Review of Organic Chemistry Functional Group PDF
Review of Organic Chemistry Functional Group PDF
Review of Organic Chemistry Functional Group PDF
Review of Organic
Functional Groups
Introduction to Medicinal Organic Chemistry
Fifth Edition
Printed in China
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9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Lemke, Thomas L.
Review of organic functional groups: introduction to medicinal organic chemistry/
Thomas L. Lemke.5th ed.
p. ; cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-60831-016-6 (alk. paper)
1. Pharmaceutical chemistry. I. Title.
RS403.L397 2012
615.19dc22
2010023763
DISCLAIMER
Care has been taken to confirm the accuracy of the information present and to describe generally
accepted practices. However, the authors, editors, and publisher are not responsible for errors or
omissions or for any consequences from application of the information in this book and make no warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the currency, completeness, or accuracy of the contents
of the publication. Application of this information in a particular situation remains the professional
responsibility of the practitioner; the clinical treatments described and recommended may not be
considered absolute and universal recommendations.
The authors, editors, and publisher have exerted every effort to ensure that drug selection and
dosage set forth in this text are in accordance with the current recommendations and practice at the
time of publication. However, in view of ongoing research, changes in government regulations, and the
constant flow of information relating to drug therapy and drug reactions, the reader is urged to check
the package insert for each drug for any change in indications and dosage and for added warnings and
precautions. This is particularly important when the recommended agent is a new or infrequently
employed drug.
Some drugs and medical devices presented in this publication have Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) clearance for limited use in restricted research settings. It is the responsibility of the health care
provider to ascertain the FDA status of each drug or device planned for use in their clinical practice.
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Preface
his book has been prepared with the intent that it may be used as a self-paced
review of organic functional groups. If the material covered in this book were
to be presented in a conventional classroom setting, it would require 14 to 16
formal lecture hours. With this in mind, you should not attempt to cover all
of the material in one sitting. A slow, leisurely pace will greatly increase your comprehension and decrease the number of return visits to the material. You should
stop to review any section that you do not completely understand. You should also
use the problem sets and detailed answers on the enclosed CD-ROM to enhance
your understanding of the organic functional groups (Chapters 217). See the
Additional Resources section, below, for more information.
OBJECTIVES
The book is designed as a review of the organic functional groups common to organic medicinal agents. It is the objective of this book to review the general topics
of nomenclature, physical properties (with specific emphasis placed on water and
lipid solubility), chemical properties (the stability or lack of stability of a functional
group to normal environmental conditions, referred to as in vitro stability), and metabolism (the stability or lack of stability of a functional group in the body, referred
to as in vivo stability). There will be no attempt to cover synthesis, nor will great
emphasis be placed on chemical reactions except when they related to the physical
or chemical stability and mechanistic action of drugs. This review is meant to provide background material for the formal pharmacy courses in medicinal chemistry.
The objectives are presented in the following manner to aid in focusing attention
on the expected learning outcomes.
Nomenclature
1. Common
2. Official (IUPAC)*
3. Generic (name of the functional group)
Physical-Chemical Properties
1. Physical propertiesrelated to water and lipid solubility
2. Chemical properties in vitrostability or reactivity of functional groups
on the shelf
*While IUPAC nomenclature will be presented for individual functional groups, it is normally not expected that a student will be able to draw a structure based upon IUPAC nomenclature of polyfunctional molecules (most drugs are polyfunctional), nor will the student be expected to write an IUPAC
name based upon the chemical structure. The student is expected to identify the individual functional
groups within a drug molecule using the common or generic name of the functional group.
iii
iv
PREFACE
Metabolism
Chemical properties in vivostability or reactivity of functional groups in
the body
Upon successful completion of the book, the following general objectives will
have been attained:
The student will be able to draw a chemical structure of simple organic
molecules given a common or official chemical name. With more complex
polyfunctional molecules, the student will be able to identify functional
groups (generic name) given the chemical structure.
The student will be able to predict the solubility of a chemical in
1. aqueous acid
2. water
3. aqueous base
The student will be able to predict and show, with chemical structures, the
chemical instabilities of each organic functional group under conditions appropriate to a substance setting on the shelf, by which is meant conditions
such as air, light, aqueous acid or base, and heat.
The student will be able to predict and show, with chemical structures, the
metabolism of each organic functional group.
A more detailed list of learning objectives can be found in Appendix D.
RECOMMENDED PREPARATION
In order to maximize learning and to provide perspective in the study of the book,
it would be helpful to read certain background material. It is highly recommended
that a textbook on general organic chemistry be reviewed and consulted as a reference book while using this book. Pay special attention to the sections on nomenclature and physical-chemical properties.
PREFACE
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Review of Organic Functional Groups, Fifth Edition includes additional resources
for both instructors and students.
Instructors
Approved adopting instructors will be given access to the following additional resources, which are available on the books companion website at thePoint.lww.com/
LemkeReview5e:
PowerPoint slides
An image bank of all the figures and tables in the book
Students
Students who have purchased Review of Organic Functional Groups, Fifth Edition
have access to the following additional resources, via both an in-book CD-ROM
and the books companion website at thePoint.lww.com/LemkeReview5e:
Problem sets corresponding to each of the organic functional groups
(Chapters 217): Each problem set is followed by answers to the questions
and a detailed discussion explaining the process leading to the answers. If
you do not understand an answer or the process leading to the answer, return to the appropriate section of the book and review that section again.
Answers to the case studies found in the book.
In addition, purchasers of the text can access the searchable Full Text On-line by
going to the Review of Organic Functional Groups, Fifth Edition website at
thePoint.lww.com/LemkeReview5e. See the inside front cover of this text for more
details, including the passcode you will need to gain access to the website.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This book would not have been possible without the encouragement and input of
colleagues and students. The idea for the text originated from a late-night discussion at a medicinal chemistry symposium and began as a series of tapes and slides
that students were expected to review on their own time. A set of notes taken by
students from the audiovisual presentations led to the initial development of a written manuscript which, with support from the SmithKline Corporation and the
University of Houston College of Pharmacy, finally produced the first desktop
copies of the book. In 1983, Lea & Febiger agreed to take a chance and published
the first edition of this book, which has grown in size and quality over the years.
The real joy comes from students, some of whom are now my colleagues, who informally tell me of the benefits they have gained from this book.
vi
PREFACE
I want to acknowledge Drs. Victoria Roche and Sandy Zito, who have brought
creativity, enthusiasm, and helpful suggestions in addition to their case studies to
this edition of the book. I also want to thank the excellent staff, past and present,
at LWW who have made this project seem more like an academic undertaking
rather than a commercial process. Many of the staff members I have never met,
but they do an excellent job of producing a quality product. I want to thank the staff
that I have met and worked with over the years, which includes Matthew J.
Hauber, David B. Troy, and Meredith Brittain. They have contributed greatly by
keeping me on track and with encouraging words. Finally, a very special thanks
goes out to my wife Pat, who puts up with me and the time spent working on the
book, Flash, and PowerPoint presentations.
CHAPTER
Contents
Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .iii
1
2
3
Alkanes (CnH2n+2 ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6
Alkenes (CnH2n ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
n
4
5
n
n
Amines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49
n
n
n
11
Ethers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36
Thioethers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38
Case Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40
10
Phenols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29
n
Alcohols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23
n
AminesGeneral . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49
Quaternary Ammonium Salts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58
Case Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59
vii
viii
12
CONTENTS
13
14
n
n
n
n
n
Heterocycles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .96
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
16
15
Esters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73
Amides . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76
Carbonates, Carbamates, and Ureas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79
Amidines and Guanidines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81
Case Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82
CONTENTS
17
Proteins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .141
n
18
ix
n
n
n
CHAPTER
water-loving
lipid-hating
lipid-loving
water-hating
Water and lipid solubility are essential characteristics of a drug. For a drug to
leave the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, it must pass through the lipid membrane of the
GI tract. The drug will then enter the blood stream that is composed primarily of
water. The drug can then be distributed throughout the body ultimately reaching
the target cells on which or in which it is expected to act. To enter the cell the drug
must again penetrate a lipid membrane and enter the aqueous intracellular fluid or
cytosol. To leave the body, similar membranes and fluids must be traversed finally
exiting the body through the kidney in aqueous urine or into the GI tract in biliary
fluids. Thus, it should be recognized that aqueous and lipid solubility is essential
for drug action.
To predict whether a chemical will dissolve in water or a lipid solvent, it must
be determined whether the molecule and its functional groups can bond to water
or the lipid solvent molecules. THIS IS THE KEY TO SOLUBILITY. If a molecule, through its functional groups, can bond to water, it will show some degree of
water solubility. If, on the other hand, a molecule cannot bond to water, but instead
bonds to the molecules of a lipid solvent, it will be water-insoluble or lipid-soluble.
Our goal is therefore to determine to what extent a molecule can or cannot bond
1
to water. To do this, we must define the types of intermolecular bonding that can
occur between molecules.
What are the types of intermolecular bonds?
FIGURE 1-1. Van der Waals attraction resulting from distortion of covalent bonds.
CHAPTER 1
dipole-dipole attraction between two polar molecules arises from the negative end
of one dipole being electrostatically attracted to the positive end of the second dipole. The hydrogen bond can occur when at least one dipole contains an electropositive hydrogen (e.g., a hydrogen covalently bonded to an electronegative
atom such as oxygen, sulfur, nitrogen, or selenium), which in turn is attracted to a
region of high electron density. Atoms with high electron densities are those with
unshared pairs of electrons such as amine nitrogens, ether or alcohol oxygens, and
thioether or thiol sulfurs. While hydrogen bonding is an example of dipole-dipole
bonding, not all dipole-dipole bonding is hydrogen bonding (Fig. 1-3). Water, the
important pharmaceutical solvent, is a good example of an hydrogen-bonding solvent. The ability of water to hydrogen bond accounts for the unexpectedly high
boiling point of water as well as the characteristic dissolving properties of water.
The hydrogen bond depends on temperature and distance. The energy of hydrogen bonding is 1.0 to 10.0 kcal/mole for each interaction.
IONIC ATTRACTION
A third type of bonding is the ionic attraction found quite commonly in inorganic
molecules and salts of organic molecules. Ionic bonding results from the attraction of a negative atom for a positive atom (Fig. 1-4). The ionic bond involves a
ION-DIPOLE BONDING
Probably one of the most important chemical bonds involved in organic salts dissolving in water is the ion-dipole bond (Fig. 1-5). This bond occurs between an ion,
either cation or anion, and a formal dipole, such as is found in water. The following two types of interactions may exist:
1. A cation will show bonding to a region of high electron density in a dipole
(e.g., the oxygen atom in water).
2. An anion will bond to an electron-deficient region in a dipole (e.g., the
hydrogen atom in water).
