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Escape from flatland: increasing saturation as an approach to improving clinical success
- Source :
- Journal of medicinal chemistry. 52(21)
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- The medicinal chemistry community has become increasingly aware of the value of tracking calculated physical properties such as molecular weight, topological polar surface area, rotatable bonds, and hydrogen bond donors and acceptors. We hypothesized that the shift to high-throughput synthetic practices over the past decade may be another factor that may predispose molecules to fail by steering discovery efforts toward achiral, aromatic compounds. We have proposed two simple and interpretable measures of the complexity of molecules prepared as potential drug candidates. The first is carbon bond saturation as defined by fraction sp(3) (Fsp(3)) where Fsp(3) = (number of sp(3) hybridized carbons/total carbon count). The second is simply whether a chiral carbon exists in the molecule. We demonstrate that both complexity (as measured by Fsp(3)) and the presence of chiral centers correlate with success as compounds transition from discovery, through clinical testing, to drugs. In an attempt to explain these observations, we further demonstrate that saturation correlates with solubility, an experimental physical property important to success in the drug discovery setting.
- Subjects :
- Molecular model
Databases, Factual
Molecular Structure
Chemistry
Stereochemistry
Hydrogen bond
Drug discovery
Stereoisomerism
Carbon
Polar surface area
Molecular Weight
Structure-Activity Relationship
Pharmaceutical Preparations
Solubility
Lipophilic efficiency
Chemical physics
Asymmetric carbon
Drug Design
Drug Discovery
Molecular Medicine
Molecule
Transition Temperature
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15204804
- Volume :
- 52
- Issue :
- 21
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of medicinal chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0fad870a41c84183c9af8d07c96a531e