carbon-carbon atom pairs. The method has potential in the quest for new drugs and materials which are often based on such molecule rings.

While the ring structure remains intact in the so-called peripheral functionalisation of rings – which involves for example the attachment of groups of atoms – skeletal editing requires the cleavage of robust bonds between carbon atoms or between a carbon atom and another atom within the ring. “In organic synthesis,” says Armido Studer, “this is considered to be particularly challenging – we can imagine it as a kind of surgical procedure.” Up to now, no synthesis strategy was known which could be used to swap complex pyridines by means of skeletal editing. In this new approach, the team produced benzenes and naphthalenes with functional groups which are attached precisely to specific positions. Functional groups are groups of atoms which play a decisive role in the properties of a compound.

“The pyridines which we used are inherently inert, making it difficult to modify them,” explains post-doc Dr. Qiang Cheng. “We first had to change their specific bonding structure – carrying out so-called dearomatization – in order to obtain significantly more reactive intermediates. The subsequent cycloaddition and rearomatization processes ultimately result in the formation of the skeletal-edited compounds.”

Debkanta Bhattacharya, a PhD student in Armido Studer’s team, adds: “Now, by using a so-called one-pot procedure, we can introduce synthetically valuable and medically significant functional groups to specific positions on rings.” Chemists speak of a one-pot reaction to describe a synthesis in which the reagents needed react with one another in a single vessel. The reaction sequence’s mechanism was theoretically analysed by Dr. Christian Mück-Lichtenfeld from the Institute of Organic Chemistry.


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