Selective deuteration and tritiation of pharmaceutically relevant sulfoximines

Blair I. P. Smith, Nathan M. L. Knight, Gary J. Knox, David M. Lindsay, Laura C. Paterson, Jonas Bergare, Charles S. Elmore, Ryan A. Bragg, William J. Kerr*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)
8 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Pharmaceutical-aligned research endeavors continue to diversify, including via the installation of new chemical functionality and non-classical bioisosteres within drug design. With this, an equally high demand emerges for the direct installation of isotopic substituents into these scaffolds within drug discovery programmes, as isotopologues are essential for the elucidation of the biological efficacy and metabolic fate of the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API). The sulfoximine functional group has recently become established as a high-value unit in this context; however, general and effective methods for the synthesis of deuterium (2H, D) and tritium (3H, T) labelled analogues have remained elusive. Herein, we disclose the design and development of the first iridium-catalyzed sulfoximine-directed hydrogen isotope exchange (HIE) systems that permit the site-selective integration of a distinguishing atomic label at aromatic C(sp2)–H and more challenging C(sp3)–H moieties. Moreover, we exemplify the broad applicability of these methods within a spectrum of molecular settings, as well as in the late-stage generation of isotopically-enriched complex bioactive architectures.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere202417179
Number of pages11
JournalAngewandte Chemie International Edition
Volume64
Issue number5
Early online date30 Oct 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Jan 2025

Funding

An EPSRC Industrial CASE PhD Studentship (EP/M507647/1) with additional support from AstraZeneca is gratefully acknowledged. Additionally, the authors thank the University of Strathclyde for PhD studentship funding.

Keywords

  • sulfoximine
  • deuterium
  • iridium
  • C–H activation
  • hydrogen isotope exchange

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