Optimising Drug Structure Flashcards

1
Q

What to identify when designing a new drug from a natural ligands or new lead compound

A

Types of interactions possible
Structural features that are important
Pharmocaphore

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2
Q

What is a pharmocaphore

A

Defines the atoms and functional groups required for a specific pharmacological activity, and their relative positions in space”

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3
Q

For a drug to fir into target protein site it must:

A

Fit into the site
Be held in place by complimentary binding interactions - more biding interactions the tighter it will bind

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4
Q

If it is greatly bound then less…

A

Less drug needed and less costs

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5
Q

Intermolecular binding interactions

A

Ionic
Hydrogen
Van der waals
Hydrophobic
Pi pi

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6
Q

Ionic bonds :

A

Strongest
Between opposite charges
Strength is inversely proportional to the distance between the 2 groups

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7
Q

Negatively charged FG’s

A

Can be deprotoated

  • carboxylic acids
  • sulfonic acids
  • phosphates
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8
Q

Ositively charged FG’s:

A

Can be pronated

H3N-R

Any N containing mol with an avalible lone pair to pick up a proton

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9
Q

Hydrogen bods

A

Weaker than ionic but stronger than van der waals

Place betwen elector define int H and alavalible lone pai on heteroatom

HBA and HBD

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10
Q

HBD’s

A

Alcohol
Thrill
Amines

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11
Q

HBA’s

A

N O or S heteroatoms

Amine, alcohol, ester, thinly, ether, carboxylic, phosphates

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12
Q

Van der waals

A

Very weka

Between hydrophoic regions of drug and target
Drug mst be close to binding region for interaction to occur

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13
Q

Pi pi stacking

A

Non covalent interactions between aromatic rings containing pi bonds

Best overlap is when rings are on top of each other and a little of set

Very common

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14
Q

What are the binding roles of alcohols and phenols

A

Often used in H bonding

O is acceptor and H is donor

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15
Q

Bindin roles of aromatic rings

A

To test importance we replace it with a cyclohexane ring o is no longer flat and may not bind as well

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16
Q

Binding role of ketones and aldehydes

A

Carbonyl is planar and interacts as HBA

To test ipoartannce:
- reduce carbonyl to alcohol
- Changes the geometry to tetrahedral
- weakens H binding and dipole-dipole
Could also replace C=O with a CH2 group to see if HBD groups are important

17
Q

Binding roles of amines

A

Protonated at physiological pH (7)

  • it’s ionised and cannot act of HBA but can act as HBD and form strong H bonds

To test importance:
- convert to amide
- prevents N acting as HBA as the lone pair will interact with neighbouring carbonyl group
- also prevent protonated of N = no ionic interactions

18
Q

Binding role of carboxylic

A

Can act as HBD and HBA

19
Q

Binding role of esters

A

HBA only

20
Q

What is a struture activity relationship SAR

A

Aims to discover which parts of the molecule are important for biological activity

21
Q

Simple substitution

A

Varying substituents
Remove the group
Bioisosteres Structural simplific

22
Q

Structural extension

A

Chain extension
Ring expansion/contraction Ring fusion
Ring variation

23
Q

Alter 3D shape

A

Stereochemistry
Rigidification
Conformational blockers

24
Q

Lipinskis rule

A

Molecular weight less than 500
No more than 5 HBD
No more than 10 HBA
LogP less than +5

25
Q

How does hydrophobicity affect drug behaviour

A

How readily a drug crosses cell membranes

How a drug interacts with a protein receptor

26
Q

Extension of the structure

A
  • Lead compound wont necessarily hit all of the possible binding sites in a receptor
  • Could add extra functional groups to the lead in order to probe for extra binding interactions * Often used to find extra hydrophobic regions
  • Frequently used strategy to turn agonists into antagonists
27
Q

Chain extension

A

Some drugs have two important binding groups linked together by a chain, in which case it is possible that the chain length is not ideal for the best interaction.

Therefore, shortening or lengthening the chain is a useful tactic to try.

28
Q

Ring variations

A
  • varying the rings in drug structures can lead to improved binding
  • In particular, changing an aromatic ring to a heteroaromatic ring can often give new binding interactions
29
Q

Bioisoster

A

Group that can be used to replace another group while retaining the desired biological activity

Often used to replace a FG that is important for target binding but it also problematic

30
Q

Simplification of the structre

A

Removal of chiral carbons is a benefit ie statins

31
Q

Rigidification

A

To lock a compound into active site
Can be used to increase activity
Can be ridgified by adding rigid FGs’ like double bonds, alkynes, amides or aromatic rings