Lecture 2 - Functional Groups and Molecular Properties
Lecture 2 - Functional Groups and Molecular Properties
properties
Why are functional groups important in medicinal
chemistry?
functional groups are specific groups of atoms
within molecules that are responsible for the
characteristic properties and chemical
reactions of molecules.
• Water/lipid solubility
• Route of administration
• Interaction with target
• Mechanism of action
• Route of metabolism and excretion
• Duration of action
• Adverse effects and toxicity
Why are functional groups important in medicinal
chemistry?
AZT
Three important effects of functional groups
• Electronic Effects
• Solubility
• Steric Effects
Electrons are shared among a group of atoms that have adjacent double bonds and
lone pair electrons
Electronic effects
b) Inductive effects
How does the OH group in analog A and analog B affect the electronics of the
aromatic ring?
Electron donating groups
Fine balance!
• The more ionized the drug is, the more water soluble it is
• The more non-ionized the drug is, the more lipid soluble it is
Qn. Calculate the degree of ionization of aspirin in a) the stomach and b) the intestine
given that the pKa of aspirin is 3.5, the pH of the stomach is 1 and the pH of the
intestine is 6.
• Aspirin is only slightly ionized in the stomach but is significantly more ionized in the
intestine
• Aspirin will be more readily absorbed in the stomach since drugs cross membranes
more easily in their non-ionized form
• Other factors may also affect absorption
Lipophilic
Membrane
Stomach Blood
pH 1 - 3 R-H R-H
R-CO2H R-CO2H
R-NH3
Similarly,
Weakly basic drugs (eg caffeine) tend to be more readily absorbed in the intestine
Drug lipophilicity - Partition coefficient
• A measure of the extent to which a compound distributes itself between
two immiscible phases
• This can be roughly approximated for biological systems using organic
solvent/aqueous solvent mixtures.
• Octanol/water is commonly used
• Groups that ionize are better for water solubility than groups that do not
ionize. Eg. COOH, phosphate (PO32-), sulphonic acid (SO3H)
• The more polar groups, the better
Qn
Which is more ionizable CH3OH or CH3OCH3?
Which is more water soluble CH3OH or CH3OCH3?
The more H-bonds possible - the more water sol.
H H
O O H H
H O
H
Alchohol O 3 H-Bonds H H
R H
Primary amine R N H O
3 H-Bonds
O H
H H
H H
O
H H
O O
H H
H H H H
O O O
H H
R'
Ester O 3 H-Bonds 1 H-Bonds
Secondary amine R N R''
R
R O
H H
H H O
O
Predicting water solubility - Empirical
Water solubilization of functional groups
Functional group Monofunctional comp. Polyfunctional
Ex. monofunctional comp.
comp. methanol - pentanol/hexanol
are soluble
Alcohol 5 – 6 carbons 3 – 4 carbons
Ketone 5–6 2
Amine 6–7 3
21 C-atom, tertiary amine solubilize 6 - 7 C atoms
Carboxylic acid 5–6 3 Insolubile (neutral form)
Ester 6 3
Corresponding acid (cationic) solubile
Amide 6 2-3
comp.
Ex. polyfunctional comp.
Alcohol 5 – 6 carbons 3 – 4 carbons
Amine 2
Amine 6–7 3 O
Tot: 9 - 10
Carboxylic acid 5–6 3 (notsoluble
solubile)
18 C
18 C-atomer
atoms Not
Ester 6 3
Amide 6 2-3