Hansch Constant (p) Hansch derived constants for the contributions of substituents to the partition coefficient. The lipophilicity constant, π, is defined as: π = log Px - log PH = log (Px/PH) where Px is partition constant for the compound with X as substituent and PH is the partition constant for the parent. Tables of values of π for other substituents are available. p values for various substituents on aromatic rings CH3 t-Bu 0.5 2 OH 1.68 -0.67 CONH2 CF3 -1.49 Cl Br F 1.16 0.71 0.86 0.14 Theoretical Log P for chlorobenzene = log P for benzene + p for Cl = 2.13 + 0.71 = 2.84 p values for various substituents on aromatic rings CH3 t-Bu OH CONH2 0.52 1.68 -0.67 -1.49 CF3 Cl Br F 1.16 0.71 0.86 0.14 Theoretical Log P for meta-chlorobenzamide = log P for benzene + p for Cl + p for CONH2 = 2.13 + 0.71 - 1.49 = 1.35 The following are the p values for various substituents on an aromatic ring: -CF3 (1.07), -Br (0.94), -OCH3 (-0.02), -CH2OH (-1.03). Which functional group listed above will increase the water solubility of the following drug the most (ie. we replace the R- group with one of the substituents). A) -CF3 (1.07) B) -Br (0.94) C) -OCH3 (-0.02) D) -CH2OH (-1.03) E) They will all make the drug equally lipophilic STERIC FACTORS The bulk, size and shape of a drug will influence how easily it can approach and interact with binding site. A bulky substituents may act like a shield and hinder the ideal interaction between a drug and its binding site. Bulky substituent may help to orient a drug properly for maximum binding and increase activity. Steric Effects much harder to quantitate Examples are: Taft’s steric factor (Es) based on rate constants (~1956), an experimental value Molar refractivity (MR)--measure of the volume occupied by an atom or group--equation includes the MW, density, and the index of refraction— Verloop steric parameter--computer program uses bond angles, van der Waals radii, bond lengths Steric Effects The third major factor that often must be considered in QSAR involves steric effects. For studies involving reactivity of organic compounds, a steric parameter, Es, was defined by Taft as : where k is the rate constant for the acid hydrolysis of esters of the type Taft’s Steric Factor (Es) •Measured by comparing the rates of hydrolysis of substituted aliphatic esters against a standard ester under acidic conditions kx represents the rate of hydrolysis of a substituted ester ko represents the rate of hydrolysis of the parent ester •Limited to substituents which interact sterically with the tetrahedral transition state for the reaction •Not by resonance or hydrogen bonding Disadvantages ES value measures intramolecular steric effect but drugs interact with target binding site in intermolecular process (i.e. a drug binding to a receptor) Molar Refractivity (MR) this is a measure of a substituent’s volume MR = (n 2 - 1) (n 2 - 2) Correction factor for polarisation (n=index of refraction) x mol. wt. density Defines volume This is perticularly significant if the substituent has π electrons or lone pair of electrons Verloop Steric Parameter - calculated by software (STERIMOL) - gives dimensions of a substituent from the standard bond angle ,van der Waals radii, bond length and possible conformations for the substituents - can be used for any substituent Example - Carboxylic acid B4 O B 3 B2 C H O H L B3 B 4 O C O B1 HANSCH EQUATION •A QSAR equation relating various physicochemical properties to the biological activity of a series of compounds •Usually includes log P, electronic and steric factors •Start with simple equations and elaborate as more structures are synthesised •Typical equation for a wide range of log P is parabolic 1 Log C = - k1(logP)2 + k 2 logP + k 3 s + k 4 Es + k 5 Craig Plot Craig plot shows values for 2 different physicochemical properties for various substituents . . .. . