Publication | Closed Access
The Application of Microwaves in Combinatorial and High‐Throughput Synthesis as New Synthetic Procedure in Drug Discovery
38
Citations
121
References
2004
Year
Combinatorial ChemistryMicrowave ChemistryEngineeringNew Synthetic ProcedureOrganic ChemistryFocused MicrowavesChemistryHigh‐throughput SynthesisHeterocycle ChemistryMedicinal ChemistryDiversity Oriented SynthesisDiversity-oriented SynthesisSynthesis MethodPharmacologyNatural Product SynthesisMicrowave SynthesisBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesSynthetic BiologySmall MoleculesDrug Discovery
Abstract Heterocyclic compounds hold a special place among pharmaceutically important natural and synthetic materials. The remarkable ability of heterocyclic nuclei to serve both as biomimetics and reactive pharmacophores has largely contributed to their unique value as traditional key elements of numerous drugs. In both lead identification and optimization processes there is an acute need for new organic small molecules. Traditional methods of organic synthesis are orders of magnitude too slow to satisfy the demand for these compounds; so, the fields of combinatorial and automated medicinal chemistry have been developed to meet the increasing requirement of new compounds for drug discovery; within these fields, speed is of the essence. The efficiency of microwave chemistry in dramatically reducing reaction times (reduced from days and hours to minutes and seconds) has recently been proven in several different fields of organic chemistry. We believe that the time saved by using focused microwaves is potentially important in traditional organic synthesis but could be of even greater importance in high‐speed combinatorial and medicinal chemistry.
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