Issue 5, 2023

Digital design and 3D printing of reactionware for on demand synthesis of high value probes

Abstract

Performing chemical transformations in a standardised way is important for increasing the accessibility to high value reagents for specific purposes. Building on the use of 3D-printed reactionware, we present a new concept in the design of reactionware devices for generating such high value compounds. In this approach integrated reactor sequences are treated as modular, with each module able to effect a specific chemical transformation, rather than individual chemical processing steps. The initial workflow is mapped into a core set of modules, and different synthetic pathways can be selected by attaching different peripheral modules in a ‘plug and react manner’. We utilised this system to synthesise a set of diazirine based photoaffinity probes. Starting from appropriately functionalised starting materials, a core sequence of reactors furnishes a central diazirine moiety on a variable sized molecular scaffold, with exchangeable peripheral reactors facilitating the attachment of auxiliary moieties. Yields and purities range from 29–39% and 93–97%, respectively, comparable to, or exceeding literature yields for similar compounds. The activity of photoprobes produced was validated by analysis of their interaction with the peptide hormone, human Angiotensin II.

Graphical abstract: Digital design and 3D printing of reactionware for on demand synthesis of high value probes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Jun 2023
Accepted
31 Jul 2023
First published
02 Aug 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Digital Discovery, 2023,2, 1326-1333

Digital design and 3D printing of reactionware for on demand synthesis of high value probes

P. Frei, P. J. Kitson, A. X. Jones and L. Cronin, Digital Discovery, 2023, 2, 1326 DOI: 10.1039/D3DD00108C

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