Ion-dipole bonding is a strong attraction that is relatively insensitive to temperature or distance. When an organic compound with basic properties (e.g., an amine)
is added to an aqueous acidic medium (pH below 7.0), the compound may form an
ionic salt that, if dissociable, will have enhanced water solubility owing to ion-dipole
bonding. Likewise, when an organic compound with acidic properties (e.g., carboxylic acids, phenols, unsubstituted or monosubstituted sulfonamides and unsubstituted imides) is added to an aqueous basic medium (pH above 7.0), the compound
may form an ionic salt that, if dissociable, will have enhanced water solubility owing
to ion-dipole bonding. Both of these examples are shown in Fig. 1-5.
Water is an important solvent from both a pharmaceutical and a biologic standpoint. Therefore, when looking at any drug from a structural viewpoint, it is important to know whether the drug will dissolve in water. To predict water solubility, one
must weigh the number and strength of hydrophilic groups in a molecule against the
lipophilic groups present. If a molecule has a large amount of water-loving character, by interacting with water through hydrogen bonding or ion-dipole attraction, it
would be expected to dissolve in water. If a molecule is deficient in hydrophilic
groups but instead has a lipophilic portion capable of van der Waals attraction, then
the molecule will most likely dissolve in a nonaqueous or lipophilic medium.
In reviewing the functional groups in organic chemistry, an attempt will be
made to identify the lipophilic or hydrophilic character of each functional group.
CHAPTER 1
Knowing the character of each functional group in a drug will then allow an intelligent prediction of the overall solubility of the molecule by weighing the importance of each type of interaction. This book is organized in such a way that each
functional group is discussed individually. Yet, when dealing with a drug molecule,
the student will usually find a polyfunctional molecule. The ultimate goal is that the
student should be able to predict the solubility of actual drugs in water, aqueous
acidic media, and aqueous basic media. Therefore, to use this book correctly and
to prepare yourself for the typical complex drug molecules, it is recommended that
you read through Chapter 18 after studying each functional group. This will help
you put each functional group into perspective with respect to polyfunctional
molecules.
Cation- Bonding
An unusual type of chemical bond is the cation- bond. This electrostatic
chemical bond exists between an electron-rich system, such as that found
in an aromatic ring, and a cation. The cation can be a metal (Li, Na, K)
or an organic ammonium salt. The strength of the bond is similar to that
M
of the hydrogen bond and is effected by the nature of the cation and
substitutions on the aromatic ring (groups that increase the electron density within the aromatic ring increase the strength of the bond). Recent
studies have suggested that the cation- bond is important for molecular
recognition between cationic ligands and biologic receptors.
Cation- bond
O
HN
O
H3C
O
CH3
N
CH3
H3C
O
N
H
N
H
HN
NH
NH
Receptor
N
N
Receptor
CH3
CHAPTER
Alkanes (CnH2n2)
CHAPTER 2
ALKANES (C n H 2n2 )
Propane
42.0
n-Butane
0.5
n-Pentane
36.1
n-Hexane
69.0
n-Heptane
98.4
n-Octane
126.0
FIGURE 2-3. Diagram of n-hexanes lack of solubility in water and the solubility
of sodium chloride in water through ion-dipole bonding.
The effects of adding an alkane to water are depicted in Figure 2-3. Water is an
ordered medium with a considerable amount of inter-molecular bonding, indicated
by its high boiling point (i.e., high in respect to its molecular weight). To dissolve
in or to mix with water, foreign atoms must break into this lattice. Sodium chloride
(table salt), which is quite water-soluble, is an example of a molecule capable of
this. An alkane cannot break into the water lattice since it cannot bond to water.
Ion-dipole interaction, which is possible for sodium chloride, is not possible for the
alkane. Ionic bonding and hydrogen bonding between water and the alkane also
are not possible. Van der Waals bonding between alkane and alkane is relatively
strong, with little or no van der Waals attraction between the water and the alkane.
The net result is that the alkane separates out and is immiscible in water. Alkanes
will dissolve in a lipid solvent or oil layer. The term lipid, fat, or oil, defined
from the standpoint of solubility, means a water-immiscible or water-insoluble material. Lipid solvents are rich in alkane groups; therefore, it is not surprising that
alkanes are soluble in lipid layers, since induced dipole-induced dipole bonding
will be abundant. If an alkane has a choice between remaining in an aqueous area
CHAPTER 2
ALKANES (C n H 2n2 )
or moving to a lipid area, it will move to the lipid area. In chemistry, this means that
if n-heptane is placed in a separatory funnel containing water and decane, the
n-heptane will partition into the decane. This movement of alkanes also occurs
in biologic systems and is best represented by the general anesthetic alkanes and
their rapid partitioning into the lipid portion of the brain, while at the same time
they have poor affinity for the aqueous blood. This concept will be discussed in
detail in courses in medicinal chemistry.
Another property that should be mentioned is chemical stability. In the case of
alkanes, one is dealing with a stable compound. For our purposes, these compounds are to be considered chemically inert to the conditions met on the shelf
namely, air, light, aqueous acid or base, and heat.
A final physical-chemical property that may be encountered in branched-chain
alkanes is seen when a carbon atom is substituted with four different substituents
(Fig. 2-4). Such a molecule is said to be asymmetric (i.e., without a plane or point
10
mixed-function oxidase enzymes, and in most cases it occurs at the end of the hydrocarbon, the omega carbon, or adjacent to the final carbon at the omega-minus-one
carbon, as shown. For additional discussion of the metabolic process see Appendix C,
Metabolism.
CHAPTER
Alkenes (CnH2n)
n NOMENCLATURE. The common nomenclature for the alkenes uses the radical name representing the total number of carbons present and the suffix -ene,
which indicates the presence of a double bond (Fig. 3-1). This type of nomenclature becomes awkward for branched-chain alkenes, and the official IUPAC
nomenclature becomes useful. With IUPAC nomenclature, the longest continuous chain containing the double bond is chosen and is given a base name that corresponds to the alkane of that length. As indicated in Figure 3-2, the longest
chain has seven carbons and is therefore a heptane derivative. The chain is numbered so as to assign the lowest possible number to the double bond. In numbering left to right, the double bond is at the 3 position, which is preferred,
rather than numbering right to left, which would put the double bond at the 4
position. With the molecule correctly numbered, the final step in naming the
compound consists of naming and numbering the alkyl radicals, followed by the
location of the double bond and the alkane name, in which the -ane is dropped
Structure
Common name
CH2 = CH2
Ethylene
CH2 = CH
CH3
CH2 = CH
CH2
Propylene
CH3
CH2 = C CH3
CH3
1-Butylene
iso-Butylene
H
CH3
CH3 CH2 C C CH2 C CH3
CH3
CH3
3 4
5 4
11
12
and replaced with the -ene. In the example, the correct name would be 3,6,6trimethyl-3 (the location of the double bond) hept (seven carbons) ene (meaning
an alkene).
In complex molecules, the student will be expected to identify the alkene and
label it as such. The student should then associate the appropriate physicalchemical and metabolic properties to the alkene functional group.
The introduction of a double bond into a molecule also raises the possibility of
geometric isomers. Isomers are compounds with the same empirical formula but a
different structural formula. If the difference in structural formulas comes from
lack of free rotation around a bond, this is referred to as a geometric isomer.
2-Butene may exist as a trans-2-butene or cis-2-butene, which are examples of geometric isomers (Fig. 3-3). The E,Z nomenclature has been instituted to deal with
H3C
H
C
H
C
CH3
H3C
C
CH3
trans -2-Butene
cis -2-Butene
(E )-2-Butene
(Z )-2-Butene
H2C H2C
CH2 CH3
H
ol indicated
alcohol
en indicated alkene
FIGURE 3-3. Examples of E,Z nomenclature for naming alkenes.
CHAPTER 3
ALKENES (C n H 2n )
13
O2
O
C
O
C
14
H O
R CH2 C C C S-CoA
H
Hydration
OH H O
R CH2 C C C S-CoA
H H
Epoxidation
COOH Peroxidation
COOH
O
O
H O
R CH2 C C C S-CoA
H
Reduction
H
R CH2 C
H
H O
C C S-CoA
H
Cyclopropane
(Reactive)
Cyclopentane
(Unreactive)
Cyclohexane
(Unreactive)
cyclopentane and cyclohexane are chemically inert, much like the alkanes. All
three compounds are lipid-soluble and quite flammable. The latter two ring systems are common to many drug molecules.
Similar to the alkenes, the cycloalkanes do not show free rotation around the
carbon-carbon bonds of the cycloalkane and as a result have the potential of geometric isomers. With polysubstituted cycloalkanes cis and trans isomers exist, resulting in compounds with different physical-chemical properties. An added
characteristic of cycloalkanes with six or more carbons (less so with cyclopentane)
is the ability of the molecule to exist in different conformational forms or isomers.
While conformational isomers of a molecule (i.e., the way the molecule stands in
space) do not change the physical-chemical properties of a molecule, nor are these
isomers separable, conformational isomers of a molecule may affect the way that
CHAPTER 3
ALKENES (C n H 2n )
15
A
C
B
(CH2)X
(CH2)X
trans isomer
cis isomer
(a)
H3C
HH
(a) CH3
axial trans -1,2-dimethylcyclohexane
(high energy conformation)
H
H
CH3
CH3
H3C
(e)
(e)
CHAPTER
Aromatic Hydrocarbons
3
4
Benzene
6
5
1
2
3
5 10 4
Anthracene
4
5
Naphthalene
3
5 4
6
7
2
1
10
8
9
Phenanthrene
16
CHAPTER 4
17
AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS
reaction is quite important during drug metabolism but does not occur in vitro.
Aromatic hydrocarbons are quite stable on the shelf. These hydrocarbons, like other
hydrocarbons, are lipophilic and flammable. Because of their high electron density
and flat nature, however, aromatic hydrocarbons show a somewhat stronger capacity to bond through van der Waals attraction. Aromatic rings appear to play a significant role in the binding of a drug to biologic proteins, as will be seen in courses on
medicinal chemistry.
METABOLISM. As already mentioned, aromatic rings are quite prone to oxidation in vivo or, more specifically, to aromatic hydroxylation. This reaction is
commonly catalyzed by several of the cytochrome P450 isoforms and may involve
an initial epoxidation. In a few cases, this highly reactive epoxide has been isolated, but in most cases the epoxide rearranges to give the hydroxylation product,
the phenol or dialcohol, as shown in Figure 4-2. The importance of this reaction
is considerable.
O
N C CH3
O
N C CH3
O
N C CH3
H
H
OH
OH
H
H
H
OH
OH
H
OH
Aromatic hydroxylation significantly increases the water solubility of the aromatic system (See Chapter 7, Phenols). In many cases this results in a rapid removal of the chemical from the body, while in a few cases hydroxylation
may actually increase the activity of the drug. An area of considerable importance has been the study of the role of hydroxylation of aromatic hydrocarbons
and its relationship to the carcinogenic properties of aromatic hydrocarbons.
Evidence suggests that the intermediate epoxides are responsible for this carcinogenic effect.
