Using Chiral Spectroscopy to Enhance Quality Control in Drugs
The Kotov Lab at the University of Michigan is working to evade the devastating effects of unsafe drugs with a new method of drug screening and quality control.
“We foresee new roads ahead—for instance using terahertz waves with tailored polarization to manipulate large molecular assemblies. It might replace microwaves in many synthesis applications in which the handedness of the molecules matters,” said André Farias de Moura , professor of chemistry at the Federal University of São Carlos and co-corresponding author.
Transcript
00:00:00 Some of the wrong chiralities in biomolecules can be devastating for your body, as it had been already in the past with a number of chiral drugs. The simplest chiral structure is a helix, and it can be left and right. If we shine the left helical light to a left helical crystal, we have stronger absorption of that light. If it's of opposite helicity, it will absorb less. With this type of spectroscopy and chiral phonons, you have a very sensitive way to establish what kind of chiralities your drugs are, your peptides, your supplements are — What kind of chemical changes happen to them between the synthesis, and maybe storage, transportations? And you have a very accurate readout in this spectra, in terms of terahertz circular dichroism spectra, to establish whether you have some alternations.

