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Click Chemistry and Radiochemistry: An Update

Journal

BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY
Volume 34, Issue 11, Pages 1925-1950

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.3c00286

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The term click chemistry refers to a class of organic transformations aimed at simplifying and streamlining chemical synthesis. It has had a significant impact on various fields of chemical and biological science and has shown particular promise in radiopharmaceutical chemistry.
The term click chemistry describes a class of organic transformations that were developed to make chemical synthesis simpler and easier, in essence allowing chemists to combine molecular subunits as if they were puzzle pieces. Over the last 25 years, the click chemistry toolbox has swelled from the canonical copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition to encompass an array of ligations, including bioorthogonal variants, such as the strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition and the inverse electron-demand Diels-Alder reaction. Without question, the rise of click chemistry has impacted all areas of chemical and biological science. Yet the unique traits of radiopharmaceutical chemistry have made it particularly fertile ground for this technology. In this update, we seek to provide a comprehensive guide to recent developments at the intersection of click chemistry and radiopharmaceutical chemistry and to illuminate several exciting trends in the field, including the use of emergent click transformations in radiosynthesis, the clinical translation of novel probes synthesized using click chemistry, and the advent of click-based in vivo pretargeting.

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