Substituents and Bio-isosteres in Medicinal Chemistry

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
HL Option G Organic Chemistry
Advertisements

16. Chemistry of Benzene: Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
Nitrogen Compounds Ammonia derivatives. Specification from OCR Properties of primary amines Properties of primary amines Amino acids; peptide formation.
Amines The organic bases. Categorizing Amines Amines are categorized by the number of alkyl groups attached to nitrogen : 1º (primary amine)RNH 2 2º (secondary.
Ch 16 Amines Homework problems: 16.9, 16.10, 16.21, 16.25, 16.39,
Ionization and dissociation of drugs-1
AMINES Dr. Sheppard CHEM 2412 Fall 2014 McMurry (8 th ed.) sections:24.2, 24.3, 24.4, 24.6, 24.7, 24.9,
Lecture 3 Chemicals of Life
On a FREE AMINO ACID, what functional groups will accept or donate protons at pH 7, and hence are normally charged in water? side chain groups -OH -CH.
Structure and Classification of Amines Amines are derivatives of ammonia, the same way that alcohols are derivatives of water Amines have a nitrogen,
Organic Chemistry Larry Scheffler Lincoln High School 1 Revised September 12, 2010.
Aldehydes and ketones Chapter 15. The carbonyl group Aldehydes and ketones are among the first examples of compounds that possess a C-O double bond that.
L. Scheffler IB Chemistry 3-4. Lincoln H.S.
Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationships (QSAR)  Attempts to identify and quantitate physicochemical properties of a drug in relation to its biological.
Functional groups / Pharmacological Activity
Chapter 8: Organic Acids and Bases
CHE 311 Organic Chemistry I Dr. Jerome K. Williams, Ph.D. Saint Leo University.
Optimizing Target Interactions
Chapter 18 Carboxylic Acids and Their Derivatives
CH 20: Carboxylic Acids and Nitriles Renee Y. Becker CHM 2211 Valencia Community College 1.
AP Biology Chemistry of Carbon Building Blocks of Life.
Chapter 23 Functional Groups 23.1 Introduction to Functional Groups
Drug Metabolism and Prodrugs
Carboxylic Acids: Part I
Organic and Biological Chemistry Organic and Biological Chemistry.
Conjugated dienes, aromaticity. Allylic and benzylic reactivity. Phenols.

1 © Patrick An Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry 3/e Chapter 10 DRUG DESIGN: OPTIMIZING TARGET INTERACTIONS Part 1: Section 10.1 (SAR)
CHEMISTRY 2000 Topic #4: Organic Chemistry Spring 2010 Dr. Susan Lait == aspirin.
MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY-III
II- Classification according to polarity of side chain (R): A- Polar amino acids: Polar side chains contain groups that are either charged at physiological.
9 9-1 Copyright © 2000 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Introduction to Organic Chemistry 2 ed William H. Brown.
Prodrugs Medicinal Chemistry I 1. Prodrugs  Are inactive compounds converted to the active form in vivo.  Useful for drugs with undesirable physicochemical.
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY The scientific study of the structure, properties, composition, reactions, and preparation (by synthesis or by other means) of chemical.
Prodrugs Medicinal Chemistry I 1. Prodrugs  Are inactive compounds converted to the active form in vivo.  Useful for drugs with undesirable physicochemical.
Carboxylic Acids and Derivatives. Naming Carboxylic Acids Starting materials for acyl derivatives (esters, amides, and acid chlorides) Abundant in nature.
Drug Metabolism and Prodrugs
Chem 341 Review for Finals Structure Determination NMR –Chemical shifts, splitting patterns, integrations IR –ROH, C=O Formula => # of Rings + Pi-Bonds.
20-1 Relative Reactivities, Structures and Spectra of Carboxylic Acid Derivatives Carboxylic acid derivatives undergo substitution reactions via the (often.
Puan Rozaini Abdullah School of Bioprocess Engineering
Chapter 5-2. Chemistry of Benzene: Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
Chapter 12. Amines.  Organic derivatives of ammonia, NH 3,  Nitrogen atom with a lone pair of electrons, making amines both basic and nucleophilic 
Acyl Chlorides Dean Martin City and Islington College.
Organic chemistry Topic 10
FUNCTIONAL GROUPS IN ORGANIC COMPOUNDS. Naturally occurring organic compounds are found in plants, animals, and fossil fuels All of these have a plant.
Aldehydes and Ketones Handout # 7 Winter 2015/2016 (N. Noureldin)
© 2006 Thomson Higher Education Chapter 15 Carboxylic Acids and Nitriles.
Chapter 2 Families of Carbon Compounds. Basic Definitions Hydrocarbons- Compounds containing only carbon and hydrogen. Alkanes- hydrocarbons that contain.
Proteins. Chemical composition of the proteins
Chapter 12 Amines Suggested Problems: 24-6,30-32,34-5,36,38,50,54.
DRUG DESIGN: OPTIMIZING TARGET INTERACTIONS
Ch 17- Carboxylic Acids and their derivatives
CH 20: Carboxylic Acids and Nitriles
Amines
DRUG DESIGN: OPTIMIZING TARGET INTERACTIONS
Patrick: An Introduction to Medicinal Chemistry 6e
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
There are two major classes of organic chemicals aliphatic : straight or branched chain organic substances aromatic or arene: includes one or more ring.
NEW CHAPTER BASIC CONCEPTS BINDING AND RESONANCE.
Organic Chemistry 2: Important Reactions
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
ORGANIC CHEMISTRY The scientific study of the structure, properties, composition, reactions, and preparation (by synthesis or by other means) of chemical.
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Fundamentals of Organic Chemistry
Organic Chemistry CHEM 145
Organic Chemistry CHEM 145
Presentation transcript:

