From Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia.
Combinatorial chemistry
involves the rapid
synthesis and/or the
computer simulation of a large
number of different but
structurally related
molecules.
Introduction
Synthesis of molecules in a
combinatorial fashion can quickly
lead to large numbers of
molecules. For example, a molecule
with three points of diversity
(R1, R2, and R3) can generate
possible structures, where
,
,
and
are the number of different
substituents utilized.
Although combinatorial
chemistry has only really been
taken up by industry since the
1990s, its roots can be seen
as far back as the
1960s when a researcher at
Rockefeller University,
Bruce Merrifield, started
investigating the
solid-phase synthesis of
peptides. In the
1980s researcher H. Mario
Geysen developed this technique
further, creating arrays of
different peptides on separate
supports.
In its modern form,
combinatorial chemistry has
probably had its biggest impact in
the
pharmaceutical industry.
Researchers attempting to optimize
the activity profile of a compound
create a 'library' of many
different but related compounds.
Advances in
robotics have led to an
industrial approach to
combinatorial synthesis, enabling
companies to routinely produce
over 100,000 new and unique
compounds per year. (See
Medicinal chemistry)
In order to handle the vast
number of structural
possibilities, researchers often
create a 'virtual library', a
computational enumeration of all
possible structures of a given
pharmacophore with all
available
reactants. Such a library can
consist of thousand to millions of
'virtual' compounds. The
researcher will select a subset of
the 'virtual library' for actual
synthesis, based upon various
calculations and criteria. (See
ADME,
Computational chemistry, and
QSAR)
Materials science has applied
to the techniques of combinatorial
chemistry to the discovery of new
materials. This work was pioneered
by P.G. Schultz et al. in the mid
nineties (Science, 1995, 268:
1738-1740) in the context of
luminescent materials obtained by
co-deposition of elements on a
silicon substrate. Work has been
continued by several academic
groups as well as companies with
large research and development
programs (Symyx
Technologies,
GE, etc).