As indicated, the phenols formed by aromatic hydroxylation may be eliminated
as such from the body or may undergo a phase 2 conjugation, giving rise to a sulfate
18
O
N C CH3
O
N C CH3
Aromatic
hydroxylation
OH
H
COOH
O
OH
O
N C CH3
O
N C CH3
O SO3H
HO
OH
conjugate or a glucuronide conjugate, as shown in Figure 4-3. These conjugates exhibit an even greater water solubility (see Appendix C, Metabolism for discussion of
conjugation reactions).
CHAPTER
Halogenated Hydrocarbons
NOMENCLATURE. The common nomenclature for mono-substituted halogenated hydrocarbons consists of the name of the alkyl radical followed by the name
of the halogen atom. Examples of this nomenclature, along with the structures and
names of several common polyhalogenated hydrocarbons, are shown in Figure 5-1.
This nomenclature again becomes complicated as the branching of the hydrocarbon chain increases, and one therefore uses IUPAC nomenclature. The IUPAC
nomenclature requires choosing the longest continuous hydrocarbon chain, followed by numbering of the chain so as to assign the lowest number to the halide.
The compound is then named as a haloalkane. This is illustrated in Figure 5-2 for
2-bromo-4-methylpentane.
PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The properties of the halogenated hydrocarbons differ somewhat from those of the hydrocarbons previously discussed. The
monohaloalkanes have a permanent dipole owing to the strongly electronegative
Structure
Common name
CH3 F
Methylfluoride
CH3 CH2
Ethylchloride
Cl
Propylbromide
Br
n-Butyliodide
CH2Cl2
Methylene chloride
CHCl3
Chloroform
CCl4
Carbontetrachloride
Cl
CH2 CH2
Ethylene chloride
Cl
CH3
Br
H3C C CH2 C CH3
H
H
1 2
4 5
5 4
2 1
19
20
halide attached to the carbon. The permanent dipole does not guarantee dipoledipole bonding, however. Although the halogen is rich in electron density, there is no
region highly deficient in electrons, and intermolecular bonding is therefore weak
and again depends on the van der Waals attraction. Since only van der Waals bonding is possible, these compounds have low boiling points and poor water solubility.
The halogens covalently bound to carbon in general increase the lipophilic nature of
the compounds to which they are bound. Another property of the halogenated hydrocarbons is a decrease in flammability with an increase in the number of halogens.
In fact, carbon tetrachloride has been used in fire extinguishers. In general, these
compounds are highly lipid-soluble and chemically nonreactive.
One important chemical reaction that methylene chloride, chloroform, and
several other polyhalogenated compounds undergo is shown in Figure 5-3.
Chloroform, in the presence of oxygen and heat, is converted to phosgene, a reactive and toxic chemical. To destroy any phosgene that may form in a bottle of chloroform, a small amount of alcohol is usually present. The alcohol reacts with the
phosgene to give a nontoxic carbonate.
CHCl3
1/2 O2
Heat
O
Cl C Cl
C2H5-OH
O
C2H5 O C O C2H5
Phosgene
-Hydrogen
H
F2HC O CF2 C F
Cl
Enflurane
CYP450
OH
F2HC O CF2 C F
Cl
Halohydrin
O
F2HC O CF2 C F
Reactive intermediate
CHAPTER 5
21
HALOGENATED HYDROCARBONS
intermediate formed following dehydrohalogenation is associated with both hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity. Since the halogenated hydrocarbons are quite lipid soluble, they are not readily excreted by the kidney and have prolonged biologic
half-life, increasing the likelihood for systemic toxicity. This may also account for the
potential carcinogenic properties of some halogenated hydrocarbons.
In summary, one significant property is common to all of the hydrocarbons, and
that is the lack of ability to bond to water and thus the lipophilic or hydrophobic
nature. SINCE ALL ORGANIC MOLECULES HAVE A HYDROCARBON
PORTION, THIS PROPERTY WILL SHOW UP TO SOME EXTENT IN ALL
MOLECULES. You will have to weigh the extent of influence of the lipophilic portion against the quantity of hydrophilic character to predict whether a molecule
will dissolve in a nonaqueous medium or in water.
Note: Case Studies 5.1 and 5.2 incorporate information from Chapters 2
through 5 of this book.
N
H
H
CH2 C N CH2 C CH2 O-R
O
NH2
CHCl2
R=
R=
R=
2
Discuss the feasibility of each of the four candidates for this R substituent in
light of the binding site restrictions, and make a recommendation to your synthetic team. Since nothing is ever truly perfect, identify one potential disadvantage to your recommendation.
22
F F
F C C H
F
Cl C H
F H
F H
CHAPTER
Alcohols
n NOMENCLATURE. The common nomenclature of alcohols is to name the molecule as an alcohol preceded by the names of the hydrocarbon radical (Fig. 6-1).
Methyl and ethyl alcohol are examples of primary alcohols, isopropyl alcohol is an
example of a secondary alcohol, and tertiary butyl alcohol is an example of a tertiary alcohol. The primary, secondary, and tertiary designations given to an alcohol
depend upon the number of carbons that are attached to the carbon that contains
the OH group. The primary designation indicates that one carbon is attached to
the carbon bearing the OH group; the secondary designation indicates that two
carbons are attached; and the tertiary designation indicates that three carbons are
attached.
Once again, the nomenclature becomes clumsy as the hydrocarbon portion
branches, and the official IUPAC nomenclature must be used (see Fig. 6-1). The
longest continuous chain that contains the hydroxyl group is chosen. The chain is
then numbered to give the lowest number to the hydroxyl group. Other substituents, preceded by their numbered location, come first, followed by the location of the hydroxyl group, followed by the name of the alkane. To show that this is
an alcohol, the e is dropped from the alkane name and replaced by ol, the official sign of an alcohol.
It is essential that the student be able to identify an alcohol functional group
within a complex molecule and assign primary, secondary, or tertiary designation to
the group.
Structure
Common name
IUPAC name
CH3 OH
Methyl alcohol
(Wood alcohol)
Ethyl alcohol
(Alcohol USP)
Isopropyl alcohol
(Rubbing alcohol)
Methanol
tert-Butyl alcohol
2-Methyl-2-propanol
CH3 CH2 OH
CH3 CH OH
CH3
CH3
CH3 C OH
CH3
Ethanol
2-Propanol
23
24
CH3
CH2 O
H
CH2
CH2
CH3
CH3
H
O
H
CH3
CH2
Intermolecular H-bonding
(increased boiling point)
H
H
Intermolecular H-bonding
(increased water solubility)
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The properties of the alcohol offer a departure from the compounds that have been discussed previously. The OH group can
participate in intermolecular hydrogen bonding (Fig. 6-2). Because of the electronegativity of the oxygen and the electropositive proton, a permanent dipole
exists. The hydrogen attached to the oxygen is slightly positive in nature and the
oxygen slightly negative. Remember, this is not a formal charge but simply an unequal sharing of the pair of electrons that make up the covalent bond. The intermolecular hydrogen bonding that is now possible between the alcohol molecules
results in relatively high boiling points compared with their hydrocarbon counterparts (Table 6-1). Also important is the fact that the alcohol group can hydrogen
bond to water (see Fig. 6-2). This means that it can break into the water lattice,
with the result that the alcohol functional group promotes water solubility. The extent of water solubility for each alcohol will depend on the size of the hydrocarbon
portion (see Table 6-1). C1 through C3 alcohols are miscible with water in all proportions. As the length of the hydrocarbon chain increases, the hydrophilic nature
of the molecule decreases. The location of the hydroxyl radical also influences
water solubility, although not as dramatically as chain length. A hydroxyl group
BOILING POINTS C
65.5
78.3
97.0
82.4
117.2
99.5
137.3
7.9
12.5
2.3
CHAPTER 6
25
ALCOHOLS
centered in the molecule will have a greater potential for producing water solubility than a hydroxyl at the end of the straight chain. If a second hydroxyl is added,
solubility is increased. An example of this is 1,5-pentanediol. It can be thought of
as ethanol and propanol put together. Since both alcohols are quite water-soluble,
it would be predicted that 1,5-pentanediol would also be quite water-soluble, and
it is. It also follows that as the solubility of the alcohol in water decreases, the solubility of the alcohol in nonaqueous media increases. In summary, it can be said
that an alcohol functional group has the ability to solubilize to the extent of 1% or
greater an alkane chain of five or six carbon atoms.
Looking at the chemical reactivity of the alcohol, we find that from a pharmaceutical standpoint the alcohol functional group is a relatively stable unit.
Remember, though, that in the presence of oxidizing agents, a primary alcohol will
be oxidized to a carboxylic acid after passing through an intermediate aldehyde
(Fig. 6-3). The secondary alcohols can be oxidized to a ketone, and a tertiary
alcohol is stable to mild oxidation. The oxidation of an alcohol in vitro is not commonly encountered because of the limited number of oxidating agents used
pharmaceutically.
CH3 CH2
OH
O
CH3 C H
Aldehyde
CH3 CH OH
CH3
CH3
CH3 C OH
CH3
CH3 C
O
CH3 C OH
Acid
O
CH3
Ketone
Stable
26
Phase 1 Oxidation:
Oxidase
R
CH2 OH
CH OH
Oxidase
O
C OH
C
R
Phase 2 Conjugation:
CH2 OH
COO
O
OH
COO
O
OH
O-UDP
UDP-glucuronosyl
transferase (UGT)
HO
OH
UDP-glucuronate
O CH2 R
HO
OH
Glucuronide
NH2
N
CH2 OH
O
O3SO P O
OH
H2O3PO
N
N
R
O
OH
Sulfotransferase
(SULT)
CH2
O
O S O
O
Sulfate
3-Phosphoadenosine-5'phosphosulfate (PAPS)
FIGURE 6-4. Metabolic reactions of the alcohol functional group.
CHAPTER 6
27
ALCOHOLS
H O
NH
O
O
Ac
HO
OH
7
O
H
HO
10
NH
O
HO
O H C
3
OH
10
CH3
O C O
H
HO
O
Ac
28
OH
CH3
CH3
NH
OH
CH3
CH3
NH
CH3
OH
1. What functional groups, from the first six chapters of this book, are present in
these phenylethylamine analogs?
2. What is the role of the hydroxyl groups in the given structures in relation to
solubility in water?
3. Do each of these compounds distribute to all tissues of the body?
4. Focusing only on the aliphatic hydroxyl group in structures 2 and 3, what is its
possible in vitro instability and in vivo metabolism?
5. Compound 3 was identified as the chemical in the capsules. Is your friend in
trouble with the law?
