Article

Heteroaromatic Rings of the Future

UCB Celltech, Granta Park, Great Abington, Cambridge CB15 6GS, United Kingdom
J. Med. Chem., 2009, 52 (9), pp 2952–2963
DOI: 10.1021/jm801513z
Publication Date (Web): April 6, 2009
Copyright © 2009 American Chemical Society
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone: 44-(0)1753 534655. Fax: +44(0)1753 447603. E-mail: will.pitt@ucb.com. Current address: UCB Celltech, 208 Bath Road, Slough SL1 3WE, United Kingdom., †

Current address: Addex Pharmaceuticals.

, ‡

Current address: Cyclofluidic.

, §

Current address: Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre.

Abstract

Abstract Image

Small aromatic ring systems are of central importance in the development of novel synthetic protein ligands. Here we generate a complete list of 24847 such ring systems. We call this list and associated annotations VEHICLe, which stands for virtual exploratory heterocyclic library. Searches of literature and compound databases, using this list as substructure queries, identified only 1701 as synthesized. Using a carefully validated machine learning approach, we were able to estimate that the number of unpublished, but synthetically tractable, VEHICLe rings could be over 3000. However, analysis also shows that the rate of publication of novel examples to be as low as 5−10 per year. With this work, we aim to provide fresh stimulus to creative organic chemists by highlighting a small set of apparently simple ring systems that are predicted to be tractable but are, to the best of our knowledge, unconquered.

Citation data is made available by participants in CrossRef's Cited-by Linking service. For a more comprehensive list of citations to this article, users are encouraged to perform a search in SciFinder.

Metrics

Article Views: 13,466 Times
Received 2 December 2008
Published online 6 April 2009
Published in print 14 May 2009
Learn more about these metrics Article Views are the COUNTER-compliant sum of full text article downloads since November 2008 (both PDF and HTML) across all institutions and individuals. These metrics are regularly updated to reflect usage leading up to the last few days.

The Altmetric Attention Score is a quantitative measure of the attention that a research article has received online. Clicking on the donut icon will load a page at altmetric.com with additional details about the score and the social media presence for the given article. Find more information on the Altmetric Attention Score and how the score is calculated.
+
More Article Metrics
Explore by: