 Chemists from The 
Scripps Research Institute illustrate their powerful new technique to 
make and modify medicines, published recently in the journal Science. 
Professor Phil Baran (center) holds a flask representing amines to 
cleave strained C–C bonds, which are depicted by a tug-of-war between 
co-first authors Ryan Gianatassio (left center) and Justin Lopchuk 
(right center) with co-authors Chung-Mao Pan (left)  and Jie Wang.
 
Chemists from The 
Scripps Research Institute illustrate their powerful new technique to 
make and modify medicines, published recently in the journal Science. 
Professor Phil Baran (center) holds a flask representing amines to 
cleave strained C–C bonds, which are depicted by a tug-of-war between 
co-first authors Ryan Gianatassio (left center) and Justin Lopchuk 
(right center) with co-authors Chung-Mao Pan (left)  and Jie Wang.
  
Bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine
Bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine hydrochloride
 http://www.scripps.edu/news/press/2016/20160114baran.html
TSRI Chemists Devise Powerful New Method for Modifying Drug Molecules
‘Strain-release amination’ technique emerged from efforts to help Pfizer synthesize promising cancer drug candidate
LA JOLLA, CA—January 14, 2016—Chemists at The Scripps Research 
Institute (TSRI) have developed a versatile new technique for making 
modifications—especially one type of extremely difficult, but 
much-sought-after modification—to complex drug molecules.
The feat, reported in the January 15 issue of the journal 
Science,
 has already enabled pharma giant Pfizer to proceed with the evaluation 
of a promising cancer drug candidate that otherwise could not have been 
made in sufficient quantities.
“People from other pharma companies who have seen early drafts of 
this paper can’t get their hands on the supporting information fast 
enough,” said senior investigator Phil S. Baran, the Darlene Shiley 
Professor of Chemistry at TSRI. “I expect that every company in the 
business of making drugs will be using this chemistry soon.”
The technique, known as “strain-release amination,” also should 
enable the easier construction of a variety of molecules besides 
pharmaceuticals, including molecular probes for basic biology studies, 
plastics, and other materials made from organic compounds.
Pfizer’s Bottleneck
The project began with Pfizer’s request for help in synthesizing a 
molecule known as bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine, which it needed to make 
the cancer drug candidate. The Baran laboratory frequently collaborates 
with Pfizer and other pharma companies to solve tough problems in 
medicinal and process chemistry.
Traditional methods of synthesizing bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine left
 much to be desired. “Most of the previously published synthetic routes 
require three to five steps with toxic reagents and yield only tens of 
milligrams,” said Ryan Gianatassio, a PhD student at TSRI who was 
co-first author of the study.
Pfizer needed kilograms of bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine for 
preclinical studies of its cancer drug candidate, and the company had 
had to shelve the drug’s development until it could make that much of 
it.
“We built a team of expert synthetic chemists to solve this 
challenging problem, including chemists from Phil Baran’s lab and 
Pfizer’s synthetic and process chemistry groups,” said Michael R. 
Collins, a senior principal scientist at the drug company’s La Jolla 
Laboratories.
Baran and his team, including Gianatassio and co-first author TSRI 
Research Associate Justin M. Lopchuk, were able to solve the supply 
problem for this building block, enabling a relatively quick and easy 
synthesis from a readily available starting compound. “Using our 
procedure, Pfizer easily produced over 100 grams, and they are now in a 
position to scale that up further and re-start that delayed drug 
development program,” said Gianatassio.
Adding Strained-Ring Structures
Baran realized that the new method could have much broader applications.
Bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine is a “spring-loaded” or “strained ring” 
molecule, in which carbon atoms are arranged in rings at odd angles, 
with relatively large bond energies. Pharmaceutical chemists know that 
adding such a structure to a drug molecule sometimes greatly improves 
the drug’s properties: making it more absorbable by the gut, for 
example, or enabling it to resist breakdown by enzymes in the body so 
that it works therapeutically for longer periods.
The problem has been that, using traditional methods, the insertion 
of these small structures into larger drug molecules is tricky—so much 
so that chemists often have had to redesign the entire synthesis around 
the small added structure.
“The way they’ve been doing it is like decorating a Christmas tree by
 putting the ornaments in place first and then growing the tree around 
it,” said Baran. “In many cases they just won’t pursue that because of 
the time and labor it would take.”
Baran and his team showed that they could use their new method to 
directly append a strained-ring molecule favored by pharmaceutical 
chemists—propellane, so-called because its structure resembles a 
propeller—to existing larger drug molecules. “We can make that 
five-carbon ring structure of propellane click onto a wide range of drug
 molecules of a type known as secondary amines—we call that a 
propellerization reaction,” said Lopchuck.
“In fact, starting with a stock solution of the propellane, we can 
use high-throughput techniques to quickly elaborate a matrix of 
amine-containing compounds with the bicyclopentyl moiety, instead of 
painstakingly synthesizing the compounds one at a time,” Collins said.
The team went on to demonstrate similar direct modifications using 
two other strained-ring structures, azetidine and cyclobutane.
The TSRI researchers also found that they could use the new method to
 attach molecules very precisely and selectively to specific amino acids
 on proteins, thus in principle enabling the creation of new biologic 
drugs as well as new reagents that would be useful in basic biology 
research. “This technique opens up a world of chemistry that academic 
and commercial laboratories have really wanted to look into but 
couldn’t, due to the technical obstacles,” said Baran.
The supporting, publicly available information on strain-release 
amination is meant to enable chemists to start using the technique right
 away. A behind-the-scenes account and high-definition photos of the new
 reaction setup can be found on the Baran Lab Blog, 
Open Flask.
“This can be considered rapid bench-to-bedside chemistry because it 
is fundamental science that will have a positive impact on human 
medicine in a short period of time,” Baran said.
Other co-authors of the paper, “Strain Release Amination,” were Jie 
Wang, Chung-Mao Pan, Lara R. Malins and Liher Prieto of TSRI; and Thomas
 A. Brandt, Gary M. Gallego, Neal W. Sach, Jillian E. Spangler, Huichun 
Zhu and Jinjiang Zhu, of Pfizer.
The research was funded in part by Pfizer and the National Institutes
 of Health’s National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
About The Scripps Research Institute
The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) is one of the 
world's largest independent, not-for-profit organizations focusing on 
research in the biomedical sciences. TSRI is internationally recognized 
for its contributions to science and health, including its role in 
laying the foundation for new treatments for cancer, rheumatoid 
arthritis, hemophilia, and other diseases. An institution that evolved 
from the Scripps Metabolic Clinic founded by philanthropist Ellen 
Browning Scripps in 1924, the institute now employs about 2,700 people 
on its campuses in La Jolla, CA, and Jupiter, FL, where its renowned 
scientists—including two Nobel laureates—work toward their next 
discoveries. The institute's graduate program, which awards PhD degrees 
in biology and chemistry, ranks among the top ten of its kind in the 
nation. For more information, see 
www.scripps.edu.
# # #
For information:
Office of Communications
 
