Sony Pixel Power calrec Sony

December 11, 2025

12/12/2025

Scripps Research team pioneers an efficient way to stereoselectively add fluorine to drug-like molecules A new method uses a novel catalyst and inexpensive fluoride salts to modify the most common chemical bonds opening doors to new medicines and improved medical imaging.

December 11, 2025

LA JOLLA, CA Fluorine is critical for biomedicine. This element can help drug compounds be more potent and last longer in the body, and its radioactive isotope, fluorine-18, powers medical imaging techniques such as positron emission tomography (PET). But scientists have long struggled with adding fluorine to the most common chemical bonds carbon hydrogen (C H) bonds in a way that's precise, efficient and compatible with the molecules used to create many modern medicines. There's been particular interest in constructing carbon fluorine bonds stereoselectively that is, attaching fluorine from a specific direction in space to create the needed fluorinated stereoisomer ( mirror image form) of the target molecule. Stereoselective C H fluorination has remained one of the most challenging synthetic transformations, and the limited approaches developed to date have relied on expensive specialty chemicals or complicated, multi-step procedures.

Now, chemists at Scripps Research have developed a long-sought method to stereoselectively attach fluorine atoms to complex, drug-like molecules in a single step using cheap, readily available fluoride salts. The method, published in Nature Catalysis, enables new ways of molecular editing to accelerate the development of more effective therapeutics and more accessible radioactive tracers for medical imaging.

This discovery changes how we think about C H fluorination, says corresponding author Jin-Quan Yu, the Bristol Myers Squibb Endowed Chair in Chemistry and the Frank and Bertha Hupp Professor of Chemistry at Scripps Research. It not only solves a decades-old problem but also points to new strategies for designing catalysts, which are substances that are vital to speeding up chemical reactions.

Over the past decade, some years saw as many as half of new FDA-approved drugs contain fluorine. However, directly incorporating fluorine into the stable C H bonds of drug-like molecules in a stereoselective fashion has long been a challenge. The new approach solves this by combining a palladium-based catalyst with a specially designed chiral helper molecule called a ligand.

Our approach employed interaction-driven ligand design and computational modeling to guide the catalyst to a specific spot on the target molecule, and to position it precisely in 3D space in order to form the required fluorinated stereoisomer, says first author Nikita Chekshin, a former doctoral student at Scripps Research who's now a scientist at Bristol Myers Squibb.

This method successfully fluorinated a range of medicinally relevant drug-like compounds, including derivatives of flutamide (a prostate cancer drug) and fentanyl (an opioid used for pain relief) with high yields and enantioselectivity meaning it created only the desired stereoisomer of the product, the version most likely to work as intended in the body. The team also tested numerous fluoride salts to refine the chemistry. Their protocol allowed using cheap potassium fluoride, which is essential for the incorporation of fluorine-18, to access radioactive tracers used in PET imaging.

Fluoride is not only the most sustainable and readily available source of fluorine; it's also the way fluorine-18 is synthesized and used in radiochemical applications, notes Chekshin.

Importantly, the reaction can be run quickly in only 45 minutes. That's critical because fluorine-18 has a half-life of about 110 minutes, meaning its amount halves in less than two hours. The reaction's speed renders the method useful for preparing PET tracers on clinical timelines. Until now, that half-life made it challenging to introduce fluorine-18 with older, slower approaches. Radiochemists often had to take longer synthetic routes, which limited the kinds of molecules they could work with.

As a PET tracer, fluorine-18 has to be injected into the studied tissue almost immediately because it decays so quickly, explains Chekshin. This new method simplifies the process of attaching fluorine-18 to drug-like molecules, making it far more practical for medical imaging.

Thanks to the technique, it's now possible to take fluorine-18 directly from a cyclotron a particle accelerator that produces radioactive compounds for medical imaging and incorporate it into drug-like molecules in a single step before it decays. In collaboration with Bristol Myers Squibb, the team demonstrated that the method could radiolabel bioactive compounds in other words, tag drug-like molecules with fluorine-18, which allows tracking their path through the body with medical scans.

This platform will enable late-stage functionalization of medicines, says Yu. That means attaching radioactive tracers to drug molecules at the final step so they can be tracked in imaging studies, without needing to remake the entire compound from scratch.

Because this fluorine platform has been applied in industry, we're optimistic that it will accelerate both drug discovery and diagnostic imaging, adds Chekshin.

And the team has already extended their platform to other elements besides fluorine including oxygen, halogens and nitrogen allowing scientists to even more easily fine-tune drug compounds.

