| Literature DB >> 17530727 |
Martin Morgenthaler1, Eliane Schweizer, Anja Hoffmann-Röder, Fausta Benini, Rainer E Martin, Georg Jaeschke, Björn Wagner, Holger Fischer, Stefanie Bendels, Daniel Zimmerli, Josef Schneider, François Diederich, Manfred Kansy, Klaus Müller.
Abstract
This review describes simple and useful concepts for predicting and tuning the pK(a) values of basic amine centers, a crucial step in the optimization of physical and ADME properties of many lead structures in drug-discovery research. The article starts with a case study of tricyclic thrombin inhibitors featuring a tertiary amine center with pK(a) values that can be tuned over a wide range, from the usual value of around 10 to below 2 by (remote) neighboring functionalities commonly encountered in medicinal chemistry. Next, the changes in pK(a) of acyclic and cyclic amines upon substitution by fluorine, oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur functionalities, as well as carbonyl and carboxyl derivatives are systematically analyzed, leading to the derivation of simple rules for pK(a) prediction. Electronic and stereoelectronic effects in cyclic amines are discussed, and the emerging computational methods for pK(a) predictions are briefly surveyed. The rules for tuning amine basicities should not only be of interest in drug-discovery research, but also to the development of new crop-protection agents, new amine ligands for organometallic complexes, and in particular, to the growing field of amine-based organocatalysis.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17530727 DOI: 10.1002/cmdc.200700059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ChemMedChem ISSN: 1860-7179 Impact factor: 3.466