Tel: 858-784-2666
Fax: 858-784-8136
press@scripps.edu
  
Org Lett. 2014 Apr 4;16(7):1884-7. doi: 10.1021/ol500635p. Epub  2014 Mar 14.
 
A new route to bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine from 1-azido-3-iodobicyclo[1.1.1]pentane.
Abstract
From
 a medicinal chemistry perspective, bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-amine (1) has
 served as a unique and important moiety. Synthetically, however, this 
compound has received little attention, and only one scalable route to 
this amine has been demonstrated. Reduction of an easily available and 
potentially versatile intermediate, 1-azido-3-iodobicyclo[1.1.1]pentane 
(2), can offer both a flexible and scalable alternative to this target. 
Herein, we describe our scrutiny of this reportedly elusive 
transformation and report our ensuing success with this endeavor. 
 
 
Scalable Synthesis of 1-Bicyclo[1.1.1]pentylamine via a Hydrohydrazination Reaction
Pfizer
 Worldwide Research and Development, La Jolla Laboratories, 10770 
Science Center Drive, San Diego, California 92121, United States
 
Org. Lett., 2011, 13 (17), pp 4746–4748
DOI: 10.1021/ol201883z
Publication Date (Web): August 11, 2011
Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
 
Abstract
The reaction of [1.1.1]propellane with di-tert-butyl azodicarboxylate and phenylsilane in the presence of Mn(dpm)3 to give di-tert-butyl 1-(bicyclo[1.1.1]pentan-1-yl)hydrazine-1,2-dicarboxylate is described. Subsequent deprotection gives 1-bicyclo[1.1.1]pentylhydrazine followed by reduction to give 1-bicyclo[1.1.1]pentylamine. The reported route marks a significant improvement over the previous syntheses of 1-bicyclo[1.1.1]pentylamine in terms of scalability, yield, safety, and cost.
 
 
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