| Literature DB >> 27629993 |
Raffael Vorberg1, Nils Trapp1, Daniel Zimmerli2, Björn Wagner2, Holger Fischer2, Nicole A Kratochwil2, Manfred Kansy2, Erick M Carreira3, Klaus Müller4.
Abstract
The modulation of pharmacologically relevant properties of N-alkyl-piperidine-2-carboxamides was studied by selective introduction of 1-3 fluorine atoms into the n-propyl and n-butyl side chains of the local anesthetics ropivacaine and levobupivacaine. The basicity modulation by nearby fluorine substituents is essentially additive and exhibits an exponential attenuation as a function of topological distance between fluorine and the basic center. The intrinsic lipophilicity of the neutral piperidine derivatives displays the characteristic response noted for partially fluorinated alkyl groups attached to neutral heteroaryl systems. However, basicity decrease by nearby fluorine substituents affects lipophilicities at neutral pH, so that all partially fluorinated derivatives are of similar or higher lipophilicity than their non-fluorinated parents. Aqueous solubilities were found to correlate inversely with lipophilicity with a significant contribution from crystal packing energies, as indicated by variations in melting point temperatures. All fluorinated derivatives were found to be somewhat more readily oxidized in human liver microsomes, the rates of degradation correlating with increasing lipophilicity. Because the piperidine-2-carboxamide core is chiral, pairs with enantiomeric N-alkyl groups are diastereomeric. While little response to such stereoisomerism was observed for basicity or lipophilicity, more pronounced variations were observed for melting point temperatures and oxidative degradation.Entities:
Keywords: fluorine; levobupivacaine; partial fluorination patterns; pharmacological properties; ropivacaine
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27629993 DOI: 10.1002/cmdc.201600325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ChemMedChem ISSN: 1860-7179 Impact factor: 3.466