CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug Molecules

Amphiphilic compounds play crucial roles in biology. They represent molecules with an inherent tendency to orient themselves in a suitable environment (e.g. a lipid bilayer). The driving force behind this effect is probably one of the crucial reasons for structural organization in living m...

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Main Authors: Holger Fischer, Manfred Kansy, Daniel Bur
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Swiss Chemical Society 2000-11-01
Series:CHIMIA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.chimia.ch/chimia/article/view/3304
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author Holger Fischer
Manfred Kansy
Daniel Bur
author_facet Holger Fischer
Manfred Kansy
Daniel Bur
author_sort Holger Fischer
collection DOAJ
description Amphiphilic compounds play crucial roles in biology. They represent molecules with an inherent tendency to orient themselves in a suitable environment (e.g. a lipid bilayer). The driving force behind this effect is probably one of the crucial reasons for structural organization in living matter. An amphiphile typically comprises a hydrophilic as well as a hydrophobic part. The prediction of amphiphilic properties of charged small molecules by means of our in-house developed program CAFCA is presented in this work. An experimentally derived quantification of amphiphilic properties of a compound, expressed in terms of free energy of amphiphilicity (??GAM), can be deduced from surface activity measurements. Amphiphilic moments are obtained by vector addition of individual atom/fragment contribution values. Calculated amphiphilic moments were subsequently calibrated with known free energies of amphiphilicity (??GAM) of a homologous series of small charged amphiphiles (n-alkylsulfonic acids). The influence of conformational effects of molecules on calculated amphiphilic moments were further investigated for a set of eight structurally diverse commercially available drugs with known free energies of amphiphilicity. It turned out that conformations with maximal distance between charged group and center of gravity of the non-charged residue of the molecule yielded best results. Our calculated data and molecular modeling studies are in good accordance with experimentally derived published values. Our program CAFCA (CAlculated Free energy of amphiphilicity of small Charged Amphiphiles) can be used to estimate preferred conformations as well as orientations of molecules in biological membranes and to quantify amphiphilic properties of molecules.
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spelling doaj.art-6233b351a0664958a76d6a3dac9b277d2022-12-22T00:05:47ZdeuSwiss Chemical SocietyCHIMIA0009-42932673-24242000-11-015411CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug MoleculesHolger FischerManfred KansyDaniel Bur Amphiphilic compounds play crucial roles in biology. They represent molecules with an inherent tendency to orient themselves in a suitable environment (e.g. a lipid bilayer). The driving force behind this effect is probably one of the crucial reasons for structural organization in living matter. An amphiphile typically comprises a hydrophilic as well as a hydrophobic part. The prediction of amphiphilic properties of charged small molecules by means of our in-house developed program CAFCA is presented in this work. An experimentally derived quantification of amphiphilic properties of a compound, expressed in terms of free energy of amphiphilicity (??GAM), can be deduced from surface activity measurements. Amphiphilic moments are obtained by vector addition of individual atom/fragment contribution values. Calculated amphiphilic moments were subsequently calibrated with known free energies of amphiphilicity (??GAM) of a homologous series of small charged amphiphiles (n-alkylsulfonic acids). The influence of conformational effects of molecules on calculated amphiphilic moments were further investigated for a set of eight structurally diverse commercially available drugs with known free energies of amphiphilicity. It turned out that conformations with maximal distance between charged group and center of gravity of the non-charged residue of the molecule yielded best results. Our calculated data and molecular modeling studies are in good accordance with experimentally derived published values. Our program CAFCA (CAlculated Free energy of amphiphilicity of small Charged Amphiphiles) can be used to estimate preferred conformations as well as orientations of molecules in biological membranes and to quantify amphiphilic properties of molecules. https://www.chimia.ch/chimia/article/view/3304Amphiphilic momentMembrane bindingMolecular propertiesPharmaceutical chemistry
spellingShingle Holger Fischer
Manfred Kansy
Daniel Bur
CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug Molecules
CHIMIA
Amphiphilic moment
Membrane binding
Molecular properties
Pharmaceutical chemistry
title CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug Molecules
title_full CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug Molecules
title_fullStr CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug Molecules
title_full_unstemmed CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug Molecules
title_short CAFCA: a Novel Tool for the Calculation of Amphiphilic Properties of Charged Drug Molecules
title_sort cafca a novel tool for the calculation of amphiphilic properties of charged drug molecules
topic Amphiphilic moment
Membrane binding
Molecular properties
Pharmaceutical chemistry
url https://www.chimia.ch/chimia/article/view/3304
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AT manfredkansy cafcaanoveltoolforthecalculationofamphiphilicpropertiesofchargeddrugmolecules
AT danielbur cafcaanoveltoolforthecalculationofamphiphilicpropertiesofchargeddrugmolecules