1 / 49

Formula for chemical compounds:

CZ3253: Computer Aided Drug design Lecture 4: Structural modeling of chemical molecules Prof. Chen Yu Zong Tel: 6874-6877 Email: csccyz@nus.edu.sg http://xin.cz3.nus.edu.sg Room 07-24, level 7, SOC1, National University of Singapore. Formula for chemical compounds:. Molecular formula:

kroeger
Download Presentation

Formula for chemical compounds:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CZ3253: Computer Aided Drug designLecture 4: Structural modeling of chemical molecules Prof. Chen Yu ZongTel: 6874-6877Email: csccyz@nus.edu.sghttp://xin.cz3.nus.edu.sgRoom 07-24, level 7, SOC1, National University of Singapore

  2. Formula for chemical compounds: Molecular formula: • Element(No. of atom) .Element (No. of atom) .... • Elements are placed in the order of C, N, H, O, and others. There can be exceptions to this rule.          Examples: • Carbon dioxide  CO2 • Ammonia   NH3 • Octane   C8H18

  3. Formula for chemical compounds: • Condensed formula • Formula reflects organization. • Members of the same functional group are placed together. • Example:

  4. Formula for chemical compounds: • Structural formula • 2D drawing of whole organization of chemical compound. • Example:

  5. Formula for chemical compounds:

  6. Chemical bonds: • There are 3 types of bonds: • single bond (1 bond between 2 atoms) • double bond (2 bonds between 2 atoms) • triple bond (3 bonds between 2 atoms) • Two atoms may be connected by one of these types of bonds according to their chemical properties. • The length of each types of bonds are in certain ranges

  7. Chemical bonds:

  8. Chemical bonds: • Problem solving example: • In each pair of bonds, predict which will be shorter? (a) C=C or C-C (b) C=C or C=O • Solution: • (a) C=C For the same pair of atoms, double bond is always shorter than single bond. • (b) C=O According to the Table, the length of C=O is 122pm which is shorter than that (134pm) of the C=C.

  9. Chemical Compounds: Stereochemistry • Three features: • Configuration (atom organization). • Conformation (atom spatial arrangement). • Shape (Surface landscape, steric packing)

  10. Chemical Compounds: • Configuration: • The organization of atoms and chemical bonds.   • Change of configuration requires breaking of bonds.

  11. Chemical Compounds: • An important aspect of configuration is chirality. • Chirality defines the property of mirror image.   • If mirror image is not the same as the original, the compound is called chiral.

  12. Chemical Compounds: Example

  13. Chemical Compounds: Conformation: • Determined by the spatial positions of its constituent atom. • Interconvertible without breaking and making of bonds.   • Conformation change is the key in many chemical reactions in living system.

  14. Chemical Compounds: III. Shape • Steric packing (what part of space is covered by the compound).     • Surface features (cavities, grooves where other molecules can bind to).   • Molecular shape determines the binding of two molecules.

  15. Atomic Motions in Chemical Compounds: • Atoms are not rigidly positioned.   • External and internal forces can induce atomic motions. • Some motions have chemical effect.   Example: • Binding of a drug to a protein can induce an atomic motion in protein that leads to the change of the 3D shape of that protein. • This shape change makes a chemically important cavity inaccessible to other molecules.

  16. Atomic Motions in Chemical Compounds: The effect of motions are described by energy: • Energy measures the ability to do work.   • Motion is associated with energy.   • There are two types of energy: • Kinetic energy -- motional energy. • Kinetic energy is related to the speed and mass of a moving object. The higher the speed and the heavier the object is, the bigger work it can do.

  17. Atomic Motions in Chemical Compounds: • Potential Energy -- "positional" energy • Potential energy description: • Water falls from higher ground to lower ground. In physics such a phenomenon is modeled by potential energy description: • Objects move from higher potential energy place to lower potential energy place.

  18. Atomic Motions in Chemical Compounds: • Potential Energy -- "positional" energy • Potential energy description: • Water falls from higher ground to lower ground. In physics such a phenomenon is modeled by potential energy description: • Objects move from higher potential energy place to lower potential energy place.

  19. Atomic Motions in Chemical Compounds: • Potential Energy -- "positional" energy • Different types of bond motions are modeled by different energy functions.   • Energy terms are additive.   • The total energy determines overall effect.

  20. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models The stretching energy equation is based on Hooke's law. The "kb" parameter controls the stiffness of the bond spring, while "ro" defines its equilibrium length.

  21. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models The stretching energy equation is based on Hooke's law. The "kb" parameter controls the stiffness of the bond spring, while "ro" defines its equilibrium length.

  22. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models The bending energy equation is also based on Hooke's law

  23. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models The bending energy equation is also based on Hooke's law

  24. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models The torsion energy is modeled by a simple periodic function Why?

  25. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models Torsion energy as a function of bond rotation angle.

  26. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models The non-bonded energy accounts for repulsion, van der Waals attraction, and electrostatic interactions.

  27. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models • van der Waals attraction occurs at short range, and rapidly dies off as the interacting atoms move apart. • Repulsion occurs when the distance between interacting atoms becomes even slightly less than the sum of their contact distance. • Electrostatic energy dies out slowly and it can affect atoms quite far apart.