CHAPTER
Phenols
Common name
IUPAC name
Carbolic acid
Phenol
o-Cresol
2-Methylphenol
p-Nitrophenol
4-Nitrophenol
Catechol
1,2-Dihydroxybenzene
Resorcinol
1,3-Dihydroxybenzene
Hydroquinone
1,4-Dihydroxybenzene
CH3
OH
O2N
OH
OH
OH
HO
OH
HO
OH
29
30
Cyclohexanol
161
3.6
Phenol
182
9.3
p-Cresol
202
2.3
m-Chlorophenol
214
2.6
Catechol
246
45.0
CHAPTER 7
31
PHENOLS
K1
Acid (definition): HX
H2O
H3O
K21
OH
+ H2O
K1
H3O
K21
(Dissociation)
(Resonance)
O
R
OH
Dissociation constant
Ka (in water)
pKa
R=H
1.1 X 10210
9.96
R = m -CH3
9.8 X 10211
10.01
R = p -CH3
10211
10.17
R = m -NO2
R = p -NO2
Mineral acids
6.7 X
29
5.0 X 10
6.9 X
10
1028
21
25
Carboxylic acids
10
Alcohols
10217
8.3
7.16
1.0
5.0
17.0
FIGURE 7-2. Dissociation constants and pKas in water for common phenols.
32
ring results in increased acidity. Again, the most pronounced effect occurs with
para substitution. In both cases, the influence of substituents on acidity comes
from the inability or ability of the substituent to stabilize the phenolate form.
Comparison of the acidity of phenols to that of carboxylic acids and mineral acids
demonstrates that phenols are weak acids (Table B-1, Appendix B).
Another significant property of phenols is their chemical reactivity. An important reaction is shown in Figure 7-3. Because phenol is a weak acid, it will not react
with sodium bicarbonate, a weak base, but will react with strong bases such as
sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide to give the respective phenolate salts.
Salt formation is an important reaction since the phenolates formed are ions and
will dissolve in water through the much stronger ion-dipole bonding. As salts, the
simple phenols (phenol, cresol, and chlorophenol) are extremely soluble in water.
Several words of caution are necessary before leaving this topic. Sodium and potassium salts will greatly increase the water solubility of the phenols. Heavy metal salts
of the phenols will actually become less water-soluble because of the inability of the
salt to dissociate in water. Salts of phenols that are capable of dissociation in water
will always increase water solubility, and for most of the phenols of medicinal value,
the salts will give enough solubility so that the drug will dissolve in water at the concentration needed for biologic activity. As the lipophilic portions attached to the
aromatic ring increase, however, the solubility of the phenolate salts will decrease.
You should realize that while salt formation (with a dissociating salt) is an example
of a chemical reaction, it is not a chemical instability. Treatment of the water-soluble
salt with acid will reverse this reaction, regenerating the phenol. For our purposes,
salt formation resulting in precipitation of the organic molecule is a pharmaceutical incompatibility that the student should watch for.
A second significant chemical reaction of phenols involves their facile air oxidation. Phenols are oxidized to quinones, which are highly colored. A clear solution
of phenol allowed to stand in contact with air or light soon develops a yellow coloration owing to the formation of p-quinone or o-quinone (Fig. 7-4). This reaction
occurs more readily with salts of phenols and with polyphenolic compounds.
Phenols and their salts must be protected from oxygen and light by being stored in
closed, amber containers or by the addition of antioxidants.
CHAPTER 7
33
PHENOLS
O
OH
O2 (air)
+
O
OH
OH
OH
Hydroxylation
and/or
CYP450
OH
Conjugation
UGT
COOH
O
OH
HO
OH
OH
Conjugation
SULT
O
O S OH
O
Methylation
SAM
OCH3
34
OH
NH3
HO
OH
Norepinephrine bitartrate
OH
NH3
CH3
OH
CH3O
COO
HC OH
HO CH
COOH
NH3
OH H
H
Cl
N
CH3
CH3
Cl
CH3
CH3O
COO
HC OH
HO CH
COOH
Metaraminol bitartrate
(a vasoconstrictor)
OH
OH H H
N CH3
C
H3C CH3
HO
OH
Terbutaline sulfate
(a bronchodilator)
SO 42
2
CHAPTER 7
35
PHENOLS
H3C O
H
H
HO
HO
Estrone
Equilin
While answering your mothers first question you say to her that these conjugated estrogens will be rapidly excreted. To which your mom then surprises you
with an astute question: Well, if the conjugated estrogens are excreted from the
body how can they be available to me when I take them in the form of a pill?
CHAPTER
ETHERS
n NOMENCLATURE. Another important functional group found in many medicinal
agents is the ether moiety shown in Fig. 8-1. The ethers use a common nomenclature in which the compounds are called ethers, and both substituents are named by
their radical names, such as methyl, ethyl, or phenyl. Thus, Ether USP, a common
name, can also be referred to as diethylether. The official names for the simple ethers
are shown in Fig. 8-1. The inherent problem of naming the alkyl radical again arises
as branching in the alkyl chain occurs. The official nomenclature names the compounds as alkoxy derivatives of alkanes. In the example shown below, the longest continuous alkane chain containing the ether is chosen as the base name, and the alkane
is numbered to give the ether the lowest number. The correct name for the ether is
therefore 2-methoxy (numbered to give the alkoxy the lowest number)-4,4-dimethylpentane (the longest alkane chain). In drug molecules the student should be
able to identify the alkoxy or aryloxy groups and assign the appropriate properties.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. What can one predict about the water solubility of the ether group? It is interesting that the synthesis of ethers is brought about
by combining two alcohols or an alcohol and phenol to give the ether. The precursors
have high boiling points, strongly bond to water to give solubility, and show chemical reactivity under certain conditions. Ethers, by contrast, are low-boiling liquids
with poor water solubility (Fig. 8-2) and chemically are almost inert. This becomes
Structure
IUPAC name
H3C O CH2CH3
Ethylmethylether
Methoxyethane
CH3CH2 O CH2CH3
Ethoxyethane
H3C O
Methylphenylether (Anisole)
Methoxybenzene
O CH3 CH3
CH3 C CH2 C CH3
H
CH3
4 5
2-Methoxy-4,4-dimethylpentane (Correct)
2 1
4-Methoxy-2,2-dimethylpentane (Incorrect)
FIGURE 8-1. Ether nomenclature.
36
CHAPTER 8
37
CH2
H3C
O
CH2
H3C
R
CH3
R
CH3
CH2
O
H
O
H
Ether
Ether
R = C2H5
34.6
8.4
68
0.002
R=
H3C
CH
H3C
understandable when one recalls that the properties of alcohols and phenols depend
primarily upon the OH group. With diethyl ether, resulting from the combination
of two moles of ethanol, the OH groups have been lost. Without the OH group, hydrogen bonds cannot exist, and the only intermolecular bonding is weak van der
Waals attraction and thus a low boiling point. Ether can hydrogen bond to water.
The hydrogen of water will bond to the electron-rich oxygen (see Fig. 8-2). The
lower-membered ethers therefore show partial water solubility, but as the hydrocarbon portion increases, water solubility rapidly decreases. In the area of general
anesthetics, this water solubility for ethers has a significant effect on the onset and
duration of biologic activity. The figures given for boiling points and water solubility
for two ethers shown in Fig. 8-2 demonstrate the weak intermolecular bonding and
how rapidly water solubility decreases as the hydrocarbon portion increases.
Chemically the ethers are relatively nonreactive, stable entities, with one important exception. Liquid ethers in contact with atmospheric oxygen form peroxides (Fig. 8-3). The peroxide formed, although not present in great quantities, can
be quite irritating to the mucous membranes and, if concentrated, may explode.
Hence, care should be taken in handling ethers to minimize the contact with
oxygen. Many times an antioxidant such as copper metal is added to take up any
oxygen that may be present and thus prevent this instability.
CH3CH2 O CH2CH3
Air (O2)
CH3CH2 O CHCH3
OOH
O
CH3CH2 OH
+ CH3CH
38
OH
O CH3
O
H C H
THIOETHERS
Nomenclature
The thioethers are also commonly referred to as the alkyl or arylthio group or alkyl
or aryl mercaptans. The student is expected to identify the thioether portion of a
drug molecule and associate with these groups specific physical-chemical and
metabolic properties. The thioether is mentioned because it is found in a variety of
drug molecules as a diaryl-, dialkyl-, or arylalkyl thioether (Fig. 8-5).
R S R'
Thioether
S
H3C
Cl
N
CH3
CH2CH2CH2 N
CH3
S
HN
Chlorpromazine
CH3
NH
H
N
Cimetidine
CH3-S
N
N
CN
H
N
N
6-Methylthiopurine
Physical-Chemical Properties
The replacement of oxygen with sulfur results in a compound with a significant increase in the boiling point (diethyl thioether, 92) and a decrease in water solubility
CHAPTER 8
39
Metabolism
Thioethers may undergo one of two metabolic reactions depending on the nature
of the thio substituents. Of significance is the unique metabolic oxidation reaction that thioethers may undergo. The oxidation reaction may not be too surprising since sulfur exists in a variety of oxidation states including 2, 4, and 6.
The thioether moiety may undergo a single oxidation to the sulfoxide or may be
oxidized to the sulfone (Fig. 8-6). This reaction is catalyzed by flavin mono-oxygenase (FMO).
In a process similar to that experienced by short-chain alkylethers, short-chain
alkyl thioethers may undergo dealkylation giving rise to a thiol and an aldehyde.
This reaction is catalyzed by cytochrome family of enzymes.
A. Oxidation:
O
O
S
Cl
FMO
N
CH3
CH2CH2CH2 N
CH3
FMO
N
R
Cl
N
CH3
CH2CH2CH2 N
CH3
"Sulfone"
"Sulfoxide"
Chlorpromazine
B. Dealkylation:
CH3-S
N
N
H
N
N
6-Methylthiopurine
H-S
CYP
N
N
H
N
O
H C H
6-Thiopurine
FIGURE 8-6. Metabolism of thioethers.
Thiol Oxidation
While not common in drug molecules, the thiol functional group is very
common in protein structures as it is present in the amino acid cysteine (see
Chapter 15). A thiol functional group is readily oxidized by molecular oxygen to a disulfide dimer. An example of such an instability is seen with the
(continued)
40
Thiol Oxidation
(continued)
CH3
[O]
CH2 S S H2C
N
CO2H
CO2H
CH3
N
CH3
CO2H
Disulfide dimer
Captopril
N CH3
H
CH3O 3
O
OH
OH
CHAPTER 8
41
Methoxyflurane
oil/gas = 970
blood/gas = 12
F F
F
H C C O C H
Cl F
F
Enflurane
oil/gas = 98.5
blood/gas = 1.1
F F
F
F C C O C H
F H
F
Desflurane
oil/gas = 16.7
blood/gas = 0.42
You remember when you studied ethers in the organic functional groups
course that the relative water solubility has a significant effect on the onset and
duration of action of the volatile ether anesthetics. The water solubility of volatile
ether anesthetics is usually expressed as their blood/gas ratio and this ratio directly correlates to the oil/gas ratio that is easier to measure. The higher this ratio
is, the greater the blood/gas ratio of the ether.
