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Drug–Membrane Permeability across Chemical Space
Author(s) -
Roberto Menichetti,
Kiran H. Kanekal,
Tristan Bereau
Publication year - 2019
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.8b00718
Subject(s) - chemical space , biological system , a priori and a posteriori , membrane , molecular descriptor , drug discovery , computer science , membrane permeability , chemistry , biochemical engineering , molecule , chemical physics , nanotechnology , combinatorial chemistry , materials science , quantitative structure–activity relationship , organic chemistry , stereochemistry , biochemistry , philosophy , epistemology , engineering , biology
Unraveling the relation between the chemical structure of small druglike compounds and their rate of passive permeation across lipid membranes is of fundamental importance for pharmaceutical applications. The elucidation of a comprehensive structure-permeability relationship expressed in terms of a few molecular descriptors is unfortunately hampered by the overwhelming number of possible compounds. In this work, we reduce a priori the size and diversity of chemical space to solve an analogous-but smoothed out-structure-property relationship problem. This is achieved by relying on a physics-based coarse-grained model that reduces the size of chemical space, enabling a comprehensive exploration of this space with greatly reduced computational cost. We perform high-throughput coarse-grained (HTCG) simulations to derive a permeability surface in terms of two simple molecular descriptors-bulk partitioning free energy and p K a . The surface is constructed by exhaustively simulating all coarse-grained compounds that are representative of small organic molecules (ranging from 30 to 160 Da) in a high-throughput scheme. We provide results for acidic, basic, and zwitterionic compounds. Connecting back to the atomic resolution, the HTCG predictions for more than 500 000 compounds allow us to establish a clear connection between specific chemical groups and the resulting permeability coefficient, enabling for the first time an inverse design procedure. Our results have profound implications for drug synthesis: the predominance of commonly employed chemical moieties narrows down the range of permeabilities.

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