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . + 1.0 CF3SO 2 .75 CN CH3SO2 SO 2NH2 NO2 .50 CH3CO CONH2 OCF3 .25 CO2H -2.0 -p -1.6 -1.2 -.8 -.4 SF5 CF3 F .4 I Br Cl .8 1.2 1.6 CH3CONH -.25 -.50 NMe 2 NH2 -.75 -1.0 - Et t-Butyl OCH3 OH Me 2.0 +p •Allows an easy identification of suitable substituents for a QSAR analysis which includes both relevant properties •Choose a substituent from each quadrant to ensure orthogonality •Choose substituents with a range of values for each property – Assuming the electronic effects of substituent X can be ignored, the size of X will affect the transition state and hence the rate of reaction. – By definition Es = 0 for X=H. – Tables of values of Es for other substituents are available. Hansch Approach A drug's activity was really a function of two processes: 1. its transportation from point of entry to receptor site(s) (pharmacokinetics). 2. its interaction with the receptor (pharmacodynamics). – Hansch proposed that the ability of a drug to get through a membrane might be modeled by its partition coefficient between a lipid-type solvent and water The suggested model for a drug traveling through the body to its receptor site might be: log 1/C = -k(log P)2 + k'(log P) + k" where potency is expressed as log (1/C) and C is the concentration of a drug that provides some standard biological effect. This equation has the format for a parabola The significance of this observation is that an optimum hydrophobicity may exist. Log (1/C) o Log P Log P Optimum value of log P for anaesthetic activity = log Po – Accordingly several membranes may have to be traversed for compounds to get to the target site, and compounds with the greatest hydrophobicity will become localized in the membranes they encounter initially, thereby slowing their transit to the target site. – Hansch proposed also that there should be a linear free energy relationship (like the Hammett equation) between lipophilicity and drug activity and that this might be indicated by the partition coefficient Hansch Linear Free Energy Model Hansch has derived a general equation based on linear free-energy considerations. In this equation is the ability to incorporate parameters which encompass the full range of known biological requirements for drug activity. Among theses terms for biological transport, drug/enzyme binding energies and substituent effects (both electronic and steric). The most general form of Hansch equation is: log 1/C = -aπ2 + bπ + ρσ + c Log 1/C = k1P - k2P2 + k3s + k4Es + k5 Where activity expressed as 1/C, C = concentration, π is the Hansch constant (measure of lipophilicty), ρ is constant related to the given molecule, ς is the Hammett substituent constant which is a measure of the electronic effect. Es Taft’s constant Hansch Analysis • Look at size and sign for each component of the equation. • Values of r <<0.9 indicate equation not reliable • Accuracy depends on using enough analogs, accuracy of data, & choice of parameters. Examples for Hansch equations log 1/C = 1.22 p – 1.59 s + 7.89 (n = 22; r = 0.918) log 1/C = 0.398 p + 1.089 s + 1.03 Es + 4.541 (n = 9; r = 0.955) Examples: Adrenergic blocking activity of b-halo-b-arylamines Y X CH CH2 1 Log C = NRR' 1.22 p - 1.59 s + 7.89 Conclusions: • Activity increases if p is + (i.e. hydrophobic substituents) • Activity increases if s is negative (i.e. e-donating substituents) For the antibacterial activity of substituted phenols OH X log 1/C = 0.684 log P – 0.921σ + 0.268 For a series of phosphonate esters, cholinesterase inhibitors O O P OCH2CH3 R O2N log K = -0.152 π –1.68 σ + 4.053 Es + 7.212 Where K is the inhibition constant, σ is the Hammett substituent constant for aliphatic systems Es is the Taft steric constant. In this example steric effect of the substituents plays an important role. The bulkier groups cause a decrease in cholinesterase inhibition. 一For the antibacterial effects on gram-negative bacteria of a series of diguanidines: NH (CH2)n (NH-C-NH2)2 log 1/C = -0.081 π2 + 1.483 π – 1.578 Example: Antimalarial activity of phenanthrene aminocarbinols CH2NHR'R" (HO)HC X Y 1 Log C = - 0.015 (logP)2 + 0.14 logP + 0.27 SpX + 0.40 SpY + 0.65 SsX + 0.88 SsY + 2.34 Conclusions: • Activity increases slightly as log P (hydrophobicity) increases (note that the constant is only 0.14) • Parabolic equation implies an optimum log Po value for activity • Activity increases for hydrophobic substituents (esp. ring Y) • Activity increases for e-withdrawing substituents (esp. ring Y) Electronic effect Lipophilicityt Steric effect 3-D space formed by lipophilic, electronic and steric coordinates