CHAPTER
42
CHAPTER 9
43
Structure
Common name
IUPAC name
Formaldehyde
Methanal
Acetaldehyde
Ethanal
Propionaldehyde
Propanal
Structure A
3,3-Dimethylbutanal
Aldehydes:
O
H C H
CH3
O
C H
O
C H
CH3CH2
CH3
O
CH3 C CH2 C H
CH3
3 2
-al = aldehyde
Ketones:
O
CH3 C CH3
CH3CH2
O
C CH3
O
CH3 C
CH3
O CH3
CH3
CH3 C CH2 C C CH2 C CH3
H
H
CH3
2 3
4 5 6
Dimethylketone
(Acetone)
2-Propanone
Ethylmethylketone
2-Butanone
Methylphenylketone
(Acetophenone)
1-Phenylethanone
Structure B
2,5,7,7-Tetramethyl-4octanone
-one = ketone
lesser extent aldehydes may exist in equilibrium with the enol form (Fig. 9-2).
This property and the polar nature of the carbonyl lead to higher boiling points
for aldehydes and ketones compared with nonpolar compounds of comparable
molecular weight. Because of the high electron density on the oxygen atom, aldehydes and ketones can hydrogen bond to water and will dissolve, to some extent,
in water. The hydrogen bonding is similar to that suggested for ethers but
stronger. Keep in mind that as the nonpolar hydrocarbon portion increases, the
O
CH3 C CH3
Keto
HO
H3C
CH2
Enol
44
O
R C R'
(g/100g H2O)
21
CH3
C2H5
n-C3H7
C6H5
R'
(g/100g H2O)
CH3
CH3
56
20
CH3
C2H5
80
26.0
49
16.0
CH3
n-C3H7
102
6.3
76
7.0
C2H5
C2H5
101
5.0
178
0.3
C6H5
CH3
202
<1.0
effect of the polar carbonyl group on overall solubility will decrease. This is
illustrated in Table 9-1, where it is apparent that as the hydrocarbon portion increases beyond two or three carbons, the water solubility decreases rapidly in
both aldehydes and ketones. Some water solubility is still possible, however, with
a total carbon content of five or six carbons.
In considering the chemical reactivity from a pharmaceutical standpoint, the ketone functional group is relatively nonreactive. This is not true of the aldehyde
functional group. Aldehydes are one oxidation state from the stable carboxylic acid
structure, and most are therefore rapidly oxidized. With many liquids, this means
air oxidation, and compounds containing aldehydes therefore must be protected
from atmospheric oxygen. The low-molecular-weight aldehydes can also undergo
polymerization to cyclic trimers, a compound containing three aldehyde units, or
straight-chain polymers (Fig. 9-3). The trimers are stable to oxygen but will allow
regeneration of the aldehyde upon heating. In some cases, this reaction is used advantageously to protect the aldehyde.
A sequence of chemical reactions common to both aldehydes and ketones is
the reaction that occurs between aldehydes or ketones and alcohols (Fig. 9-4). This
O
R C H
Air (O2)
HO
H
O
R C OH
R
OH
R
or
H
H
C O C
R
R
CHAPTER 9
O
R C H
45
R' OH
H / H2O
O R'
R C H
O H
+ R' OH
H / +H2O
Hemiacetal
O
R C R
R' OH
O R'
R C R
O H
Acetal
H / H2O
+ R' OH
Hemiketal
O R'
R C H
O R'
H / +H2O
O R'
R C R
O R'
Ketal
FIGURE 9-4. Formation of acetals and ketals from aldehydes and ketones, respectively.
46
Aldehyde
-Configuration
COOH
O OH
OH
H
HO
CHO
C OH
C H
C OH
C OH
COOH
H
HO
H
H
OH
Hemiacetal
-Configuration
COOH
O H
OH
OH
HO
Alcohol
OH
Hemiacetal
Glucuronic acid
(open chain)
ArOH
RCH2OH
COOH
O O Ar
OH
H
HO
Glucuronide conjugates
(Acetals)
COOH
O H
OH
O CH2R
HO
OH
OH
H3C
NH2
Acetal
O
H2N O
HO
Acetal
NH2
Gentamicin C-2
NH2
O
O
HO
CH3
CH3HN OH
O
R C H
Oxidation
O
R C OH
O
R C H
Reduction
O
R C
Oxidation
R CH2 OH
O
HO C
CHAPTER 9
47
CH2OH
C O
OH
HO
CH2OH
C O
OH
CH3
N
CH3
CH3
CH3
NH2
CH3
NH
CH3
Methadone
Dinormethadone
Compound identified
in PTs urine
48
0.50 mg/g
120.00 mg/g
60.00 mg/g
819.50 mg/g
21
O
OH
HO
HO
11
HO
HO
OH
17
O
O
HO
HO
O
O
O
O
16
3
F
O
Triamcinolone
Triamcinolone acetonide
F
O
Triamcinolone cyclopentonide
CHAPTER
10
Amines
AMINESGENERAL
Two major functional groups still remain to be considered. These two groups,
the carboxylic acids and the amines, are extremely important to medicinal
chemistry and especially to the solubility nature of organic medicinals. In addition, the functional derivatives of these groups will be considered. In many instances the carboxylic acid or amine functional group is added to organic
molecules with the specific purpose of promoting water solubility, since it is
generally found that compounds showing little or no water solubility also are devoid of biologic activity.
n NOMENCLATURE. The common nomenclature for amines is illustrated in
Figure 10-1. Inspection of this nomenclature reveals that the common names
consist of the name of the alkyl or aryl radical, followed by the word amine. The
examples given also show the different types of amines. The primary amine, isopropylamine, has a single substituent attached to the nitrogen; the secondary
amine, ethylmethylamine, has two substituents attached to the nitrogen. The tertiary amine, t-butylethylmethylamine, has three groups attached directly to the
Structure
IUPAC name
H
H3C C NH2
CH3
Isopropylamine
(Primary amine)
2-Aminopropane
Ethylmethylamine
(Secondary amine)
N-Methylaminoethane
t -Butylethylmethylamine
(Tertiary amine)
N-Ethyl-N-methyl-2methyl-2-aminopropane
H
H3C CH2 N CH3
CH3 CH
3
H3C C N
CH3 CH2-CH3
C6H5
CH3
N C CH2 CH2 CH3
H
H3C CH
CH3
N-Phenyl-N-(2-propyl)-2-aminopentane
N = substituent on the Nitrogen
49
50
nitrogen. As with all common nomenclatures, the system becomes nearly impossible to use as the branching of the alkyl groups increases, and the official nomenclature becomes necessary. In the IUPAC system, the amines are considered
substituted alkanes. The longest continuous alkyl chain containing the amine is
identified and serves as the base name. The alkane chain is numbered in such a
manner as to give the lowest possible number to the amine functional group,
while the other substituents on the amine group are designated by use of a capital N before the name of the substituents. Examples are given in Figure 10-1.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The amine functional group is probably one
of the most common functional groups found in medicinal agents, and its value in
the drug is twofold. One role is in solubilizing the drug either as the free base or as
a water-soluble salt of the amine. The second role of the amine is to act as a binding site that holds the drug to a specific site in the body to produce the biologic activity. This latter role is beyond the scope of this book, but the former role
contributes to an important physical property of the amine. First, let us pose a
question: What influence will the amine functional group have on solubility properties? While amines are polar compounds, they may not show high boiling points
or good water solubility. One reason for this is that in the tertiary amine, one does
not find an electropositive group attached to the nitrogen. In the primary and secondary amines, one does have an electropositive hydrogen connected to the nitrogen, but the nitrogen is not as electronegative as oxygen, and the dipole is therefore
weak. What all this means is that the amount of the intermolecular hydrogen bonding is minimal in primary and secondary amines and nonexistent in tertiary amines.
This leads to relatively low-boiling liquids.
In considering water solubility, a different factor must be taken into account.
The amine has an unshared pair of electrons, which leads to high electron density
around the nitrogen. This high electron density promotes water solubility because
hydrogen bonding between the hydrogen of water and the electron-dense nitrogen
occurs. This is similar to the situation with low-molecular-weight ethers but occurs
to a greater extent with basic amines. Both boiling points and the solubility effects
are shown in Table 10-1. Also illustrated in Table 10-1 is the effect on solubility of
increasing the hydrocarbon constituent. Primary amines tend to be more soluble
than secondary amines, which are more soluble than tertiary amines. The amine
can solubilize up to six or seven methylenes, which, from a solubility standpoint,
makes the amines equivalent to an alcohol.
An extremely important property of the amines is their basicity and ability to
form salts. The Brnsted definition of a base is the ability of a compound to accept a proton from an acid. Amines have an unshared pair of electrons, which is
more or less available for sharing. The statement more or less has to do with the
strength of a base, and this is considered in Figure 10-2. The strength of a base is
defined by its relative ability to donate its unshared pair of electrons. The more
readily the electrons are donated, the stronger the base. To define the strength of
a base and to place this value on the same scale with acids, the measure of basicity of an amine is obtained by considering the acidity of the conjugate acid produced by protonating the amine. This protonation gives an ammonium ion and its
CHAPTER 10
51
AMINES
R2
R3
R1
R2
R3
BOILING POINT
C
SOLUBILITY
(g/100g H2O)
CH3
7.5
very soluble
CH3
CH3
7.5
very soluble
CH3
CH3
CH3
3.0
91.0
C2H5
17.0
miscible
C2H5
C2H5
55.0
very soluble
C2H5
C2H5
C2H5
89.0
14.0
C6H5
184.0
3.7
C6H5
CH3
196.0
slightly soluble
C6H5
CH3
CH3
194.0
1.4
Example 1:
+ H2O
+ H2O
Ka
H
R 1 N R1
R1
+ H2 O
Ka
H
R2 N R2
R2
Ka
R
R1
H
R N R
R
+ H3O
R1
+ H3O
R1
Example 2:
R2
N
R2
R2
+ H3O
52
Two factors influence basicity through the effects these factors have on the
availability of the electrons. One of the factors is electronic, while the other is
steric. To consider the former, if electron-donating groups are attached to the
basic nitrogen, electrons are pushed into the nitrogen. Since a negative repels a
negative, the electron pair on the nitrogen will be pushed out from the nitrogen,
thus making the pair more readily available for donating.
If, on the other hand, electron-withdrawing or electron-attracting groups are
attached to the nitrogen, the unshared pair of electrons will be pulled to the nitrogen atom and will be less readily available for donating, and therefore a weaker
base results. An example of the electron donor is the alkyl, and an example of an
electron-withdrawing group is the aryl or phenyl group. Based on this, one would
predict that secondary alkyl amines with two electron-releasing groups attached to
the nitrogen should be more basic than primary alkyl amines with a single alkyl
group attached to the nitrogen. This is normally true. One would also predict that
tertiary alkyl amines with three electron-releasing groups attached to the nitrogen
should be more basic than secondary amines. This would be true if it were not for
steric hindrance, the second factor that affects basicity. If large alkyl groups surround the unshared pair of electrons, then the approach of hydronium ions, a
source of a proton, is hindered. The degree of this hindrance will affect the
strength of basicity. The steric effect becomes important for tertiary amines but
has little if any effect on primary and secondary amines. As shown in Figure 10-3,
with amines, the large alkyl groups move back and forth, blocking the approach of
water. Salt formation therefore does not occur as readily as it would in the absence
H3O
H3O
N
R
H3O
R
H3O
H3O
H3O
of such hindrance. We commonly find that with alkyl amines, secondary amines
are more basic than tertiary amines, and tertiary amines are more basic than primary amines.
