Previous Pause Next
Home >> News Center >> Features >> Rising Stars >>
Martin Burke: Generate Diverse Arrays of Small Mole­cules Simply and Quickly PDF Print E-mail
User Rating :  / 0
Thursday, 15 July 2010 14:15

Of the thousands of drugs used to treat disease, most are small molecules--organic compounds that bind with proteins and influence their activity. But researchers must screen many compounds to find potential drugs, and the large number of chemical reactions needed to synthesize any one compound makes the process slow and painstaking.

Martin Burke, an assistant professor of chemistry at University of Illinois, Urbana, has figured out a way to simply and quickly generate diverse arrays of small mole­cules by repeatedly using a single reaction to join different organic components. He begins by turning a wide variety of organic molecules into standardized building blocks, each of which has a boronic acid on one end and a halide, such as bromide, on the other. In a test tube, the two ends react to link molecules with a carbon-carbon bond. Burke's key advance is a way to reversibly obstruct the boronic-acid end, so that chemists can sequentially couple different molecules.

Burke is partnering with a major chemical company to release a set of premade building blocks. Ultimately, he hopes that the ability to quickly c­reate large collections of compounds will help him find highly complex small molecules that can imitate the structure of proteins that mal­function in diseases such as cystic fibrosis. Such "molecular prosthetics" could provide new treatments for a whole array of diseases, saving lives.

Marin's Research Intetrests

Research in the Burke group focuses on the synthesis and study of small molecules with the capacity to perform protein-like functions. Ultimately, we envision such compounds serving as substitutes for missing or dysfunctional proteins, thereby operating as prostheses on the molecular scale. To enable these studies, we seek to develop new strategies and methods that make the process of complex small molecule synthesis as simple, efficient, and flexible as possible. We further aim to harness the power of this chemistry to illuminate the underpinnings of higher-order small molecule function in atomistic detail. Collectively, these efforts seek to make possible the development of molecular prosthetics as a general strategy for the understanding and betterment of human health. Specific examples of ongoing projects are described below:

Iterative Cross-Coupling (ICC): Towards a General Strategy for Complex Small Molecule Synthesis

To most effectively harness the potential impact of complex small molecules on both science and medicine, it is critical to maximize the simplicity, efficiency, and flexibility with which these types of compounds can be synthesized in the laboratory. In this regard, modern peptide synthesis, involving the iterative coupling of bifunctional amino acids represents a valuable benchmark. Amino acid building blocks are now commercially-available in suitably-protected form as stable, crystalline solids, and the process of peptide synthesis is routinely automated. As a result, this powerful discovery engine is accessible to a broad range of scientists. In sharp contrast, the laboratory synthesis of small molecules remains a relatively complex and non-systematized process. We are currently developing a simple and highly modular strategy for making small molecules which is analogous to peptide synthesis and involves iterative Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling of B-protected haloboronic acids. In this approach, building blocks are prepared (or in the future simply purchased) having all of the required functional groups preinstalled in the correct oxidation state and with the desired stereochemical relationships. These building blocks are then brought together via the recursive application of one mild reaction. Although certain small molecules are currently more amenable to this approach than others, the rapidly expanding scope of the Suzuki-Miyaura reaction, which increasingly includes sp3-sp3 couplings, suggests the potential for broad generality. Our long term goal is to create a general and automated process for the simple and flexible construction of a broad range of complex small molecules.

Towards the Total Synthesis of Amphotericin B via Iterative Cross-Coupling

The channel-forming natural product amphotericin B is a prominent example of the special utility that may be found in small molecules that perform higher-order functions. Specifically, in contrast to most antibiotics, microbial resistance to amphotericin B is extremely rare, and it is likely that the lack of a mutable protein target and lack of resistance are causatively linked. This relationship may prove to be general and merits intense inquiry. Moreover, in many ways amphotericin B represents a potential prototype for small molecules that replicate the functions of protein-based ion channels and thereby operate as prostheses on the molecular scale. However, despite more than five decades of research, the archetypal amphotericin B channel remains poorly understood at the molecular level precluding the rational pursuit of these objectives. An efficient, modular, and flexible total synthesis of this complex natural product stands to enable the first systematic dissection of the structure/function relationships that underlie its extraordinary ion channel activity. Taking advantage of the iterative cross-coupling strategy described above, we aim to synthesize amphotericin B using only the Suzuki-Miyaura reaction to bring together a collection of efficiently synthesized bifunctional building blocks.

