| Literature DB >> 27748751 |
Björn Over1, Pär Matsson2,3, Christian Tyrchan4, Per Artursson2,3, Bradley C Doak5, Michael A Foley6, Constanze Hilgendorf7, Stephen E Johnston6, Maurice D Lee6, Richard J Lewis4, Patrick McCarren6, Giovanni Muncipinto6, Ulf Norinder8, Matthew W D Perry4, Jeremy R Duvall6, Jan Kihlberg5.
Abstract
Macrocycles are of increasing interest as chemical probes and drugs for intractable targets like protein-protein interactions, but the determinants of their cell permeability and oral absorption are poorly understood. To enable rational design of cell-permeable macrocycles, we generated an extensive data set under consistent experimental conditions for more than 200 non-peptidic, de novo-designed macrocycles from the Broad Institute's diversity-oriented screening collection. This revealed how specific functional groups, substituents and molecular properties impact cell permeability. Analysis of energy-minimized structures for stereo- and regioisomeric sets provided fundamental insight into how dynamic, intramolecular interactions in the 3D conformations of macrocycles may be linked to physicochemical properties and permeability. Combined use of quantitative structure-permeability modeling and the procedure for conformational analysis now, for the first time, provides chemists with a rational approach to design cell-permeable non-peptidic macrocycles with potential for oral absorption.Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27748751 DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.2203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 15.040