We Welcome back Emma Edelstein, PhD, Senior Scientist at Merck and a GW Department of Chemistry Alumna

The seminar topic is: Synthetic Innovations in Drug Discovery: Development of Methods Toward the Synthesis of Substituted Heterocycles
Fri, 2 December, 2022 2:00pm - 3:00pm
Headshot of Dr. Emma Edelstein

Dr. Edelstein, Senior Scientist at Merck and a GW Department of Chemistry Alumna

The Department of Chemistry Presents, this week's speaker,  Emma Edelstein, PhD, Senior Scientist at Merck and GW Department of Chemistry Alumna.  Will be discussing synthetic innovation in drug discovery.  Emma received her B.S. degree from GW where she conducted undergraduate research for the Dowd Lab.  

 

Lengthy cycle times in the discovery of drug candidates, compounded by high levels of attrition as they progress through clinical development, severely hampers efficiency in Pharmaceutical R&D.  Excellence in synthetic chemistry has the potential to be a key mitigating factor capable of increasing the probability of success and accelerating programs through all stages of their life cycles, particularly in discovery and early development where synthesis is often on the critical path.  As part of this guiding principle, this presentation will describe recent examples of synthetic innovation from the Discovery Process Chemistry group at Merck toward the synthesis of substituted heterocyclic scaffolds. Specifically, a Rh-catalyzed conjugate addition reaction toward the synthesis of trans-3-substituted proline derivatives will be described. A high-throughput experimentation campaign was used to identify an efficient chiral catalyst which was able to afford the desired products in high yield and with high levels of diastereo- and enantioselectivity. This method was used to afford a range of 3-substituted pyrrolidine analogues from readily available dehydroproline-derived electrophiles and boronic acid nucleophiles.

BIO

Dr. Edelstein received her B.S. degree from the George Washington University, where she carried out undergraduate research in the laboratory of Professor Cynthia Dowd. She then pursued graduate studies at Boston College working with Professor James Morken on synthetic method development with a focus on enantioselective catalysis. After completing her graduate studies in 2018, she joined the Discovery Process Chemistry group at Merck in Boston, MA.

Where
Online and In-person Science & Engineering Hall 800 22nd Street, NW Washington DC 20052
Room: B1220

Admission
Open to everyone.

Contacts
Chemistry Department
[email protected]
(202) 994-6121

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