Substituents and Bio-isosteres in Medicinal Chemistry Scott Jarvis Prof. Charette’s Laboratories Based largely on “The Practice of Medicinal Chemistry”, Elsevier Ltd, 2003 April 14, 2009

What is an Isostere? Defined by Langmuir in 1919 (JACS, 1919, 1543-1559): “Comolecules are thus isosteric if they contain the same number and arrangement of electrons. The comolecules of isosteres must, therefore, contain the same number of atoms. The essential differences between isosteres are confined to the charges on the nuclei of the constituent atoms.” ie: C=O and N=N, N=N=N- and N=C=O- This has concept progressed to include groups that have similar properties but not necessarily the same number of atoms or electrons (Erlenmeyer 1932, included thiophene and benzene as biosteres, oxygen and sulphur, Cl being aprox. equivalent to cyanide, etc.)

What is a Bio-isostere? In medicinal chemistry, bio-isosteres (biostere) are substituents or groups with similar physical or chemical properties that impart similar biological properties to a chemical compound. Why do we need them? “A lead compound with a desired pharmacological activity may have associated with it undesirable side effects, characteristics that limit its bioavailability, or structural features which adversely influence its metabolism and excretion from the body.” Chem Rev. 1996, 3147. The purpose of exchanging one group for a biostere is to enhance the desired biological or physical properties of a compound without making “significant” changes in chemical structure.

Guidelines for Oral Bio-Availability Lipinski's rule of 5 says that, in general, an orally active drug has no more than one violation of the following criteria: Not more than 5 hydrogen bond donors (nitrogen or oxygen atoms with one or more hydrogen atoms) Not more than 10 hydrogen bond acceptors (nitrogen or oxygen atoms) A molecular weight under 500 daltons An octanol-water partition coefficient (log P) of less than 5 Veber’s Guidelines (based on oral rat data) ≤10 rotatable bonds ≤ 140 Å Polar surface area or ≤ 12 Hydrogen bonds (acceptors and donors)

Taxol Taxol – IV Drug 4 H-Donors 15 H-Acceptors MW 853.9 Log P >99* *Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology, 1997, 40, 285-292.

Properties that can be modified by changing substituents/functional groups Activity Solubility (Log P) Electronic Density H-Bonding (donor/acceptor) π-Bonding Steric bulk affected Conformation Specificity (Interactions with other substrates ) Bioavailability (ability to cross membranes, ie: active transporters) Metabolism (life span of compound in-vivo) Toxicity

Properties that can be modified by changing substituents/functional groups Activity Solubility (Log P) Electronic Density H-Bonding (donor/acceptor) π-Bonding Steric bulk affected Conformation Specificity (Interactions with other substrates ) Bioavailability (ability to cross membranes, ie: active transporters) Metabolism (life span of compound in-vivo) Toxicity

Where Biosteres Fit Into Drug Design (In No Particular Order) Things commonly changed in optimizing activity: Ring connectivity Closing of a ring (rigidity) Opening of a ring (other conformations available – usually done as a “me too” strategy) Size of ring (bigger, smaller) Reorganization of the rings (splitting fused rings) Homologues (Vinylogues) Spacer between two binding units Substituents/Functional Groups (H donor/acceptor, electronic affects, and steric demands) Switch for other substituents Simplify the molecule by chopping off pieces that aren’t important Make it more complex by adding Modify with biosteres Conformation (affected by all) –increase active conformation population Chirality Affected by all other factors, ie: rings and substituents Saturation level

