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  4. Towards predictable transmembrane transport: QSAR analysis of anion binding and transport
 
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2013
Journal Article
Title

Towards predictable transmembrane transport: QSAR analysis of anion binding and transport

Abstract
The transport of anions across biological membranes by small molecules is a growing research field due to the potential therapeutic benefits of these compounds. However, little is known about the exact mechanism by which these drug-like molecules work and which molecular features make a good transporter. An extended series of 1-hexyl-3-phenylthioureas were synthesized, fully characterized (NMR, mass spectrometry, IR and single crystal diffraction) and their anion binding and anion transport properties were assessed using 1H NMR titration techniques and a variety of vesicle-based experiments. Quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) analysis revealed that the anion binding abilities of the mono-thioureas are dominated by the (hydrogen bond) acidity of the thiourea NH function. Furthermore, mathematical models show that the experimental transmembrane anion transport ability is mainly dependent on the lipophilicity of the transporter (partitioning into the membrane), but smaller contributions of molecular size (diffusion) and hydrogen bond acidity (anion binding) were also present. Finally, we provide the first step towards predictable anion transport by employing the QSAR equations to estimate the transmembrane transport ability of four new compounds.
Author(s)
Busschaert, N.
Bradberry, S.J.
Wenzel, M.
Haynes, C.J.E.
Hiscock, J.R.
Kirby, I.L.
Karagiannidis, L.E.
Moore, S.J.
Wells, N.J.
Herniman, J.
Langley, G.J.
Horton, P.N.
Light, M.E.
Marques, I.
Costa, P.J.
Felix, V.
Frey, J.G.
Gale, P.A.
Journal
Chemical Science  
Open Access
DOI
10.1039/c3sc51023a
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Keramische Technologien und Systeme IKTS  
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