Fluorine incorporation into medicines, modern materials, and agricultural agents has improved their structural stability and reinvented these domains. Yet the world has not fully realized fluorine's potential. One promising approach to fluorine installation involves the direct transformation of a carbon?hydrogen bond (C?H bond) into a carbon?fluorine bond in a process known as C?H functionalization. Yet C?H functionalization processes have broader potential: they include reactions to replace C?H bonds with carbon?oxygen, carbon?sulfur, carbon?chlorine or carbon?carbon bonds. In short, C?H functionalization reactions are powerful technologies to streamline access to health-relevant small molecules. Over the last decade, some of the most important advances in C?H functionalization originated from new platforms to control the site of this reaction. Still, the utility of known C?H functionalization processes remains constrained by incomplete positional control in C?H functionalization processes. In some cases, positional control can be achieved by using a directing group. The proposed research includes new directing group strategies with the capacity to substantively extend the synthetic utility C?H functionalization reactions, with tremendous potential benefit to human health.

Public Health Relevance

Medical advances depend on access to small molecule drug formulation aids, biochemical probes, imaging agents, and new chemical entities. My research program invents chemical methods that deliver first-in-kind access to to small molecules with import to human health. To do so, develop technologies that enable carbon? hydrogen (C?H) bond functionalization of sites that are hitherto untargetable because they are neither kinetically accessible based on well-developed C?H functionalization methods, nor the most reactive based on bond dissociation energy.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Unknown (R35)
Project #
1R35GM128741-01
Application #
9574944
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZGM1)
Program Officer
Lees, Robert G
Project Start
2018-07-01
Project End
2023-06-30
Budget Start
2018-07-01
Budget End
2019-06-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Duke University
Department
Chemistry
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
044387793
City
Durham
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27705