Small Unit Biosteres Atom interchange (C, N, O, S, etc) Methyl Vinyl Allyl Acetylene Halogen

Methyl - Solubility Depending on the location within the substrate, the hydrophobic interactions can make it less soluble in water or more soluble. This is due to an entropic effect: in aqueous solution the compound is encased in a network of water molecules, if the cluster around the molecule is more compact it is more favourable and therefore the compound is more soluble.

Methyl: Electronic Effect Alkyl groups are the only substituents acting by an inductive effect solely, all others can also have a mesomeric effect (excluding Hydrogen). They are therefore electron donors regardless of the environment (acidic, basic, neutral)

Methyl H-Bonding (not biostere, more SAR like) Can act as a block on hetero-atoms, preventing them from being being H-donors (A quick way of determining whether that H-donor is necessary for activity) Though this has a caveat! With amides this also affects the conformation. Steric/Conformational Constraint Substitution on a heterocyclic ring causes ortho substituents to be out of plane. Amide –methylating the amide can cause an increase in the population of the cis form (active conformation population change). ie: peptides: ~1% of peptide bonds are cis and ~99% trans except proline (n-alkyl amide) which is ~30/70 cis/trans which is why they are key for beta-turns.

Methyl - Metabolism Phenyl methyl – clearance pathway available (cytochrome P450), this is a way of reducing toxicity since the compound cannot build up to dangerous levels When R is activating or an enzyme is specifically oxidizing a methylene, can block oxidation by adding methyls.

Methyl - Metabolism Amide – methylation significantly slows peptidases from cleaving the amide bond as it is “unnatural”, also N-terminal alkylation is “unnatural” so it slows metabolism Methyls can activate other positions to oxidation due to electron donating effect.

Vinyl Vinyl is not extensively used in medicinal chemistry, as it is easily oxidized to the epoxide in-vivo but is sometimes used as a “me too” strategy or as a masked epoxide however, it can be found in some drugs. Cyclopropane, and Phenyl (for cis C=C) are both biosteres of a vinyl. Neither of them can have spontaneous conversion from cis to trans, where-as with vinyl this can be a problem in-vivo and are not oxidized to epoxides.

Allyl Allyl are generally hepatotoxic (cause liver damage), and are oxidized quite quickly in-vivo. When substituted with a good leaving group becomes an alkylating agent. Used as a fast acting analgesic, which had rapid onset and short duration of action. Useful for surgery for example, and though mostly replaced by compounds with better safety profiles still used in some eastern european countries like Poland. Ragwort (plant) produces a toxin that kills the animals that eat it, one of the toxins (shown below) causes liver cancer by acting as an alkylating agent.

Acetylene Electronic effect: electron attracting, can be reinforced by substituting the acetylenic hydrogen. Can increase the acidity of an alpha-alcohol for example. Spacer: 4 in line carbons, can act as a rigid spacer. Due to the pi system, can act as a biostere of a phenyl as they give similar donor-acceptor interactions. However, can be metabolized quite quickly by hydrolysis to the ketone. Metabolism example

Halogens (One third of all current drugs are halogenated) Most used in Medicinal chemistry are Fluorine and Chlorine. Bromine is used almost exclusively as a phenyl substituent. Iodine is used almost exclusively for thyroid disorders. Inductive effect: strong for chlorine and bromine, less for iodine. Mesomeric effect: the donor effect is usually not involved in biological media. Fluorine is a biostere for a Hydrogen bonded to a carbon but is more lipophilic, and not typically metabolized (since the C-F bond is so strong). Organic Fluorines rarely accept hydrogen bonds. Chlorine can be a biostere of Fluorine for aromatic carbons (and vice-versa), but Cl has d-orbitals which can have additional interactions.

