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Isotope or mass encoding of combinatorial libraries
Geysen, H. M., Wagner, C. D., Bodnar, W. M., Markworth, C. J., Parke, G. J., Schoenen, F. J., Wagner, D. S., & Kinder, D. S. (1996). Isotope or mass encoding of combinatorial libraries. Chemistry and Biology, 3(8), 679-688. https://doi.org/10.1016/s1074-5521(96)90136-2
BACKGROUND: Combinatorial chemistry using solid-phase synthesis is a rapidly developing technology that can result in a significant reduction in the time required to find and optimize lead compounds. The application of this approach to traditional medicinal chemistry has led to the construction of libraries of small organic molecules on resin beads. A major difficulty in developing large combinatorial libraries is the lack of a facile encoding and decoding methodology to identify active compounds.
RESULTS: Several encoding schemes are described which use the ability of mass spectrometry to ascertain isotopic distributions. Molecular tags are attached to resin beads in parallel or on the linker used for chemical library synthesis. The tags are encoded via a controlled ratio of a number of stable isotopes on the tagging molecules, and range from a single to a complex isotopic distribution.
CONCLUSIONS: A novel coding scheme is described that is useful for the generation of large encoded combinatorial libraries. The code can be cleaved after assay and analyzed by mass spectrometry in an automated fashion. An important element of the combinatorial discovery process is the ability to extract the structure-activity relationship (SAR) information made available by library screening. The speed and sensitivity of the mass-encoding scheme has the potential to determine the full SAR for a given library.