Aromatic amines differ significantly from alkyl amines in basicity. The aromatic
ring, with its delocalized cloud of electrons, serves as an electron sink. The aromatic ring thus acts as an electron-withdrawing group, leading to a drop in basicity
by six powers of ten (much lower pKa). The unshared pair of electrons is said to be
resonance stabilized, as shown in Figure 10-4. The spreading of the electron density over a greater area decreases the ability of the molecule to donate the electrons, and basicity is therefore reduced. Additional substitution on the nitrogen of
CHAPTER 10
53
AMINES
H
H
H
N
H
aniline with an alkyl or a second aryl group changes the basicity in a predictable
manner, with the alkyl group increasing basicity and an aryl reducing basicity to a
nearly neutral compound (Table 10-2). Finally, substitution on the aromatic ring
also affects basicity. Substitution meta or para to the amine has a predictable effect
on basicity, while ortho substitution affects basicity in an unpredictable manner
(see Table 10-2). An electron-withdrawing group attached to the aromatic ring in
the meta or para position decreases basicity. The decrease is significant if this group
is para rather than meta. Electron-donating groups in the meta or para position
usually increase basicity above that of aniline (a higher pKa). The increase in basicity is most pronounced if the group is in the para position and not as pronounced
if it is in the meta position. It should be noted that this is the same effect seen with
phenols, but moving in the opposite direction. An electron-donating group attached meta or para to a phenol increases the pKa of a phenol resulting in a less
acidic or more basic phenol. With ortho-substituted anilines, predictability fails because of intramolecular interactions.
Since amines are basic, one would expect that they react with acids to form salts.
This is an important reaction, for if the salts that are formed dissociate in water,
there is a strong likelihood that these salts will be water-soluble (Fig. 10-5). Such is
the case with many organic drugs. If a basic amine is present in the drug, it can be
converted into a salt, which in turn is used to prepare aqueous solutions of the
drug. The most frequently used acids for preparing salts are hydrochloric, sulfuric,
R NH2
H X
R NH3
Water-soluble
Water-insoluble
FIGURE 10-5. The salt formed from an amine and an acid is water-soluble if the salt is
able to dissociate and is water-insoluble if the salt is unable to dissociate.
54
R2
Ka
R1
H 2O
H3O
R3
R1
R2
R3
pKa
CH3
10.62
CH3CH2
10.64
(CH3)3C
10.68
CH3(CH2)2
10.58
CH3
CH3
10.71
CH3CH2
CH3CH2
10.92
CH3(CH2)2
CH3(CH2)2
10.91
CH3
CH3
CH3
CH3CH2
CH3CH2
CH3CH2
C6H5
4.62
C6H5
CH3
4.85
p-O2N C6H4
1.00
m-O2N C6H4
2.51
9.78
10.75
p-Cl C6H4
3.98
m-Cl C6H4
3.52
p-CH3 C6H4
5.08
m-CH3 C6H4
4.69
p-CH3O C6H4
5.34
m-CH3O C6H4
4.23
C6H5
C6H5
0.85
phosphoric, tartaric, succinic, citric, and maleic acids (Fig. 10-6). Hydrochloric acid
is a monobasic acid; it has one proton and therefore reacts with one molecule of
base. The others are dibasic acids (sulfuric, tartaric, succinic, and maleic) and tribasic acids (citric and phosphoric). The aqueous solution of the amine salt will have
a characteristic pH that will vary depending on the acid used. The pH will be acidic
when a strong mineral acid is used to prepare the salt or weakly acidic or neutral if
a weak organic acid is used. Since the amine is converted to a water-soluble salt by
the action of the acid, it is reasonable to assume that the addition of a base to the
salt would result in liberation of the free amine, which in turn may precipitate. This
is a chemical incompatibility that could be quite important when drugs are mixed.
CHAPTER 10
55
AMINES
HCl
H2SO4
Hydrochloric acid
HO CH COOH
HO CH COOH
Tartaric acid
H3PO4
Sulfuric acid
CH2 COOH
CH2 COOH
Phosphoric acid
CH2 COOH
HO C COOH
CH2 COOH
HC COOH
HC COOH
Succinic acid
Maleic acid
Citric acid
COOH
OH
COOH
OH
OH
CH2
COOH
Pamoic acid
Hydroxynaphthoic acid
FIGURE 10-6. Structure of common acids used to prepare salts of basic amines.
Included in Figure 10-6 are two additional commonly used acids, pamoic and hydroxynaphthoic acid. These acids are commonly used in medicinal chemistry to
form amine salts that are water-insoluble (in other words, salts that will not dissociate). This property is used to good advantage in that it prevents a drug from being
absorbed and thus keeps the drug in the intestinal tract.
n METABOLISM. Many metabolic routes are available for handling amines in the
body, some of which are illustrated in Figure 10-7. A common reaction that secondary and tertiary amines undergo is dealkylation. In the dealkylation reaction,
the alkyl group is lost as an aldehyde or ketone and the amine is converted from a
tertiary amine to a secondary amine and finally to a primary amine. This reaction
usually occurs when the amine is substituted with small alkyl groups such as a
methyl, ethyl, or propyl group. An example of a drug metabolized by a dealkylation
CH3
R N
O
H C H
CH3
3 Amine
H
R N
CH3
R N
H
2 Amine
1 Amine
+
N
CH3
CH2 CH2 CH2 N
CH3
Imipramine
O
H C H
O
H C H
N
H
CH2 CH2 CH2 N
CH3
Desimipramine
56
O
R C CH3
R C CH3
N
CH2
HO3POCH2
OH
R CH CH3
NH2
NH2
CH2
HO3POCH2
OH
CH3
CH3
OH
CH CH2 NH2
OH
CH CHO
HO
HO
OH
OH
Norepinephrine
although under some circumstances primary amines may undergo a CYP450catalyzed dealkylation.
Tertiary acyclic and cyclic amines and some secondary acyclic and cyclic amines
can also undergo oxidation reactions catalyzed by CYP450 isoforms and microsomal flavin-containing mono-oxygenase (FMO). N-oxidation of a tertiary amine
leads to an N-oxide as shown in Figure 10-9.
H3C
Cl
N
CH3
Chlorimipramine
CYP2D6
H3C
Cl
N
O
CH3
N-oxide
CHAPTER 10
57
AMINES
A minor metabolic route open to amines is the methylation reaction. An important example of the methylation reaction is the biosynthesis of epinephrine from
norepinephrine catalyzed by a variety of methyltransferases including the enzyme
phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase (PNMT) and requiring the cofactor
S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) (Fig. 10-10). Methylation is considered a phase 2
conjugation reaction in which lipophilicity actually increases.
Methyltransferase
R NH2
R NH CH3
NH2
N
OOC
S
CH3
O
HO
HO
HO
NH2
NH2
HO
HO
OH
OH
Norepinephrine
Epinephrine
OH
SAM
NHCH3
PNMT
Quite important to the metabolism of primary and secondary, and a small number of tertiary, amines are the more common phase 2 conjugation reactions (see
Appendix C). Amines can be conjugated with glucuronic acid to give glucuronides.
The glucuronide of an amine is a mixed acetal functional group. Conjugation of
amines with sulfuric acid gives rise to sulfate conjugates. Both glucuronide and sulfate conjugates exhibit a significant increase in water solubility. Amines, especially
primary aryl amines, may also be acetylated by acetyl CoA to give a compound that
usually shows a decrease in water solubility (Fig. 10-11).
Conjugation
UGT
COOH
O
OH
H
N
HO
OH
NH2
Conjugation
SULT
Acetylation
AcylCoA
O
H
N S OH
O
O
H
N C CH3
58
O CH2CH2CH2 N
CH3
CH3
COO
O
OH
UGT
UDP-glucuronate
HO
CH2
N CH2CH2CH2 O
CH3
OH
Diphenhydramine
(a tertiary amine)
FIGURE 10-12. Glucuronidation of diphenhydramine.
A less common phase 2 glucuronidation has been reported for a small number
of tertiary amines and is illustrated in Figure 10-12. The resulting quaternary
amine has improved water solubility and is quite unstable. As a result these conjugates often are not isolated, but rather the unconjugated parent drug is recovered
in the urine or stools. These conjugated quaternary ammonium salts differ from
those to be discussed in the next section in that they are salts of a mixed acetal
which is the cause for the instability.
SO42
C2H5
C 2 H5
2
TEA sulfate
CHAPTER 10
59
AMINES
HX
R NH2
R NH3
H
R N R
H
R
R N R
H
R
R N R
R
BOH
H
R N R
HX
BOH
R
R N R
HX
BOH
ammonium salts are ionic compounds that, if the salt is capable of dissociation in
water, exhibit significant water solubility. Ion-dipole bonding to water of the quaternary ammonium has the potential of dissolving 20 to 30 carbon atoms. Most of
the quaternary ammonium salts commonly seen in pharmacy are water-soluble.
n METABOLISM. There is no special metabolism of quaternary ammonium salts
that the student need be familiar with.
60
(continued)
O HO
OH
HN
H
N
OH
C CH3
OH
O HO
OCH3
OH
HN
N
H
OH
CH3
OH
NH2
OH
HN
OH
HN
2 Amine B
H
N
N
H
OH
OH
CHAPTER 10
61
AMINES
(continued)
challenges you to defend the course by asking you to explain the importance of
the -amino functional group on ampicillin. He reminds you that benzylpenicillin
decomposes in acid as shown below.
H
N
H2N
H H
S
N
O
CO2H
Ampicillin
-Lactam
H
N
H H
N
O
H
N
H H
S
N
O
CO2H
H3O
H
N
R
O
pH 2
H H
S
N
CO2H
CO2H
N
H
H H H
N
S
O O
HN
CO2H
Penilloic acid
RCO
N
H
H
O
Penilloaldehyde
HN
OH
O
CO2H
Penicilloic acid
HS
H2N
H
NH H
CO2H
D-Penicillamine
HN
O
CO2H
CHAPTER
Carboxylic Acids
11
Common name
IUPAC name
O
H C OH
Formic acid
Methanoic acid
Acetic acid
(Vinegar)
Ethanoic acid
Propionic acid
Propanoic acid
Caproic acid
Hexanoic acid
O
CH3 C OH
CH3 CH2
O
C OH
5 4 3
H O
C C OH
CH3
O
C OH
2,4-Dimethyl-4-phenylpentanoic acid
2 1
62
CHAPTER 11
63
CARBOXYLIC ACIDS
intermediate in the biosynthesis of cholesterol, which itself serves as the precursor to most of the steroid hormones in the human body.