Fluorine: Sterics/Conformation Every additional F on a carbon shortens the other bonds attached to that carbon, and therefore depending on how it is attached can affect the conformation of the compound (ie: ‘a’ value of cyclohexanes) making it appear bigger than it actually is. “The A value of the trifluoromethyl group is greater than that of the isopropyl group (2.37 versus 2.21), but smaller than that of the tert-butyl group (4.87).” New J Chem, 2006, 442-446. Bond Bond Length (picometers)   Group Van der Waals radius C-C 120-154 H 1.2 C-H 106-112 F 1.35 C-F 134 Cl 1.8 C-Cl 176 CH3 ~2 CF3

Fluorine Fluorine on an alkyl chain usually decreases lipophilicity due to polarization, however on an aromatic ring it increases lipophilicity. Chem. Soc. Rev, 2008, 237. CF3 on a benzene is aproximately as sterically demanding as an ethyl though of a different shape. OCH3 on a benzene has a preferred planar conformation, where-as a OCF3 is out of plane in biological media. 1,2-Difluoroethane prefers the gauche conformation, not anti.

Hansch and Hammet constants Group π σ   H 0.00 SCN 0.41 0.52 F 0.14 0.06 NO2 -0.28 0.78 Cl 0.71 0.23 CO2H -0.32 0.45 Br 0.86 COCH3 -0.55 0.50 I 1.12 0.18 CF3 0.88 0.54 OH -0.67 -0.37 CH3 0.56 -0.17 OCH3 -0.02 -0.27 CN -0.57 0.66 NH2 -1.23 -0.66 SO2CF3 0.55 0.93 NH3+ - 0.60 SCF3 1.44 Chu, K.C (1980), The quantitative analysis of structure-activity relationships. In Wolf, M.E. (ed.) The basis of Medicinal Chemistry/Burger’s Medicinal Chemistry, pp 393-418. John-Wiley, New York

Functional Group Biosteres Acid Ester Amide Ketone (Sulfone/Sulphoxide) Phenol Amine Urea

Functional Groups: Acid Carboxylic acids are obviously proton donors for hydrogen bonding to the target, for example H-bonding with basic amino acids such as Arginine, Lysine or Histidine in a protein. The pka of the biostere is one criteria, but also the steric requirements of your target, lipophilicity and bio-availability are very important. An acid is solubilizing (easier to formulate), but to be bio-available it’s often changed to be a prodrug (ester). Talk about changing acid to biostere should always be investigated (may improve profile) but it is not necessary as many acids are drugs and can always make it an ester prodrug.

Acids As a general rule: Strong and highly ionized acids cannot cross the biological membranes which are permeable only to non-dissociated molecules. They are therefore subject to rapid clearance from the body. Once absorbed they can establish strong ionic bonds with the basic amino acid residues in proteins. Solubilizing, which can be enhanced through salt formation. For small molecules the presence of a carboxylic acid can fundamentally change the biological activity (activity and toxicity are reduced typically). In larger drugs (ie: penicillins) the effect of whether the carboxylic acid is present or not is smaller. Hydroxamic acids are very good at binding metals (ie: Zn) but can be metabolized to the acid so it can act as a prodrug also.

Drugs on the market with an “acid”

A case where the acid couldn’t be replaced (statins)

Tetrazoles Unknown in nature (therefore stable in-vivo) pka: 4.90 (Acetic acid is 4.76) Slightly larger than an acid Can be alkylated or acylated at either the 2 or 3 position (difficult to control). Process chemists generally consider it undesirable due to the danger of synthesis (explosive!).

Hydroxy-Isoxazole pka: 5.3 (can be modified by substituting the ring) Sterically very similar to the carboxylic acid if the two carbons attached to the carbonyl are included. The hydrogen is localized to two atoms (N and O) J. Med. Chem. 1981, 1377. Synthesis

Functional Group: Ester Hydrogen bond acceptor (Carbonyl oxygen) It can serve as a masked acid (prodrug), and occasionally acts as a reactive functional group to acylate the target (ie: Aspirin acylates a Serine in the active site of the COX enzyme that is involved in prostaglandin synthesis) Can be cleaved in-vivo to the acid easily, so if not acting as a prodrug or acylating reagent it is typically altered to a biostere of the ester: Amide is most common (easy to do), ketone, or other hydrogen bond acceptors such as sulphone or sulfoxide or heterocycles (pyridine like nitrogens).

Functional Group: Amide Both a Hydrogen donor and acceptor so they are capable of binding two separate sites simultaneously. Amide bonds are quite prevalent in nature, and yet are typically stable enough for an in-vivo response (see ‘Methyl’ section for example) The major conformation of secondary amides is trans, tertiary is a mix of the two possible conformers. Amides are typically considered to be regarded as having low water solubility since they are non-ionic, but the bonus is they can therefore pass membranes and are bio-available. Most typical replacement is sulfonamide even though they are more acidic, however for peptides there are other biosteres than sulfonamides since alpha-amino sulfonamides are unstable.

