Assessing Physicochemical Properties of Drug Molecules via Microsolvation Measurements with Differential Mobility Spectrometry
Author(s) -
Chang Liu,
J. C. Yves Le Blanc,
Bradley B. Schneider,
Jefry Shields,
James J. Federico,
Hui Zhang,
Justin G. Stroh,
Gregory W. Kauffman,
Daniel W. Kung,
Christian Ieritano,
Evan Shepherdson,
Mitch Verbuyst,
Luke R. Melo,
Moaraj Hasan,
Dalia Naser,
John Janiszewski,
W. Scott Hopkins,
J. Larry Campbell
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs central science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.893
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 2374-7951
pISSN - 2374-7943
DOI - 10.1021/acscentsci.6b00297
Subject(s) - molecule , chemistry , solvent , chemical physics , small molecule , hydrogen bond , ion mobility spectrometry , drug , computational chemistry , ion , organic chemistry , psychology , biochemistry , psychiatry
The microsolvated state of a molecule, represented by its interactions with only a small number of solvent molecules, can play a key role in determining the observable bulk properties of the molecule. This is especially true in cases where strong local hydrogen bonding exists between the molecule and the solvent. One method that can probe the microsolvated states of charged molecules is differential mobility spectrometry (DMS), which rapidly interrogates an ion's transitions between a solvated and desolvated state in the gas phase (i.e., few solvent molecules present). However, can the results of DMS analyses of a class of molecules reveal information about the bulk physicochemical properties of those species? Our findings presented here show that DMS behaviors correlate strongly with the measured solution phase p K a and p K b values, and cell permeabilities of a set of structurally related drug molecules, even yielding high-resolution discrimination between isomeric forms of these drugs. This is due to DMS's ability to separate species based upon only subtle (yet predictable) changes in structure: the same subtle changes that can influence isomers' different bulk properties. Using 2-methylquinolin-8-ol as the core structure, we demonstrate how DMS shows promise for rapidly and sensitively probing the physicochemical properties of molecules, with particular attention paid to drug candidates at the early stage of drug development. This study serves as a foundation upon which future drug molecules of different structural classes could be examined.
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