H 3C
OH
Squalene
OH
HO
Steroids
(Cholesterol)
Mevalonic acid
(3,5-Dihydroxy-3methylpentanoic acid)
Important in human nutrition are the natural occurring carboxylic acids commonly referred to as fatty acids. The fatty acid terminology relates to the physicochemical property of being quite fat soluble. Included within this group are lauric,
myristic, palmitic, and stearic acid (Table 11-1). It should be noted that these acids
all have an even number of carbons which relate to their common biosynthetic
pathway in which two carbon acetate units are linked together to form the natural
occurring fatty acids. In addition, the above acids are all saturated fatty acids indicating no multiple bonds are present and that all the carbons, with the exception
of the carboxylic acid group, are fully saturated with hydrogen. Palmitic and stearic
acids are the most abundant of the saturated fatty acids.
A second group of fatty acids are the monounsaturated fatty acids. The most common members of this class of agents are palmitoleic acid and oleic acid. A common
feature of the monounsaturated fatty acids is that the double bond is usually found at
the nine position (9) and is cis in stereochemistry (Z-configuration). Natural
Table 11-1. BOILING POINTS (BP)/MELTING POINTS (MP) AND
WATER SOLUBILITY OF COMMON ORGANIC ACIDS
O
CARBOXYLIC
R C OH
ACID
Formic
bp/mp C
SOLUBILITY
(g/100g H2O) (g/100g EtOH)
100.5
CH3
118.0
CH3CH2
141.0
Butyric
CH3(CH2)2
164.0
Pentanoic
CH3(CH2)3
187.0
3.7
Soluble
Hexanoic
CH3(CH2)4
205.0
1.0
Soluble
Acetic
Propionic
C6H5
250.0
0.34
Soluble
Decanoic
CH3(CH2)8
31.4
0.015
Soluble
Lauric
CH3(CH2)10
44.0
Insoluble
100.0
Myristic
CH3(CH2)12
58.5
Insoluble
Soluble
Palmitic
CH3(CH2)14
6364
Insoluble
Sparingly
Stearic
CH3(CH2)16
6970
Insoluble
Benzoic
5.0
64
occurring fatty acids have a cis stereochemistry while the presence of a trans
double bond (E-configuration) arises during food processing and is unnatural.
H
H3C
(CH2)5
(CH2)7
COOH
H3C
(CH2)7
Palmitoleic acid
(CH2)7 COOH
Oleic acid
-6
H
H3C (CH2)4
CO2H
COOH
(CH2)7
CH2
-6
Linoleic acid
Arachidonic acid
A third group of fatty acids are the polyunsaturated fatty acids. By definition,
polyunsaturated suggests two or more double bonds. The most common polyunsaturated fatty acids are linolenic, linoleic, and arachidonic acid which are also
known as the omega fatty acids (the first is -3 and the latter two are -6). The
omega nomenclature indicates that a double bond is found either three carbons
from the terminal methyl group or six carbons from the terminal methyl group, respectively. Linoleic and linolenic acid are commonly referred to as the essential
-3
H
H
CH3CH2
CH2
CO2H
(CH2)7
CH2
COOH
Linolenic acid
H
HH
CH2
-3
Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)
H H
CH2
CH2
H H
CH2
CH2
H
(CH2)2
COOH
-3
Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)
fatty acids in that they are essential for the synthesis of cell membranes as well as
other functions in the body. Arachidonic acid is a key intermediate in the biosynthesis of the prostaglandin, prostacyclin, and thromboxane hormones (Fig. 11-2).
Most recently, several dietary fish oils have been identified as having significant effects in reducing coronary artery disease. Examples of important fish oils are EPA
(a precursor to prostaglandin-3) and DHA.
CHAPTER 11
65
CARBOXYLIC ACIDS
Arachidonic acid
CO2H
O
CO2H
HO
CO2H
OH
OH
HO
PGE2 (Prostaglandin)
OH
TxA2 (Thromboxane)
PGI2 (Prostacyclin)
H O
O H
C R
O
H O
H
O
R C
O H
O H
H
H O
H
Water solubility
66
H
O
O
CH2
H3C
CH2
H3C
C
CH2
CH2
CH3
H-bonding
O
H
O
It is not surprising, then, that the solubility of the carboxylic acids is much greater
in ethanol than it is in water. Although pure ethanol cannot be used internally,
ethanol-water combinations can, and they greatly increase the solution potential of
many drugs.
Turning now to an extremely important property of the carboxylic acids, their
acidic property, one sees the familiar dissociation of a carboxylic acid (giving up a proton) shown in Table 11-2. This dissociation, by definition, makes the group an acid.
From general chemistry it will be recalled that the strength of an acid depends on
the concentration of protons in solution, which depends on dissociation. The value of
K1 and K1 in turn depends on the stability of the carboxylate anion in relation to the
undissociated carboxylic acid. In other words, if we are considering two acids, acid 1
(in which the carboxylate anion is unstable) and acid 2 (in which the carboxylate
anion is stable), acid 2, with the more stable carboxylate, will dissociate to a greater
extent, giving up a higher concentration of protons, and therefore is a stronger acid.
It has been found that the nature of the R-group does influence the stability of the
carboxylate anion, and it does so in the following manner: if R is an electron donor
group, as shown in Table 11-2, it will destabilize the carboxylate anion and thus decrease the acidity (this is represented by the dissociation arrows). To understand how
this comes about, one must look at the carboxylate anion. This anion is stabilized by
resonance, with the negative charge not remaining fixed on the oxygen but instead
being spread across the oxygen-carbon-oxygen. Now, if electrons are pushed toward
a region already high in electron density, repulsion occurs. This is an unfavorable situation. In the nonionic carboxylic acid form, resonance stabilization is not occurring
to the same extent and the problem is reduced. Therefore, in Example 1, the nonionic form is more stable than the ionic form. In Example 2, the opposite effect is
considered: electron withdrawal by the R-group. Reducing electron density around
the carbonyl carbon should increase the ease of resonance stabilization, in turn increasing the stability of the carboxylate anion. Considering Example 2 in relationship
to Example 1, one would predict that acid 2 would be more acidic than acid 1. Table
11-2 has examples of compounds that fit this description. The methyl group is an
electron donor that reduces the acidity with respect to that of formic acid, while the
phenyl can be considered an electron sink or, with respect to alkyl acids, an electronwithdrawing group; therefore, benzoic acid is a stronger acid than acetic acid. The
addition of halogens to an alkyl changes the nature of the alkyl. In chloroacetic acid,
the chloride, being electronegative, pulls electrons away from the carbon, which in
turn pulls electrons away from the carbonyl. This effect is quite strong, as is seen in
CHAPTER 11
67
CARBOXYLIC ACIDS
+ H 2O
H 3O
O
R C O
C
O
O
C OH
+ H 2O
H 3O
+R
O
C O
Example 2: R
O
C OH
+ H 2O
H 3O
+R
O
C O
Example 1:
O
R C OH
Ka (in water)
pKa
17.7 10 5
3.75
1.75 10
4.76
Cl CH2
1.36 10
2.87
Cl2CH
Cl3C
5.53 10 2
1.26
0.64
H
CH3
2.32 10
C6H5
6.30 10
4.21
p-CH3-C6H4
4.20 10 5
4.38
m-CH3-C6H4
5.40 10 5
4.27
P-NO2-C6H4
3.60 10 4
3.44
m-NO2-C6H4
3.20 10 4
3.50
the Ka. This electron-withdrawing effect continues to increase as the number of halogens increases to give a strong carboxylic acid, trichloroacetic acid.
As discussed earlier for phenols and aromatic amines, substitution on the aromatic ring of benzoic acid will influence acidity. Ortho substitution is not always predictable, but in most cases the acidity of the acid is increased by ortho substitution.
Meta and para substitutions are predictable. Substitution on the benzene ring with
an electron-releasing group decreases acidity. If this substituent is para, the decrease in acidity with respect to benzoic acid will be greater than if the substituent
is meta. If the substituent is an electron-withdrawing group, the acidity of the acid
will increase. The greatest increase is observed when the substituent is para. One
should recall that this is the same trend seen for substituted phenols.
Another property of carboxylic acids is their reactivity toward base. Carboxylic
acids will react with a base to give a salt, as shown in Table 11-3. If one is considering water solubility, the interaction of a salt with water through dipole-ion bonding is much stronger than dipole-dipole interaction of the acid. Therefore, a
68
Acid
O
R C O M
MOH
Base
+ H2O
Salt
H
O
H
O
R C O
H
O
R C O M
R = C6H5
O
H
O
H
SOLUBILITY
(g/100g H2O)
55.5
CH3
125.0
CH3 CH2
100.0
CH3 (CH2)16
10.0
considerable increase in water solubility should and does occur. The same point
must be made here as was made with phenol and amine salts: the salt must be able
to dissociate in order to dissolve in water. Salts formed from carboxylic acids and
sodium, potassium, or ammonium hydroxide show a great increase in water solubility. Salts formed with heavy metals tend to be relatively insoluble. Examples of
such insoluble salts are the heavy metal salts (e.g., calcium, magnesium, zinc, aluminium) of carboxylic acids. When salts of carboxylic acids dissolve in water, a characteristic alkaline pH is common. With sodium and potassium salts, the pH is
generally quite high. As with other salts, if acid is now added to this solution, one
can reverse the carboxylic acid-base reaction and regenerate the carboxylic acid.
The free acid is less soluble than was the salt, and precipitation may result. This is
an important chemical incompatibility that one should keep in mind when dealing
with water-soluble carboxylate salts. In summary, amines and carboxylic acids are
common functional groups found in drugs. These groups have a potentiating effect
on solubility, and both groups can form salts that, if capable of dissociation, will
greatly increase water solubility.
n METABOLISM. The metabolism of the carboxylic acids is relatively simple.
Carboxylic acids can undergo a variety of conjugation reactions (phase 2 metabolism; see Appendix C). They can conjugate with UDPGA (the activated form of
CHAPTER 11
69
CARBOXYLIC ACIDS
glucuronic acid) in the presence of UGT to form glucuronides and also with amino
acids (Fig. 11-5). Activation of the fatty acid by acetyl CoA followed by transacetylation with glycine or glutamine leads to the amino acid conjugates.