In addition to Chekshin and Yu, authors of the study Enantioselective Pd-catalysed nucleophilic C(sp3) H (radio)fluorination, include Luo-Yan Liu, D. Quang Phan and Yuxin Ouyang of Scripps Research; and David J. Donnelly, Kap-Sun Yeung and Jennifer X. Qiao of Bristol Myers Squibb Research and Development.

This work was supported by Scripps Research; the National Insti
LINK: https://www.scripps.edu/news-and-events/press-room/2025/20251211-yu-na...
See more stories from scripps

More from Scripps

04/03/2026

March 02, 2026

Scripps Research welcomes healthcare innovator Joe Kiani to the Board of Directors Kiani brings decades of experience in patient safety and public service. Mar...

04/03/2026

March 03, 2026

Nanoparticle vaccine approach takes on a new target: Hepatitis C virus Scripps Research scientists reengineer critical proteins on the surface of HCV, paving th...

28/02/2026

February 27, 2026

New way to intentionally discover molecular glues could expand drug discovery Scripps Research scientists and colleagues show how drugs that eliminate certain d...

19/02/2026

February 18, 2026

Mapping protein production in brain cells yields new insights for brain disease Scripps Research and UC San Diego scientists used a novel method to show that so...

18/02/2026

February 17, 2026

Calibr-Skaggs and Kainomyx launch collaboration to pioneer novel malaria treatments Partnering to speed up the discovery of new malaria drugs that target parasi...

12/02/2026

February 11, 2026

TIME100 Health list features Scripps Research Professor Darrell Irvine Irvine is recognized for his work in empowering the immune system to fight disease, which...

06/02/2026

February 05, 2026

How invisible vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response Scripps Research scientists designed a DNA scaffold that carries HIV vaccine proteins into the bo...

24/12/2025

December 23, 2025

Scripps Research study links sleep variability with sleep apnea and hypertension How consumers' digital activity trackers could enable personalized health s...

23/12/2025

December 22, 2025

New technique lights up where drugs go in the body, cell by cell Scripps Research scientists developed a technique that maps drug binding in individual cells th...

20/12/2025

December 19, 2025

Study reveals a key hormonal circuit in the kidneys Scripps Research scientists identify the protein that helps kidney cells regulate renin, providing foundatio...

19/12/2025

December 18, 2025

Nanoparticle vaccine strategy could protect against Ebola and other deadly filoviruses Scripps Research scientists turn nanoparticles into virus showcases to ...

12/12/2025

December 11, 2025

Scripps Research team pioneers an efficient way to stereoselectively add fluorine to drug-like molecules A new method uses a novel catalyst and inexpensive fluo...

09/12/2025

December 08, 2025

An easier approach to recreate the powerful nerve-blocking molecule found in shellfish A Scripps Research-led study resolves the challenge of synthesizing saxit...

04/12/2025

December 03, 2025

Scientists find cancer weak spot in backup DNA repair system New findings from Scripps Research reveal how certain tumors survive DNA damage and point to a stra...

19/11/2025

November 18, 2025

Scripps Research scientists receive $1.1 million to advance AI modeling for HIV vaccine development New AI system helps scientists rapidly pinpoint the most pro...

14/11/2025

November 13, 2025

Scripps Research study reveals how uterine contractions are regulated by stretch and pressure during childbirth Molecular insights could lead to improved labor ...

06/11/2025

November 05, 2025

Scripps Research team identifies sugar molecules that trigger placental formation Study reveals how sugar-protein interactions are critical for the placenta dur...

04/11/2025

November 03, 2025

Douglas W. Phillips and Steven M. Paul join Scripps Research Board of Directors Finance and biomedical leaders bring decades of experience in investment strateg...

30/10/2025

October 29, 2025

Scripps Research professor awarded $3.2 million to advance type 1 diabetes research Support from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Dis...

28/10/2025

October 27, 2025

Scripps Research awarded $4 million to advance platform for neurodevelopmental disorders The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) grant support...

09/10/2025

October 08, 2025

Scripps Research-led team receives $14.2M NIH award to map the body's hidden sixth sense An NIH-backed effort aims to decode how the nervous system monito...

07/10/2025

October 06, 2025

Former Scripps Research assistant professor awarded 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Shimon Sakaguchi is honored for his revolutionary discovery of re...

01/10/2025

September 30, 2025

Scripps Research associate professor named an HHMI Freeman Hrabowski Scholar Associate Professor Xin Jin selected for up to two five-year terms, receiving up to...

13/09/2025

September 11, 2025

Researchers find brain region that fuels compulsive drinking Study by Scripps Research scientists shows how the brain learns to seek alcohol for relief, not jus...

