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Volume 1 Issue 1, January 2022

Iterative sequences decoded

Using a broad knowledge base of individual reactions, a computer algorithm evaluates putative, but chemically plausible, sequences and discovers numerous iterative sequences. Some of these iterative sequences are validated experimentally and enable the syntheses of useful motifs in natural product targets. The cover image depicts networks which, from a handful of starting materials, lead to products after one or several types of iterations.

See Molga et al.

Image: Karol Molga and Bartosz Grzybowski, Allchemy Cover Design: Allen Beattie

Editorial

  • Welcome to the first issue of Nature Synthesis; a home for new and important syntheses of molecules and materials that can make the world a better place.

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News

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Comment & Opinion

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News & Views

  • Iterative synthesis can generalize, automate and democratize the molecule-making process. Now, by using a computer algorithm to scan the depths of chemical reactivity space, thousands of iterative ways to make small molecules are discovered.

    • Danielle C. Loving
    • Martin D. Burke
    News & Views
  • Predictably activating C–H and C–C bonds for the synthesis of new materials remains a challenge within the synthetic community. A ternary catalytic dance between radicals, metals and light may unlock this puzzle.

    • Thiago Reschützegger
    • Thomas Syphan
    • Gabriel dos Passos Gomes
    News & Views
  • Late-stage tritiation with high selectivity, isotopic purity and functional-group tolerance is important for the radiolabelling of drug candidates or bioactive compounds. Now, a broadly applicable protocol using aryl thianthrenium salts allows for tritiation of complex molecules by hydrogenolysis via an intermediate cationic palladium complex.

    • Abir Sarbajna
    • Viktoria H. Gessner
    News & Views
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Reviews

  • Enzymes catalyse reactions with unparalleled activity and selectivity. Using chemical insights, researchers can now direct these powerful natural catalysts to perform new-to-nature transformations that solve challenging synthetic problems. In this Perspective, we show how chemists and protein engineers have guided nature’s genetically encoded and evolvable machinery to perform new biocatalytic transformations.

    • David C. Miller
    • Soumitra V. Athavale
    • Frances H. Arnold
    Perspective
  • Oximes are valuable motifs with diverse reactivity. This Review outlines the breadth of oxime reactivity including N–O bond fragmentation through transition metal catalysis and photocatalysis, [2 + 2]-cycloaddition reactions, asymmetric reduction and applications in materials science. Developments in transition metal catalysis and photocatalysis highlight the use of oximes as powerful synthetic building blocks.

    • K. A. Rykaczewski
    • E. R. Wearing
    • C. S. Schindler
    Review Article
  • Remote functionalization through alkene isomerization is a popular strategy in organic synthesis. The dynamic nature of alkene isomerization typically leads to difficulties in controlling the stereochemistry of C(sp3) centres along the carbon skeleton. This Review outlines synthetic methods that tackle this issue and leverage alkene isomerization to control C(sp3) stereocentres in complex organic molecules.

    • Itai Massad
    • Rahul Suresh
    • Ilan Marek
    Review Article
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