Harnessing the Power of Synthesis to Probe the Structure and Function of the Amphotericin B Ion Channel

Molecular modeling studies predict that specific protic functional groups appended to the amphotericin B macrolide skeleton make important contributions to the self-assembly and/or ion transport properties of this prototypical small molecule-based ion channel. We aim to harness the power of organic synthesis to systematically test these hypothetical structure/function relationships. More specifically, we are employing a variety of approaches including total synthesis (described above), degradation of the natural product, and a hybrid semisynthetic approach to prepare a collection of amphotericin B derivatives that each lack one or more of the appended polar functional groups. We have found using multidimensional NMR techniques that the conformation of the macrolide skeleton is unaltered by these types of appendage deletions, greatly facilitating the interpretation of structure/function studies. Using the degradative synthetic approach, we have recently discovered that, in stark contrast to the leading model for channel self-assembly, oxidation at C(41) of the amphotericin B skeleton is not required for potent antifungal activity. Systematic evaluation of the complete collection of targeted derivatives in a battery of biological and biophysical assays stands to produce, for the first time, an atomistic understanding of the self-assembly and conducting properties of the potentially prototypical amphotericin B ion channel.

Awards

Howard Hughes Medical Institute Early Career Scientist Award, 2009
Amgen Young Investigator Award, 2009
Sloan Research Fellowship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, 2009
Thieme Chemistry Journals Award, 2009
Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation Young Investigator Award, 2008
Teacher Ranked as Excellent, UIUC Center for Teaching Excellence, 2008
National Science Foundation CAREER Award, 2008
Teacher Ranked as Excellent, UIUC Center for Teaching Excellence, 2007
Teacher Ranked as Excellent, UIUC Center for Teaching Excellence, 2006
ACS Petroleum Research Foundation Type G Award, 2005
Camille and Henry Dreyfus New Faculty Award, 2005
Henry Asbury Christian Award, HMS, 2005
NIH Medical Scientist Training Program Fellowship, 2003
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Predoctoral Fellowship, 2000
Hunterian Research Award, JHMI, 1998

Recent Publications

D.M. Knapp, E.P. Gillis, M.D. Burke. "A General Solution for Unstable Boronic Acids: Slow- Release Cross-Coupling from Air-Stable MIDA Boronates" 2009, Submitted

M.D. Burke. "Flexible Tetracycline Synthesis Yields Promising Antibiotics" Nature Chemical Biology, News and Views 2009, 5, 77-79.

D.S. Palacios, M.D. Burke. "The Prospect of Molecular Prosthetics: Small Molecules with Protein-Like Functions" Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2009, Invited Review.

E.P. Gillis, M.D. Burke. "MIDA Boronates, A User’s Guide" Aldrichimica Acta, 2009, In Press.

E.P. Gillis, M.D. Burke. "Multistep Synthesis of Complex Boronic Acids from Simple MIDA Boronates" J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 14084-14085.

S.G. Ballmer, E.P. Gillis, M.D. Burke. "B-Protected Haloboronic Acids for Iterative Cross- Coupling" Org. Syn. 2009, In Press.

B.E. Uno, E.P. Gillis, M.D. Burke. "Vinyl MIDA Boronate, A Readily-Accessible and Highly Versatile Building Block for Small Molecule Synthesis." 2008, ASAP, Invited Contribution to Tetrahedron: Special Issue in Honor of Professor Justin Dubois' Tetrahedron Young Investigator Award.

E.P. Gillis, M.D. Burke. "Multistep Synthesis of Complex Boronic Acids from Simple MIDA Boronates" J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 14084-14085

S.J. Lee, K.C. Gray, J.S. Paek, M.D. Burke. "Simple, Efficient, and Modular Syntheses of Polyene Natural Products via Iterative Cross-Coupling" J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 466-468.

D.S. Palacios, T.M. Anderson, M.D. Burke "A Post-PKS Oxidation of the Amphotericin B Skeleton Predicted to be Critical for Channel Formation is Not Required for Potent Antifungal Activity" J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 13804-13805.

E.P. Gillis and M.D. Burke. "A Simple and Modular Strategy for Small Molecule Synthesis: Iterative Suzuki-Miyaura Coupling of B-Protected Haloboronic Acid Building Blocks." J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 6716-6717.

 


 

 
FairExcellent 

Add comment  |   Add to my library  |  Forward this article

login to leave comment