11/09/2025

September 10, 2025

AI model helps boost pandemic preparedness Scripps Research breakthrough reduces antibody discovery time from weeks to hours, potentially revolutionizing pandem...

06/09/2025

September 05, 2025

Researchers map key human proteins that power coronavirus replication, pointing to new treatment strategies Findings from Scripps Research reveal promising drug...

08/08/2025

August 07, 2025

Researchers identify promising new compound to treat tuberculosis Study led by Scripps Research, Texas A&M and additional institutions highlights that the world...

01/08/2025

July 31, 2025

AI model detects hidden diabetes risk by reading glucose spikes Scripps Research scientists reveal how wearable sensors and artificial intelligence could transf...

23/07/2025

July 21, 2025

Where did RNA come from? Origin-of-life scientists from Scripps Research reveal how the sugar ribose may have been selected as one of life's building blocks...

19/06/2025

June 17, 2025

Calibr-Skaggs doses first patient with switchable CAR-T cell therapy in a phase 1 trial for metastatic breast cancer CLBR001 ABBV-461 is a novel, investigatio...

19/06/2025

June 18, 2025

Two-part vaccine strategy generates a stronger, longer-lasting immune boost against HIV Scripps Research scientists' new approach combines two immune-activa...

05/06/2025

June 04, 2025

FDA approves ENCELTO, a first-of-its-kind eye implant that slows vision loss in rare eye disease Cell-based therapy with roots at Scripps Research offers new ho...

04/06/2025

June 03, 2025

Females may be more biochemically sensitive to alcohol-long before dependence sets in Scripps Research's insights into sex-based differences in brain chemis...

30/05/2025

May 29, 2025

AI pinpoints new anti-aging drug candidates More than 70% of the drugs identified by artificial intelligence extended the lifespan of C. elegans worms. May 29,...

28/05/2025

May 27, 2025

HIV vaccine study uncovers powerful new antibody target Certain antibodies blocked nearly 70% of HIV strains, including those typically hard to target. May 27,...

23/05/2025

May 22, 2025

Newest building on Scripps Research campus earns LEED gold rating Chi-Huey Wong Laboratories for Biomedical Research recognized for sustainable construction. M...

20/05/2025

May 19, 2025

Genomic data shows widespread mpox transmission in West Africa prior to 2022 global outbreak Scripps Research scientists, in collaboration with researchers in N...

16/05/2025

May 15, 2025

Two HIV vaccine trials show proof of concept for pathway to broadly neutralizing antibodies North American and African clinical trials led by Scripps Research, ...

14/05/2025

May 13, 2025

Genome of near-extinct northern white rhino offers hope for reviving the species Breakthrough from Scripps Research, San Diego Zoo, Max Planck Institute and oth...

07/05/2025

May 06, 2025

Eric Topol authors book on the science of healthy aging Latest book by Scripps Research executive vice president guides readers through medical breakthroughs t...

29/04/2025

April 28, 2025

Origin of life twist: New study challenges longstanding hypothesis on how first sugars formed Scripps Research and Georgia Institute of Technology scientists...

22/04/2025

April 21, 2025

Empowering antibodies to better activate the immune system Scripps Research scientists discover that a higher ratio of antibodies to viral protein helps engage ...

17/04/2025

April 16, 2025

A better way to predict a patient's risk of coronary artery disease Scripps Research scientists developed a model that more accurately identifies patients a...

16/04/2025

April 15, 2025

The very first structural images of a tuberculosis-fighting virus New insights from Scripps Research could advance phage therapies for the world's deadliest...

10/04/2025

April 09, 2025

FDA clears IND for clinical trial testing switchable CAR-T therapy in patients with autoimmune diseases, without chemotherapy Innovative cellular therapy has po...

08/04/2025

April 07, 2025

A gentle approach offers new hope for inflammatory lung diseases Scripps Research and aTyr Pharma scientists have revealed how the protein HARSWHEP calms inflam...

02/04/2025

April 02, 2025

How microRNAs act as a blueprint for the developing brain Scripps Research scientists reveal that microRNAs guide the development of Purkinje cells, a rare ty...

25/03/2025

March 25, 2025

Low-sugar' vaccine can provide broad immunity against coronavirus variants Scripps Research chemistry professor Chi-Huey Wong presents results from his team...

21/03/2025

March 21, 2025

How scientists uncovered memory's hidden architecture New structural hallmarks of memory storage discovered by Scripps Research could lead to treatments for...

11/03/2025

March 10, 2025

Compound found in common herbs inspires potential anti-inflammatory drug for Alzheimer's disease Scripps Research scientists created a stable form of carnos...