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Dive into the research topics where Peter M. Wright is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter M. Wright.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

The Evolving Role of Chemical Synthesis in Antibacterial Drug Discovery

Peter M. Wright; Andrew G. Myers

The discovery and implementation of antibiotics in the early twentieth century transformed human health and wellbeing. Chemical synthesis enabled the development of the first antibacterial substances, organoarsenicals and sulfa drugs, but these were soon outshone by a host of more powerful and vastly more complex antibiotics from nature: penicillin, streptomycin, tetracycline, and erythromycin, among others. These primary defences are now significantly less effective as an unavoidable consequence of rapid evolution of resistance within pathogenic bacteria, made worse by widespread misuse of antibiotics. For decades medicinal chemists replenished the arsenal of antibiotics by semisynthetic and to a lesser degree fully synthetic routes, but economic factors have led to a subsidence of this effort, which places society on the precipice of a disaster. We believe that the strategic application of modern chemical synthesis to antibacterial drug discovery must play a critical role if a crisis of global proportions is to be averted.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

A Robust Platform for the Synthesis of New Tetracycline Antibiotics

Cuixiang Sun; Qiu Wang; Jason D. Brubaker; Peter M. Wright; Christian D. Lerner; Kevin Noson; Mark G. Charest; Dionicio Siegel; Yi-Ming Wang; Andrew G. Myers

Tetracyclines and tetracycline analogues are prepared by a convergent, single-step Michael-Claisen condensation of AB precursor 1 or 2 with D-ring precursors of wide structural variability, followed by removal of protective groups (typically in two steps). A number of procedural variants of the key C-ring-forming reaction are illustrated in multiple examples. These include stepwise deprotonation of a D-ring precursor followed by addition of 1 or 2, in situ deprotonation of a D-ring precursor in mixture with 1 or 2, and in situ lithium-halogen exchange of a benzylic bromide D-ring precursor in the presence of 1 or 2, followed by warming. The AB plus D strategy for tetracycline synthesis by C-ring construction is shown to be robust across a range of different carbocyclic and heterocyclic D-ring precursors, proceeding reliably and with a high degree of stereochemical control. Evidence suggests that Michael addition of the benzylic anion derived from a given D-ring precursor to enones 1 or 2 is quite rapid at -78 degrees C, while Claisen cyclization of the enolate produced is rate-determining, typically occurring upon warming to 0 degrees C. The AB plus D coupling strategy is also shown to be useful for the construction of tetracycline precursors that are diversifiable by latter-stage transformations, subsequent to cyclization to form the C ring. Results of antibacterial assays and preliminary data obtained from a murine septicemia model show that many of the novel tetracyclines synthesized have potent antibiotic activities, both in bacterial cell culture and in vivo. The platform for tetracycline synthesis described gives access to a broad range of molecules that would be inaccessible by semisynthetic methods (presently the only means of tetracycline production) and provides a powerful engine for the discovery and, perhaps, development of new tetracycline antibiotics.


Nature | 2016

A platform for the discovery of new macrolide antibiotics

Ziyang Zhang; Pavol Jakubec; Audrey Langlois-Mercier; Peter M. Wright; Daniel T. Hog; Kazuo Yabu; Senkara Rao Allu; Takehiro Fukuzaki; Peter N. Carlsen; Yoshiaki Kitamura; Xiang Zhou; Matthew L. Condakes; Filip T. Szczypiński; William D. Green; Andrew G. Myers

The chemical modification of structurally complex fermentation products, a process known as semisynthesis, has been an important tool in the discovery and manufacture of antibiotics for the treatment of various infectious diseases. However, many of the therapeutics obtained in this way are no longer effective, because bacterial resistance to these compounds has developed. Here we present a practical, fully synthetic route to macrolide antibiotics by the convergent assembly of simple chemical building blocks, enabling the synthesis of diverse structures not accessible by traditional semisynthetic approaches. More than 300 new macrolide antibiotic candidates, as well as the clinical candidate solithromycin, have been synthesized using our convergent approach. Evaluation of these compounds against a panel of pathogenic bacteria revealed that the majority of these structures had antibiotic activity, some efficacious against strains resistant to macrolides in current use. The chemistry we describe here provides a platform for the discovery of new macrolide antibiotics and may also serve as the basis for their manufacture.


Organic Letters | 2017

Diastereoselective Michael–Claisen Cyclizations of γ-Oxa-α,β-unsaturated Ketones en Route to 5-Oxatetracyclines

Fan Liu; Peter M. Wright; Andrew G. Myers

5-Oxatetracyclines were synthesized from d-arabinose using sequential Michael-Claisen cyclization reactions via a 5-oxa-AB enone substrate. The 5-oxatetracyclines were found to have poor stability in aqueous buffer (pH 7.4, 37 °C) and showed little to no inhibition of bacterial growth (S. aureus, E. coli).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Polyolefin-polar block copolymers from versatile new macromonomers

Christopher Kay; Paul D Goring; Connah Andrew Burnett; Ben Hornby; Kenneth Lewtas; Shaun Morris; Colin Morton; Tony McNally; Giles W. Theaker; Carl Waterson; Peter M. Wright; Peter Scott

A new metallocene-based polymerization mechanism is elucidated in which a zirconium hydride center inserts α-methylstyrene at the start of a polymer chain. The hydride is then regenerated by hydrogenation to release a polyolefin containing a single terminal α-methylstyrenyl group. Through the use of the difunctional monomer 1,3-diisopropenylbenzene, this catalytic hydride insertion polymerization is applied to the production of linear polyethylene and ethylene-hexene copolymers containing an isopropenylbenzene end group. Conducting simple radical polymerizations in the presence of this new type of macromonomer leads to diblock copolymers containing a polyolefin attached to an acrylate, methacrylate, vinyl ester, or styrenic segments. The new materials are readily available and exhibit interfacial phenomena, including the mediation of the mixing of immiscible polymer blends.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Zur Rolle der chemischen Synthese in der Entwicklung antibakterieller Wirkstoffe

Peter M. Wright; Andrew G. Myers


Tetrahedron | 2011

Methodological Advances Permit the Stereocontrolled Construction of Diverse Fully Synthetic Tetracyclines Containing an All-Carbon Quaternary Center at Position C5a.

Peter M. Wright; Andrew G. Myers


Archive | 2010

SYNTHESIS OF TETRACYCLINES AND INTERMEDIATES THERETO

Andrew G. Myers; David A. Kummer; Derun Li; Evan Hecker; Amelie Dion; Peter M. Wright


Archive | 2012

SYNTHESIS OF C5-SUBSTITUTED TETRACYCLINES, USES THEREOF, AND INTERMEDIATES THERETO

Evan Hecker; Andrew G. Myers; Peter M. Wright


Archive | 2017

Additives for Fuels and Oils Comprising Functionalised Diblock Copolymers

Carl Waterson; Kenneth Lewtas; Peter Scott; Christopher Kay; Giles W. Theaker; Peter M. Wright

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