| Literature DB >> 35800203 |
Vanessa Erckes1, Christian Steuer1.
Abstract
Peptides, as part of the beyond the rule of 5 (bRo5) chemical space, represent a unique class of pharmaceutical compounds. Because of their exceptional position in the chemical space between traditional small molecules (molecular weight (MW) < 500 Da) and large therapeutic proteins (MW > 5000 Da), peptides became promising candidates for targeting challenging binding sites, including even targets traditionally considered as undruggable - e.g. intracellular protein-protein interactions. However, basic knowledge about physicochemical properties that are important for a drug to be membrane permeable is missing but would enhance the drug discovery process of bRo5 molecules. Consequently, there is a demand for quick and simple lipophilicity determination methods for peptides. In comparison to the traditional lipophilicity determination methods via shake flask and in silico prediction, chromatography-based methods could have multiple benefits such as the requirement of low analyte amount, insensitivity to impurities and high throughput. Herein we elucidate the role of peptide lipophilicity and different lipophilicity values. Further, we summarize peptide analysis via common chromatographic techniques, in specific reversed phase liquid chromatography, hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography and supercritical fluid chromatography and their role in drug discovery and development process. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35800203 PMCID: PMC9215158 DOI: 10.1039/d2md00027j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Med Chem ISSN: 2632-8682
Advantages and difficulties of peptides, small molecules and therapeutic proteins in drug development[1–6]
| Small molecules | Peptides | Therapeutic proteins | |
|---|---|---|---|
| MW < 500 Da | MW ∼ 500–5000 Da | MW > 5000 Da | |
| Advantages | • Low cost in production and price on market | • Automated synthesis | • Very high target affinity, potency, specificity and selectivity due to large interaction site |
| • Ease of synthesis | • High target affinity, potency, specificity and selectivity | • Long half life | |
| • Membrane permeability achievable, oral bioavailability and intracellular targets accessible | • No toxic metabolites | • Drug safety, no toxic metabolites | |
| • Known guidelines for drug design, Lipinski rule of 5 | • Chemical synthesis enables easy structure modifications | ||
| Difficulties | • Often hepatic metabolism | • Proteolytic instability | • Expensive in production and on market |
| • Drug safety issues due to non-mechanistic-based toxicology (low affinity or selectivity) | • Rapid clearance, short half-life | • Complex (often recombinant) production, no easy chemical modification | |
| • Targets with need for large interaction sites precluded | • Low membrane permeability | • Immunogenicity | |
| • No guidelines for rational drug design | • No/low membrane permeability due to size, parenteral administration (s.c./i.v.), only extracellular or surface-exposed targets | ||
| • Chemically and physically unstable, elaborated storage (sensitive to heat, pH, oxidation) |
Chemically unmodified peptides.
Strengths and weaknesses of different methods for the determination of partition/distribution coefficients for peptides
| Shake flask |
| Chromatography | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strengths | - No reference compounds needed | - Fast | - Low amount of analyte needed |
| - Includes 3D structure of analyte | - Cheap | - Various solvents usable | |
| - Various solvents usable (for determination of various distribution coefficients) | - No compound synthesis needed | - Includes 3D structure of analyte | |
| - Automated and high throughput | |||
| - Multiple analytes per run | |||
| - Insensitive to impurities | |||
| - Many different techniques and methods | |||
| Weaknesses | - Labor intensive | - Often only for octanol as organic solvent | - Not established or commonly used for analysis of peptide distribution coefficients yet |
| - Low throughput | - 3D structure of analyte not included | ||
| - Requires high amount of pure substance | - Training sets based on small molecules or peptides with low numbers of amino acids | ||
| - Only one analyte per setup | |||
| - Need of additional analysis method for concentration determination in both phases |
Depending on the chromatographic environment.