Amide vs Sulfonamide Similarities in Metabolism: N-Acylation (mainly in the liver), important since N-Acyl sulfonamides are typically less soluble so can cause renal toxicity by precipitating in the kidneys. Both can be N-glucuronidated (sugar) or sulfonated making them more water soluble, therefore excretable Differences: Amides can be hydrolyzed by proteases, sulfonamides are stable. Sulfonamides are more acidic, and can be difficult to solubolize. Primary sulfonamides have active transporters (most drugs are diffusion limited) making them more bio-available. Sulfonamides being more polar are less likely to pass the blood brain barrier.

Biosteres for a peptidic amide

Amide reversal example Enzyme Ki Value (µM) NEP 24.11 0.0019 Themolysin 1.8 ACE 0.14 0.0023 2.3 >10 Retro-amides are generally more resistant to enzymatic attacks (proteases) since they are not recognized as well. In the example above, the first has a Glycine as the left side, and the second is a malonate – completely different to enzymes.

Functional Group: Ketone H-Bond acceptors: Pyridine like N, O=C, O=S, S=C, HO-CH. Sulfoxides can be reduced or oxidized Thio-carbonyls are easily oxidized, less interesting due to stability issues in-vivo. Pyridine like Nitrogens can mimic ketones since they have a free lone pair to H-bond, however the lone pair direction is not necessarily the same as the ketone. Also, they can be oxidized in-vivo rendering them inactive.

Phenols H-Bond donors For phenols “Bio-isosteres are unlikely to be suitable in those instances where biological activity is adversely affected by increased molecular size or is strongly dependent on electronic parameters.” Chem. Rev. 1996, 3147. Generally the biostere is an ‘N-H’ with an electron withdrawing group attached to the nitrogen.

Phenols

Functional Group: Amines The basic residues are H-bond acceptors, however N-H can also be H-bond donors. If only acting as a H-bond acceptor, can make it a tertiary amine or heterocyclic Nitrogen (ie: pyridine, imidazole). If replaced by an RO-H the H-bond donor effect is kept, but no longer a basic residue to bind acidic (an example is GHB as a biostere for GABA, see next slide) Typical replacements: Amidines, Guanidines and imidazoles. R2N-H like RO-H, and RS-H are the nucleophilic groups so they are metabolized by acetylation, glucuronidation, sulfonation, and of course also oxidation like anything else.

Model of a GABA type C receptor with GABA Biophysical Journal, 2008, 4115.

Ring Biosteres Benzene is the most common ring in drugs. Rings are a vital part of any medicinal compound, since they give: Rigid directional/conformational stability Hydrophobic interactions Pi stacking if aromatic Act as a spacer between two binding units Heterocycles are capable of H-bonding (donor/acceptor) A general rule for finding a Biostere of an aromatic ring is the other ring should have a similar boiling point so long as no H-bonding is involved. The boiling point is an indirect measure of the dipole of the ring. Sterically most heterocyclic rings are close enough to each other they can replace one another, and depending on the rings 5 and 6 membered rings can place substituents at similar angles.

Rings Compound BP (°C) Benzene 80 Thiophene 84 Methylbenzene 110   Benzene 80 Thiophene 84 Methylbenzene 110 2-Methyl-thiophene 113 Chlorobenzene 132 2-Chloro-thiophene 130 Acetylbenzene 200 2-Acetyl-thiophene 214

Rings: Example

Rings Pseudocycles ‘ring opening’, can present a conformational analogy that may be simpler to synthesize – though is likely less selective towards the target receptor compared to others since it is not conformationally locked.

Rings Analogy by ‘ring closure’: useful in search for biologically active conformation as it is a constrained molecule. However, can create additional chiral centers complicating the synthesis and cyclization may give the incorrect conformation.

Rings Ring enlargement/contraction (Homologues) – usually part of any good SAR but when omitted it is an easy ‘me-too’ strategy for competitors. Re-organization of the rings, such as converting simple rings into their spiro derivitives, splitting fused bicyclic systems, and ring dissociation.

Rings

Rings: Metabolism The more electron rich position of the ring and the benzyl positions are the most likely to be oxidized in aromatic carbocycles. With heterocycles the metabolism can be more complicated with hetero-atoms being oxidized and/or ring opening reactions possible, see case-by-case.

In drug design, the use of biosteres is still very intuitive and empirical.