Yong-Sok Lee
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Featured researches published by Yong-Sok Lee.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014
François Guérard; Yong-Sok Lee; Martin W. Brechbiel
Metals of interest for biomedical applications often need to be complexed and associated in a stable manner with a targeting agent before use. Whereas the fundamentals of most transition-metal complexation processes have been thoroughly studied, the complexation of Zr(IV) has been somewhat neglected. This metal has received growing attention in recent years, especially in nuclear medicine, with the use of (89) Zr, which a β(+) -emitter with near ideal characteristics for cancer imaging. However, the best chelating agent known for this radionuclide is the trishydroxamate desferrioxamine B (DFB), the Zr(IV) complex of which exhibits suboptimal stability, resulting in the progressive release of (89) Zr in vivo. Based on a recent report demonstrating the higher thermodynamic stability of the tetrahydroxamate complexes of Zr(IV) compared with the trishydroxamate complexes analogues to DFB, we designed a series of tetrahydroxamic acids of varying geometries for improved complexation of this metal. Three macrocycles differing in their cavity size (28 to 36-membered rings) were synthesized by using a ring-closing metathesis strategy, as well as their acyclic analogues. A solution study with (89) Zr showed the complexation to be more effective with increasing cavity size. Evaluation of the kinetic inertness of these new complexes in ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) solution showed significantly improved stabilities of the larger chelates compared with (89) Zr-DFB, whereas the smaller complexes suffered from insufficient stabilities. These results were rationalized by a quantum chemical study. The lower stability of the smaller chelates was attributed to ring strain, whereas the better stability of the larger cyclic complexes was explained by the macrocyclic effect and by the structural rigidity. Overall, these new chelating agents open new perspectives for the safe and efficient use of (89) Zr in nuclear imaging, with the best chelators providing dramatically improved stabilities compared with the reference DFB.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016
François Guérard; Yong-Sok Lee; Kwamena E. Baidoo; Jean-François Gestin; Martin W. Brechbiel
Aryliodonium salts have become precursors of choice for the synthesis of (18) F-labeled tracers for nuclear imaging. However, little is known on the reactivity of these compounds with heavy halides, that is, radioiodide and astatide, at the radiotracer scale. In the first comparative study of radiohalogenation of aryliodonium salts with (125) I(-) and (211) At(-) , initial experiments on a model compound highlight the higher reactivity of astatide compared to iodide, which could not be anticipated from the trends previously observed within the halogen series. Kinetic studies indicate a significant difference in activation energy (Ea =23.5 and 17.1 kcal mol(-1) with (125) I(-) and (211) At(-) , respectively). Quantum chemical calculations suggest that astatination occurs via the monomeric form of an iodonium complex whereas iodination occurs via a heterodimeric iodonium intermediate. The good to excellent regioselectivity of halogenation and high yields achieved with diversely substituted aryliodonium salts indicate that this class of compounds is a promising alternative to the stannane chemistry currently used for heavy radiohalogen labeling of tracers in nuclear medicine.
Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry | 2012
Agnieszka Sulima; Kejun Cheng; Arthur E. Jacobson; Kenner C. Rice; Klaus Gawrisch; Yong-Sok Lee
N‐Formyl‐1‐bromo‐4‐hydroxy‐3‐methoxymorphinan‐6‐one (compound 2), an important intermediate in the NIH Opiate Total Synthesis, presumably exists as a mixture of two rotamers (Z and E) in both CHCl3 and DMSO at room temperature due to the hindered rotation of its N‐C18 bond in the amide moiety. By comparing the experimental 1H and 13C chemical shifts of a single rotamer and the mixture of compound 2 in CDCl3 with the calculated chemical shifts of the geometry optimized Z and E rotamers utilizing density functional theory, the crystalline rotamer of compound 2 was characterized as having the E configuration. The energy barrier between the two rotamers was also determined with the temperature dependence of 1H and 13C NMR coalescence experiments, and then compared with that from the reaction path for the interconversion of the two rotamers calculated at the level of B3LYP/6‐31G*. Detailed geometry of the ground state and the transition states of both rotamers are given and discussed. Copyright
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2016
Mohammad B. Haskali; Sanjay Telu; Yong-Sok Lee; Cheryl Morse; Shuiyu Lu; Victor W. Pike
Treatment of (diacetoxyiodo)arenes (1a-1u) with cyclotron-produced [(18)F]fluoride ion rapidly affords no-carrier-added [(18)F]fluoroarenes (2a-2u) in useful yields and constitutes a new method for converting substituted iodoarenes into substituted [(18)F]fluoroarenes in just two steps.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010
Joong-Hyun Chun; Shuiyu Lu; Yong-Sok Lee; Victor W. Pike
Chemical Communications | 2013
François Guérard; Yong-Sok Lee; Raphaël Tripier; Lawrence P. Szajek; Jeffrey R. Deschamps; Martin W. Brechbiel
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004
Yong-Sok Lee; M. Krauss
Chemistry & Biology | 2004
Yong-Sok Lee; Monica Marcu; Len Neckers
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010
Yong-Sok Lee; Milan Hodoscek; Joong-Hyun Chun; Victor W. Pike
Dalton Transactions | 2016
Ana Christina Opina; Madeleine Strickland; Yong-Sok Lee; Nico Tjandra; R. Andrew Byrd; Rolf E. Swenson; Olga Vasalatiy