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Active HORIZON European Commission

Molecular Editing by Nitrogen Insertion

€1.46M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz
Country Germany
Start Date Mar 01, 2025
End Date Feb 28, 2030
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101165618
Grant Description

NINSERT constitutes a program to embark on selective and mild nitrogen insertions, both within and beyond carbonyl chemistry.

Reagent development, catalyst design, and synergistic effects will be evaluated to provide a platform for late-stage skeletal editing, an area that has been recently brought to the forefront of organic chemistry.

With a primary emphasis on heterocyclic motifs, commonly encountered in natural products and drug candidates, NINSERT offers a powerful tool to streamline future syntheses of nitrogen containing compounds.

Notably, approximately 59% of all small-molecule drugs feature nitrogen heterocycles, underscoring the profound impact this program will have on pharmaceutical research.

Adjusting physicochemical properties by late-stage nitrogen insertion will enable medicinal chemists to tailor the overall compound profile on its way to candidate-nomination and ultimately clinical studies.

Furthermore, asymmetric methods, as elucidated in this proposal, will give rise to molecular complexity within the 3D chemical space.

Guided by the principles of strain-release and molecular recognition, we will utilize our expertise on asymmetric ring expansion and atom insertion reactions to deliver highly selective methods applicable to both academic and industrial research.

Despite the pioneering work of Beckmann and Schmidt over a century ago, nitrogen insertions have remained significantly constrained over the years, largely due to their substrate limitations, harsh reaction conditions, and unselective outcomes.

The progression to selective and widely applicable nitrogen insertions has been long overdue and marks a major driving force behind the development of NINSERT.

All Grantees

Johannes Gutenberg-Universitat Mainz

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