| Literature DB >> 10674293 |
Abstract
Carboxylic acids have been conspicuously absent from the quantitative structure activity relationship (QSAR) literature. This study investigated the aquatic toxicity (log(IGC50(-1)) of selected mono- and di-carboxylic acids and their sodium, or disodium salts, tested in the Tetrahymena population growth assay. The relationship between log(IGC50(-1)) and hydrophobicity as described by the 1-octanol/water partition coefficient (log Kow) revealed a distinct sub-class. The relationship [log(IGC50(-1)) = 0.27(log Kow) - 0.68; n = 16, r2 = 0.943, s = 0.07, F = 233, Pr > F = 0.0001] was derived for mono-carboxylic acids. The QSAR [log(IGC50(-1)) = 0.19(log Kow) - 0.66; n = 9, r2 = 0.951, s = 0.08, F = 135, Pr > F = 0.0001] was generated for the di-carboxylic acids. Regression analysis of data for the monosodium carboxylic acid salts yielded the model, log(IGC50(-1)) = 0.60 (log Kow) + 0.58; n = 4, r2 = 0.932, s = 0.19, F = 41.2, Pr > F = 0.008. Values for the ionization constant (pKa) and the energy of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (ELUMO) do not vary within the sub-class for saturated acids. Moreover, pKa and ELUMO did not describe differences in toxicity between sub-classes of saturated aliphatic carboxylic acids and salts. However, these descriptors did vary for unsaturated acids. Inclusion of unsaturated acids afforded the derivation of a global response-surface for all aliphatic carboxylic acids, log(IGC50(-1)) = 0.25(log Kow) - 0.13(ELUMO) - 0.54; n = 34, r2 = 0.850, s = 0.138, F = 87.9, Pr > F = 0.0001. Outliers to the response-surface included small molecules that provided 2-positions in which the molecule could potentially undergo electrophilic attacked and other more large, hydrophobic molecules.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10674293 DOI: 10.1080/10629369908033224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAR QSAR Environ Res ISSN: 1026-776X Impact factor: 3.000