Rational Drug Design (RANCANGAN OBAT RASIONAL) PDF
Rational Drug Design (RANCANGAN OBAT RASIONAL) PDF
Rational Drug Design (RANCANGAN OBAT RASIONAL) PDF
1. Serendipity / ketidaksengajaan
1928 Fleming mempelajari Staphylococcus, tapi terjadi
kontaminasi di plate oleh jamur. Diamati bahwa di area yang
terkontaminasi jamur mengalami lisis. Jamur memproduksi senyawa
yang menghambat pertumbuhan bakteri : penicillin
Penemuan Obat
2. Screening
Pengujian acak aktivitas biologi sejumlah besar senyawa
menghasilkan lead. Saat ini sudah berkembang inovasi untuk
sintesis banyak senyawa sekaligus (combinatorial synthesis) dan
pengujian terhadap banyak target (high-throughput screening).
Contoh: Prontosil berasal dari zat warna yang menunjukkan
aktivitas antibakteri.
Penemuan Obat
3. Chemical Modification
Metode tradisional. Suatu senyawa analog dari senyawa aktif yang
sudah diketahui, disintesis dengan modifikasi minor, menghasilkan
peningkatan aktivitas biologi.
Analog Histamin disintesis dengan variasi struktur (modifikasi kimiawi) dan diuji.
N-guanyl-histamine menunjukkan aktivitas antagonis = LEAD compound.
Penemuan Obat
4. Rational Drug Design
Dimulai dengan merancang senyawa yang memenuhi persyaratan spesifik.
Senyawa kemudian disintesis dan diuji. Selanjutnya molekul dirancang
kembali, disintesis & diuji .....
Stages
1. Identify target disease
2. Identify drug target
3. Establish testing procedures
4. Find a lead compound
5. Structure Activity Relationships (SAR)
6. Identify a pharmacophore
7. Drug design- optimising target interactions
8. Drug design - optimising pharmacokinetic properties
9. Toxicological and safety tests
10. Chemical development and production
11. Patenting and regulatory affairs
12. Clinical trials
DRUG DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT
1. TARGET DISEASE
Priority for the Pharmaceutical Industry
• Can the profits from marketing a new drug outweigh the
cost of developing and testing that drug?
Questions to be addressed
• Is the disease widespread?
(e.g. cardiovascular disease, ulcers, malaria)
• Does the disease affect the first world?
(e.g. cardiovascular disease, ulcers)
• Are there drugs already on the market?
• If so, what are there advantages and disadvantages?
(e.g. side effects)
• Can one identify a market advantage for a new therapy?
DRUG DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT
2. DRUG TARGETS
A) LIPIDS Cell Membrane Lipids
B) PROTEINS Enzymes
Carrier Proteins
Structural Proteins (tubulin)
2. DRUG TARGETS
TARGET SELECTIVITY AND SPECIFICITY
Between species
• (Antibacterial and antiviral agents)
• Identify targets which are unique to the invading pathogen
• Identify targets which are shared but which are significantly different in
structure
3. TESTING DRUGS
• Tests are required in order to find lead compounds and
for drug optimization
• Tests can be in vivo or in vitro
• A combination of tests is often used in research
programmes (have activity at other undesired targets)
DRUG DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT
Etablishment of a
3D Str. of Target
Molecule Test System
Lead Structure
Candidate Pharmacophore
Objectives
Therapeutic Target
Lead Discovery N
H
H
Lead Optimization
drug design
Clinical Candidate
CH3
Commerical Drug
O
O Br
N
O
H
H3C N
N H
H
Lipinski‘s rule of five
In order to achieve efficient oral absorption and cell
permeability, drug candidates should have:
Bioisosteric replacement
In medicinal chemistry, bioisosteres are chemical
substituents or groups with similar physical or
chemical properties which produce broadly similar
biological properties to another chemical compound.
Bioisosterism is used to reduce toxicity, change
bioavailability, or modify the activity of the lead
compound, and may alter the metabolism of the
lead.
the replacement of a hydrogen atom with a fluorine
atom at a site of metabolic oxidation in a drug
candidate may prevent such metabolism from taking
place.
Methods of Lead Optimization in Analog Design
Homologation
Series of compounds that differ by a constant unit; generally
a CH2 group -(CH2)n- where n is varied.
Typically, an increase followed by a decrease in potency;
note that the number of CH2 groups associated with the
maximum potency differs for the series of compounds under
study.
Changes in activity often associated with solubility/absorption
issues.
Micelle formation of amphiphilic (lipid-like) compounds,
therefore, not available to bind at receptor. This occurs when
non-polar tails are long and polar head groups are present.
Methods of Lead Optimization in Analog Design
Chain branching
Changing 10-aminoalkylphenothiazine R groups:
S
1) -CH2CH(CH3)N(CH3)2 (promethazine)
N X
2) -CH2CH2N(CH3)2 (diethazine)
R
for 1 and 2: antispasmodic and antihistaminic
3) -CH2CH2CH2N(CH3)2 (promazine) decreased antispasmodic and
antihistaminic activities, has sedative and tranquilizing activities
4) -CH2CH(CH3)CH2N(CH3)2 (trimeprazine) reduced tranquilizing
activity, antipruritic (anti-itch) activity
Methods of Lead Optimization in Analog Design
Ring-Chain Transformations
Change alkyl substituent into cyclic analogs (or vice versa).
The following two drugs, trimeprazine and methdilazine, are
equivalent as antipruritic agents in humans.
Trimeprazine
S
X = Cl
R = CH2CH(CH3)CH2N(CH3)2
N X Methdilazine
CH3
X=H
R H2 N
R= C
Methods of Lead Optimization in Analog Design