Back to Search Start Over

Nonclassical Size Dependence of Permeation Defines Bounds for Passive Adsorption of Large Drug Molecules

Authors :
Alan M. Mathiowetz
Cameron R. Pye
Spiros Liras
R. Scott Lokey
Akihiro Furukawa
Chad E. Townsend
Lyns Etienne
Yongtong Lao
Terra D. Haddad
Chris Limberakis
David Price
Joshua Schwochert
William M. Hewitt
Source :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 60:1665-1672
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2017.

Abstract

Macrocyclic peptides are considered large enough to inhibit “undruggable” targets, but the design of passively cell-permeable molecules in this space remains a challenge due to the poorly understood role of molecular size on passive membrane permeability. Using split-pool combinatorial synthesis, we constructed a library of cyclic, per-N-methlyated peptides spanning a wide range of calculated lipohilicities (0 < AlogP < 8) and molecular weights (~800 Da < MW < ~1200 Da). Analysis by the parallel artificial membrane permeability assay revealed a steep drop-off in apparent passive permeability with increasing size in stark disagreement with current permeation models. This observation, corroborated by a set of natural products, helps define criteria for achieving permeability in larger molecular size regimes and suggests an operational cutoff, beyond which passive permeability is constrained by a sharply increasing penalty on membrane permeation.

Details

ISSN :
15204804 and 00222623
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9a18857e0d51e3ed2eea2a90eb515a7b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.6b01483