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DCC dynamic combinatorial

CA Carbonic anhydrases CDC Constitutional dynamic chemistry DCC Dynamic combinatorial chemistry DCL Dynamic combinatorial library(ies)... [Pg.34]

DBSA (p-dodecyl benzenesulfonic add) 593 DBU 479,1153 DCA (dichloroacetic add) 71 DCC (dynamic combinatorial chemistry) 232 DDQ... [Pg.1402]

With these selected examples as context, it became clear to several laboratories in the mid-1990s that one should be able to combine reversible formation of compounds (exchange processes) and a selection method with the then rapidly developing field of combinatorial chemistry to produce equilibrating libraries that would evolve based on some selection process. Thus, dynamic combinatorial chemistry or DCC, as it came to be called, evolved from a number of lines of research into the diverse and vibrant field it is today. [Pg.4]

Dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) is marvelously effective at discovering receptors for a broad array of analytes. The nature of the internal competition experiment ensures (normally) that the most effective binder for the analyte of interest is amplified for subsequent identification and characterization. In the context of a host-guest assembly, the issue of stereochemistry can be manifested in a number of scenarios. These include various permutations of chiral or achiral guests, along with achiral, enan-tiopure, or racemic dynamic library components. [Pg.155]

Dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) is a rapidly emerging field that offers a possible alternative to the approach of traditional combinatorial chemistry (CC).32 Whereas CC involves the use of irreversible reactions to efficiently generate static libraries of related compounds, DCC relies on the use of reversible reactions to generate dynamic mixtures. The binding of one member of the dynamic library to a molecular trap (such as the binding site of a protein) is expected to perturb the library in favor of the formation of that member (Figure 29.1). [Pg.567]

FIGURE 29.1 The dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) concept reversible reactions performed with a limiting amount of X generate a mixture of compounds AX, BX, and CX. The binding of AX to molecular trap T causes perturbation of the equilibria involving A and X to give overall amplification of AX at the... [Pg.567]

DCC Dynamic covalent chemistry or dynamic combinatorial chemistry DNCC Dynamic non-covalent chemistry... [Pg.2]

Dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) is founded on the study and the construction of mixtures of discrete constituents which are produced by reversible molecular or supramolecular associations [1, 2], The composition of a dynamic combinatorial library (DCL) is thermodynamically driven and, as such, is able to adapt itself to any parameter that - permanently or transiently - modifies its constitution/energy potential surface [3,4], Thus, in the presence of various internal or external parameters, the involved equilibria can be displaced toward the amplification of given products through an adaptation process that will occur through an in situ screening of these species. A schematic representation using Emil Fisher lock-and-key metaphora can be used to illustrate these concepts (Fig. 1). [Pg.88]

This dynamic process is commonly known as constitutional dynamic chemistry (CDC). While the concept of dynamic covalent chemistry defines systems in which the molecular (or supramolecular) reorganization proceeds via reversible covalent bond formation/breakage, dynamic systems based on noncovalent linkage exchanges define the concept of dynamic noncovalent chemistry. Dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) can be defined as a direct application of CDC where libraries of complementary functional groups and/or complementary interactional groups interexchange via chemical (i.e., covalent) reactions or physical (i.e., noncovalent) interactions. [Pg.293]

DCC is now a major synthesis strategy in supramolecular chemistry, enabling amplification of select compounds from a dynamic combinatorial library... [Pg.268]


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DCC

Dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC

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