Nick (QSAR's) Flashcards
QSAR’s
Quantitative Structure Activity Relationships.
QSAR’s attempts to identify and quantify the physiochemical properties of a drug and to see whether any of these properties influences the drugs biological activity
- Hydrophobicity of the molecule
- Hydrophobicity of substituents
- Electronic properties of substituents
- Steric properties of substituents
When looking at how a particular physiochemical property influences biological activity, the other properties should be kept constant.
Compounds studies should be structurally related and act at the same target and have the same mechanism of action.
QSAR summary points
QSAR relates physiochemical properties of a series of drugs to their biological target by means of a mathematical equation.
The common studied physiochemical properties are hydrophobicity, electronic factors and steric factors.
Hydrophobicity
The hydrophobic character of a drug is an important property to study in QSAR’s.
The hydrophobic nature is important when considering what factors?:
- absorption through cell membrane
- receptor interaction and binding to target protein
Changing substituents can have a large effect on hydrophobicity
Partition coefficients
The hydrophobic character of a drug can be measured using partition coefficients (P).
P = [drug] in octanol/[drug] in water.
What does an increase in P indicate
A higher hydrophobicity, more lipophilic molecule. As hydrophobicity increase the activity of the drug increases. The relationship is linear over a narrow range.
Concentration
C = concentration of drug needed to achieve desired activity.
The smaller the value of C the more active the drug. Therefore as 1/C increases, the activity of the drug decreases.
LogP^0 = optimum logP.
Optimum values of LogP are between 0 and 3.
The curve can be expressed as an equation (in the form of 0 = ax^2 + bx +c where x is logP):
log(1/C) = -k1(logP)^2 + k2logP + k3
where k1, k2, and k3 are constants. This shows that as logP increases so does log(1/C) but only up to a certain point. Due to the negative sign in the (logP)^2 term, log (1/C) will start to decrease above certain log P values.
Why does log(1/C) decrease above a certain log P value?
Once the drug becomes too hydrophobic the drugs may be insoluble in an aqueous media.
Anaesthetic activity of ethers
Although the equation varies for different anaesthetics the maximum log P0 value is normally around 2-3.
Most drugs with a logP value close to 2 can enter the CNS (can cross BBB) and is a common cause of CNS side effects.
LogP tells us the slope (the bigger and steeper = more sensitive it is to a changing logP)
Hydrophobicity constants
These log P values need to be determined experimentally. Using the concept of hydrophobicity constants allows logP values to be calculated theoretically.
The hydrophobicity constant (π) measures the contribution specific compounds make to the hydrophobicity of the compound relative to hydrogen.
(Adding a CH3 to a benzene ring and looking at the change in hydrophobicity allows you to determine the hydrophobicity constants of different substituents).
Positive π values increase hydrophobicity value of molecule relative to hydrogen.
P and π
P measures the importance of a molecule’s overall hydrophobicity (relevant to absorption, binding, etc).
π can help identify specific regions of the molecule that might interact with hydrophobic regions in the binding site.
Hydrophobicity summary points
The partition coefficient is a measure of a drugs overall hydrophobicity. Values of logP are used in QSAR equations with larger values indicating greater hydrophobicity.
The substituent hydrophobicity constant is a measure of the hydrophobic character of individual substituents.
The values are different for substituents attached to aliphatic and aromatic systems and are only relevant to the classes of structures from which the values were derived.
Positive values represent substituents more hydrophobic than hydrogen, negative values represent substituents more hydrophilic than hydrogen
Electronic effects
Electronic effects will affect the drugs polarity and ionisation.
the drugs polarity and ionisation will influence absorption and binding. It influences how easily it crosses the cell membranes and how it interacts with the binding site.
Hammett substitution constant (σ)
Measures the electron withdrawing/donating ability of substituents. It can be measured experimentally and tabulated.
Measure relative to the ionisation of benzoic acid.
The equilibrium constant
The equilibrium constant (KH) signifies there are no substituents on the aromatic ring.
KH = [PhCOO-][H+]/[PhCOOH]. (Products/reactants= dissociation constant)
When a substituent is on the ring the equilibrium position is affected. How it is affected depends on whether it is electron donating or withdrawing.
What effect will electron withdrawing substituents have on the equilibrium constant?
An electron withdrawing group will make the negative carboxylate group more stable. This shifts the equilibrium to the right which makes the equilibrium constant increase.
(When charge is spread across the molecule the molecule becomes more stable).