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In silico studies on recreational drugs:3D quantitative structure activity relationship prediction of classified and de novo designer benzodiazepines

Authors :
Valeria Catalani
Giuseppe Floresta
Michelle Botha
John Martin Corkery
Amira Guirguis
Alessandro Vento
Vincenzo Abbate
Fabrizio Schifano
Source :
Catalani, V, Floresta, G, Botha, M, Corkery, J M, Guirguis, A, Vento, A, Abbate, V & Schifano, F 2023, ' In silico studies on recreational drugs : 3D quantitative structure activity relationship prediction of classified and de novo designer benzodiazepines ', Chemical Biology & Drug Design, vol. 101, no. 1, pp. 40-51 . https://doi.org/10.1111/cbdd.14119
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Currently, increasing availability and popularity of designer benzodiazepines (DBZDs) constitutes a primary threat to public health. To assess this threat, the biological activity/potency of DBZDs was investigated using in silico studies. Specific Quantitative Structure Activity Relationship (QSAR) models were developed in Forge™ for the prediction of biological activity (IC 50) on the γ-aminobutyric acid A receptor (GABA-AR) of previously identified classified and unclassified DBDZs. A set of new potential ligands resulting from scaffold hopping studies conducted with MOE ® was also evaluated. Two generated QSAR models (i.e. 3D-field QSAR and RVM) returned very good performance statistics (r 2 = 0.98 [both] and q 2 = 0.75 and 0.72, respectively). The DBZDs predicted to be the most active were flubrotizolam, clonazolam, pynazolam and flucotizolam, consistently with what reported in literature and/or drug discussion fora. The scaffold hopping studies strongly suggest that replacement of the pendant phenyl moiety with a five-membered ring could increase biological activity and highlight the existence of a still unexplored chemical space for DBZDs. QSAR could be of use as a preliminary risk assessment model for (newly) identified DBZDs, as well as scaffold hopping for the creation of computational libraries that could be used by regulatory bodies as support tools for scheduling procedures.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Catalani, V, Floresta, G, Botha, M, Corkery, J M, Guirguis, A, Vento, A, Abbate, V & Schifano, F 2023, ' In silico studies on recreational drugs : 3D quantitative structure activity relationship prediction of classified and de novo designer benzodiazepines ', Chemical Biology & Drug Design, vol. 101, no. 1, pp. 40-51 . https://doi.org/10.1111/cbdd.14119
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....94006190ad61b9f75dd20e8e5f701a92
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cbdd.14119