  28. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models • Hydrogen Bond: • N-H … O • N-H … N • O-H … N • O-H … O • Modeled by • VdW+electrostatic • Modeled by More potential

  29. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models Concept of energy scale is Important for molecular Modeling

  30. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models Concept of energy scale is Important for molecular modeling

  31. Structural Modeling of Compounds: Basic Interactions and Their Models • Sources of force parameters: • Bonds, VdW, Electrostatic (for amino acids, nucleotides only): • AMBER: J. Am. Chem. Soc. 117, 5179-5197 • CHARMM: J. Comp. Chem. 4, 187-217 • H-bonds (Morse potential): • Nucleic Acids Res. 20, 415-419. • Biophys. J. 66, 820-826 • Electrostatic parameters of organic molecules need to be computed individually by using special software (such as Gaussian)

  32. Representation of Chemical Compounds How to represent a compound? • Each structure represented by digital form of structural, physico-chemical properties: • Simple molecular properties (molecular weight, no. of rotatable bonds etc.) • Molecular Connectivity and shape • Electro-topological state polarity • Quantum chemical properties (electric charge, polaritability etc. 13 in total) • Geometrical properties (molecular size vectors, van der Waals volume, molecular surface etc. 16 in total) J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci. 44,1630 (2004) J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci. 44, 1497 (2004) Toxicol. Sci. 79,170 (2004).

  33. Molecular Descriptors • Constitutional • MW, N atoms, • Topological • Connectivity,Weiner index • Electrostatic • Polarity, polarizability, partial charges • Geometrical Descriptors • Length, width, Molecular volume • Quantum Chemical • HOMO and LUMO energies • Vibrational frequencies • Bond orders • Total energy

  34. Molecular Descriptors • van der Waals volume • The sum of the non-overlaping volume of van der Waals sphere of each atom of the molecule • Molecular surface • The area of the surface contours generated by rolling a probing sphere against the surface atoms of the molecule

  35. Molecular Descriptors • Molecular size vectors • Define ranges for distances and angles

  36. Molecular Descriptors Octanol-Water Partition Coefficients • P = C(octanol) / C(water) • log P like rG = - RT ln Keq • Hydrophobic - hydrophilic character • P increases then more hydrophobic

  37. - augmented atoms - atom pairs - atom sequences - ring compositions Molecular DescriptorsBCI Chemical Descriptors • Descriptors are binary and represent:

  38. Molecular Descriptors Molecular Structures MW: 214.35 D LogP: 6.71 … Connectivity Matrix e.g. , BCUT’s

  39. Slide 7 Molecular descriptors chemical fingerprint Hashed binary fingerprint • Encodes topological properties of the chemical graph: connectivity, edge label (bond type), node label (atom type) • Allows the comparison of two molecules with respect to their chemical structure Construction • Find all 0, 1, …, n step walks in the chemical graph • Generate a bit array for each walks with given number of bits set • Merge the bit arrays with logical OR operation

  40. Slide 7 Molecular descriptors chemical fingerprint Example CH3 – CH2 – OH walks from the first carbon atom merge bit arrays for the first carbon atom: 1111011110

  41. Slide 8 Molecular descriptors chemical fingerprint 0100010100010100010000000001101010011010100000010100000000100000 0100010100010100010000000001101010011010100000000100000000100000

  42. Slide 10 Molecular descriptors Pharmacophore fingerprint Pharmacophore point type based coloring of atoms: acceptor, donor, hydrophobic, none.

  43. Topological pharmacophore fingreprint • Encodes pharmacophore properties of molecules as frequency counts of pharmacophore point pairs at given topological distance • Allows the comparison of two molecules with respect to their pharmacophore Construction Perceive pharmacophoric features Map pharmacophore point type to atoms Calculate length of shortest path between each pair of atoms Assign a histogram to every pharmacophore point pairs and count the frequency of the pair with respect to its distance

  44. acceptor donor donor Pharmacophore perception Rule based approach • Rule 1: The pharmacophore type of an atom is an acceptor, if • it is a nitrogen, oxygen or sulfur, and • it is not an amide nitrogen or sulfur, and • it is not an aniline nitrogen, and • it is not a sulfonyl sulfur, and • it is not a nitro group nitrogen.

  45. donor Exceptions to simple rules n-cyano-methil piperidine sp2 atom exception  extra rules  large number of rules  maintenance, performance

  46. acceptor donor Effect of pH pH = 7 pH = 1 pH  pH specific rules  large number of rules  maintenance, performance

  47. Pharmacophore Construction Calculation based approach Step 1: estimation of pKa allows the determination of the protonation state for ionizable groups at the given pH Step 2: partial charge calculation

  48. Pharmacophore Construction Calculation based approach Step 3: hydrogen bond donor/acceptor recognition Step 4: aromatic perception Step 5: pharmacophore property assignment acceptor negatively charged acceptor acceptor and donor hydrophobic none

  49. Pharmacophore fingerprint Pharmacophore type coloring:acceptor, donor, hydrophobic, none.

More Related