Product category:
Data management software
News Release from: Advanced Chemistry Development | Subject: Structure Elucidator
Edited by the Laboratorytalk Editorial
Team on 27 July 2007
Making a Case for structure elucidation
Structure Elucidator eases the burden of structure elucidation with computer assisted structure elucidation (Case) and provides a platform to process, analyse, and store analytical data in one place
Natural product research and development company and proprietary ingredients supplier, Unigen Pharmaceuticals, found a solution to the challenges of managing multiple analytical techniques and data formats to effectively carry out structure elucidation for lead compounds Structure elucidation is a critical task in natural product research
This article was originally published on Laboratorytalk on 7 Aug 2003 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Challenging elucidation of chemical structures
MolecularNature has purchased Structure Elucidator from Advanced Chemistry Development, to aid its researchers in phytochemical compound discovery
Automated structure elucidation
The time spent on NMR structure determination is now reduced from several days to hours or minutes by directly coupling reduced NMR spectrometer output to software
It usually involves the use of many different analytical techniques ranging from NMR, mass spectrometry, IR, and chromatography.
Various vendor formats further complicate the issue, rendering it difficult to collect and store all of this data, and even more difficult to interpret the data in order to elucidate a compound's structure.
What Unigen needed was a product that could combine the NMR spectroscopist's expert knowledge with data from other analytical techniques, integrating, predicting, processing, and databasing the available information.
Further reading
Enhanced support for structure elucidation by NMR
Software makes it possible to quickly and easily transform experimental spectra of unknown compounds into plausible chemical structures fit for expert evaluation
Chemical structures at your fingertips
Palm-compatible software allows storing, browsing, and searching of sophisticated chemical databases containing structures and analytical information on any standard Palm OS-based PDA
Structure Elucidator, from Advanced Chemistry Development, includes processing and databasing tools for 1D and 2D NMR, MS, UV-IR, and chromatography.
Once all of this information has been coherently brought together, Structure Elucidator, using its industry-leading Case capabilities, helps determine the structure of unknown compounds.
Structure Elucidator has significantly enhanced the structure elucidation competency in the novel natural ingredient discovery process through the screening of tens of thousands of medicinal plants in the PhytoLogix library at Unigen USA.
"At present, Unigen has five on-going discovery screening projects with each project yielding hundreds of purified natural compounds after bioassay guided isolation.
"How to improve our accuracy and efficiency in structure identification is a huge technology challenge to our chemists," commented Qi Jia, chief scientific officer at Unigen.
"ACD/Labs software, the database and the experience of the company in natural products offer a perfect solution to our needs".
The ability to create a comprehensive database opens up the opportunity for a company to build a library of experimental data that can serve as a valuable resource for compound identification in the future.
In addition, Structure Elucidator includes ACD/Labs's 1H, 13C, and 2D NMR prediction packages which can also be used independently for other challenging NMR projects.
Jia forecasts that the extensive use of Structure Elucidator will help Unigen to bring more novel natural products into its discovery and development pipeline.
The success of the collaboration with ACD/Labs has led to a decision from Unigen's board to bring in new NMR equipment to its Lacey, WA, facility in the third quarter of this year.
• Advanced Chemistry Development: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Laboratorytalk email newsletter
• Laboratorytalk Home Page

