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by svara
621 days ago
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I... Don't think that's right? Although I would appreciate being corrected with some good sources on this. It's a fast moving field and combinatorial chemistry is still new enough that many recently published structures wouldn't have used it. I'm well aware of the impact of natural products and particularly plant secondary metabolites in drug discovery. I'm also aware of combinatorial synthesis occasionally hitting structures that are close to natural products. But from first principles, why would you need to limit yourself to that subset of molecular space? Obviously, your structure will need to look vaguely biochemical to be compatible with the bodies chemical environment, but natural products are limited to biochemically feasible syntheses, and are therefore dominated by structures derived from natural amino acids and similar basic biochemical building blocks. For a concrete example off the top of my head, I'm not aware of any natural diazepines - the structure looks "organic" but biochemistry doesn't often make 7-rings, and those were made long before combinatorial chemistry. Might be wrong on this one, since there's so much out there, but I think it holds. |
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