COOH
O
OH
UDPGA
UGT
O
O C R
HO
OH
O
R C OH
O
R C S CoA
ATP/CoA
Acyl synthetase
Glycine
O
H
R C N CH2
COOH
Transacetylase Glutamine
O
COOH
O
H
R C N CH (CH2)2 C NH2
O
CH2 CH2 C OH
H
O
R C CH2 C S-CoA
OH
O
O
R C OH + CH3 C SCoA
O
O
(CH2)6 COOH
OH
+ CH3 C OH
(CH2)4CH3
(CH2)4CH3
HO
(CH2)4 COOH
HO
OH
70
H
N C
CH2 N
Cl
1
HO CH2 CH2 O CH2 CH2 N
HO
O
C CH2 O CH2 CH2 N
H
N C
2
Cl
H
N C
Cl
CHAPTER 11
71
CARBOXYLIC ACIDS
Sulfhydryl
Penicillamine
ACE
X
C
R1
NH
O
R2
O
O
H3N
Arginine-ACE
72
(continued)
You have enalapril, captopril, and lisinopril ACE inhibitors to choose from,
which would you recommend? Are you concerned about the oral bioavailability
of your choice?
O
OCH2CH3
O
NH
N
CH3
HS CH2
O
N
CH3
CO2H
Enalapril
CO2H
Captopril
O
OH
O
NH
(CH2)4
CO2H
NH2
Lisinopril
Before you answer you also recall that enalapril is a prodrug that requires hydrolysis of its ethyl ester in order to produce the active dicarboxylic acid metabolite, enalaprilat. Hydrolysis in vivo of the prodrug ACE inhibitors has been shown
to be catalyzed in the liver by carboxylesterases instead of the more ubiquitous esterase found in the plasma (pseudocholinesterase).
O
OCH2CH3
O
NH
N
CH3
Enalapril
OH
O
Carboxylesterase
Liver
CO2H
NH
CH3
Enalaprilat
N
CO2H
CHAPTER
Functional Derivatives
of Carboxylic Acids
12
In presenting the carboxylic acids, it is important to also consider several derivatives of carboxylic acids. The first to be discussed will be the esters.
ESTERS
NOMENCLATURE. The nomenclature of esters consists of combining alcohol
and carboxylic acid nomenclature, either common or IUPAC nomenclature, but
not a mix of both. The name of the alcohol radical comes first, followed by a space,
and then the name of the acid. To show that it is a functional derivative of an acid,
the ic ending of the acid is dropped and replaced by ate. Examples are shown
in Figure 12-1. If you do not remember alcohol and acid nomenclature, you should
return to the appropriate sections and review this material.
A unique type of ester results from the intramolecular cyclization of an alcohol
and a carboxylic acid. The resulting ester is known as a lactone (Fig. 12-2).
Lactones are quite common in drug molecules and may exist with a five- (spironolactone) or six- (testolactone) membered ring up to and exceeding 14-unit rings
(macrolide antibiotics such as erythromycin). The physical-chemical and metabolic
properties of a lactone are the same as those of an ester.
PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The physical properties of the esters are
rather interesting and show a similarity to the ethers. In the formation of esters, a
polar alcohol is combined with a polar acid to give a much less polar, low-boiling
liquid. In the case of ethers, two alcohols are joined with the same decrease in polarity and boiling points. As with ethers, in the ester, the two hydroxyl groups necessary for intermolecular hydrogen bonding are destroyed, and along with this goes
the loss of the intermolecular hydrogen bonding and a decrease in water solubility.
Proof of this effect can be seen in Table 12-1. The boiling point of acetic acid is
O
CH3
CH3 CH2 C O CH
CH3
O
CH3
CH3 C O C CH3
CH3
t-Butyl acetate
IUPAC
2-Methyl-2-propyl ethanoate
: 2-Propyl propanoate
73
74
O
C OH
(CH2)X
O
C
O
(CH2)X
CH2
CH2-OH
Lactone
Me
O
O
O
O
CH3
Me
C2H5
HO
Me
HO
OH
Me
Sugar
O
Me
O Sugar
Me
O
Spironolactone
Testolactone
Erythromycin
118, which itself is above that of many of the acetate esters. The water solubility
of acids and alcohols involve hydrogen bonding from both the OH groups of the
acid and alcohol as well as the OH group of water. With esters hydrogen bonding
occurs between the hydrogen of water and the electron-dense oxygen of the ester
carbonyl. Less potential for hydrogen bonding between the ester and water translates into less water solubility (Table 12-1). While esters are not highly water soluble, they are quite soluble in alcohol.
SOLUBILITY
(g/100g H2O)
R'
CH3
CH3
57.5
CH3
CH3CH2
77.0
10.00
CH3CH2
CH3
79.7
6.25
CH3
CH3CH2CH2
102.0
1.60
CH3
CH3CH2CH2CH2
126.0
0.83
CH3(CH2)2
CH3
102.0
1.67
C6H5
CH3
198.0
Insoluble
BOILING POINT C
CHAPTER 12
75
An important chemical property that most esters display is the ease of hydrolysis back to the alcohol and the carboxylic acid. Esters are especially prone to
base-catalyzed hydrolysis but also hydrolyze in the presence of acid and water
(Fig. 12-3). What this means to medicinal chemistry is that esters are unstable in
the presence of basic media in vitro and must therefore be protected from strongly
alkaline conditions.
O
R C O R'
H
O
R C O R'
+ H3O
O
R C O R' +
H
O
R C O R'
H
O
R C OH
R C O R'
OH
+ HO R'
O
R C O R'
Esterase
O
R C OH
O
C2H5
C O CH2 CH2 N
C2H5
HO R'
O
C OH
Esterase
H2N
H 2N
HO CH2
CH2
+
N
H5C2
C2H5
76
AMIDES
NOMENCLATURE. A second important functional derivative of the carboxylic
acid is the amide. An example of the common and official nomenclature is shown
in Figure 12-5. In the case of the common nomenclature, the common name of the
amine followed by the common name of the acid is used. The ending ic of the
acid is then dropped and replaced by amide. The same approach is used for official nomenclature except that the official name of the amine and the official name
of the acid are used. The oic ending is dropped and replaced by amide.
CH3
O
CH CH3
C N
CH3
O
C N
CH3
Common: N-Methyl-N-isopropylvaleramide
N-Methyl-N-phenylbenzamide
IUPAC
N-Methyl-N-phenylbenzamide
: N-Methyl-N-2-propylpentanamide
O
C
(CH2)X
(CH2)X
NH
CH2
CH2-NH2
Lactam
O
H
R C N
Penicillin
S
N
N
O
O
H
R C N
O
COOH
R'
COOH
Cephalosporin
CHAPTER 12
77
R1
R2
R3
BOILING POINT C
SOLUBILITY
(g/100g H2O)
210
Soluble
CH3
180
Soluble
CH3
CH3
153
Soluble
CH3
222
200.00
CH3
CH3
210
Soluble
CH3
CH3
CH3
163
Soluble
C6H5
288
1.35
C6H5
271
2.86
CH3
C6H5
304
0.53
78
O
H
R C N
H
H
C N
H
O
H
R C N
H
C
N
C
O
O
N C R
A chemical property that differentiates amides from esters is the greater stability of the amide. Amides are relatively stable to the acid, base, and enzymatic
conditions encountered in pharmacy. The reason for this stability again can be related to the resonance forms of the amide with its overlapping clouds of electrons.
The importance of the increase in stability of the amide over the ester has been
used to advantage in preparing drugs with prolonged activity. Although amides are
relatively stable to acid, base, and enzymes, metabolic hydrolysis can occur, catalyzed by the amidase enzymes. An example is illustrated in Figure 12-8. The important point to remember is that amides are more stable in vivo than are esters.
O
H
R C N R'
Amidase
O
R C OH
O
C2H5
H
Amidase
C N CH2 CH2 N
C2H5
H2N
H2N R'
O
C OH
+
H2N
H2N CH2
CH2
N
H5C2
C2H5
Although basic amines were used to prepare the amides, amides are nearly
neutral functional groups, and therefore acid salts cannot be formed. Returning
to the definition of a base, an unshared pair of electrons is essential for basicity.
The unshared pair of electrons must be available for donation, a situation that
does not exist in amides. In the amide, the pair of electrons no longer remain on
CHAPTER 12
79
the nitrogen but are spread over the nitrogen, the carbon, and the oxygen. This
resonance of the electrons reduces their availability and thus the amide exhibit
a neutral pH.
Carbonic acid
O
R O C O R'
Carbonate
O
R'
R O C N
R"
Carbamate
R1
R2
O
R3
N C N
R4
Urea
(Urea: R1 = R2 = R3 = R4 = H)
NOMENCLATURE. Carbonate nomenclature may be common or official. In either case, the two alcohol portions are named and combined with the word carbonate (carbonates are ester derivatives of carbonic acid). An example of
carbonate nomenclature is shown in Figure 12-9.
Carbamates are ester-amide derivatives of carbonic acid and, like carbonates,
require the naming of the alcohol and the amine, using either common names or
IUPAC nomenclature, followed by the word carbamate (Fig. 12-10).
The ureas, the diamide derivatives of carbonic acid, are illustrated in Figure 12-11.
In this case, it may be necessary, as we see in the example, to differentiate between
the two nitrogens. This is done by using N for the one nitrogen and N for the other
nitrogen. In the preceding cases, the structures should be obvious by the use of the
terms carbonate, carbamate, and urea in the nomenclature.
H3C
O
CH3
CH2 O C O CH
CH3
O
CH3
O C O C CH3
CH3
80
H3C
CH2
H3C CH3
O
C
CH3
O C N
CH3
H3C
C2H5
O
CH3
N C N
C2H5
C2H5
C2H5
N,N'-Diethyl-N,N'-dimethyl urea
O
CH3
N C N
CH3
N,N-Diethyl-N',N'-dimethyl urea
Carbonate
O
H
R O C N R'
Carbamate
H /H2O
H O R'
+ R O C O H
or OH /H2O
R O H
+ CO2
Unstable
H /H2O
R O H
+ H O C N R'
or OH /H2O
H
H N R' + CO2
Unstable
CHAPTER 12
81
drolyzed to give the monosubstituted carbonic acid. This acid is unstable and decomposes with loss of CO2, as shown in Figure 12-13. Carbonates are hydrolyzed
with formation of carbon dioxide and alcohol, and carbamates decompose to carbon dioxide, an alcohol, and an amine. The ureas are relatively stable chemicals and
are not commonly metabolized by hydrolysis.
O
R O C O R'
Esterase
O
H O R'
+ R O C O H
Carbonate
R O H
+ CO2
H
H N R'
+ CO2
Unstable
O
H
R O C N R'
Esterase
R O H
+ H O C N R'
Carbamate
Unstable
NH
R C NH2
N
H2N C NH2
Amidine
Guanidine
CH3
H
N
N
N
Cl
H
N
H2N C N
H
NH2
COOH
H
N
N
NH
Cl
HO
Phentolamine
Arginine
Clonidine
82
Imine nitrogen
H N
HN
R C
pKa ~ 910
N
R
NH2
Amidine
Imine nitrogen
H N
HN
H2N
H N
H N
H
N
H2N
NH2
NH2
pKa ~ 13
Guanidine
Figure 12-14. The strength of this basicity is actually quite high. Amidines may
have a pKa of 9 to 10, while guanidines may have a pKa as high as 13. The remaining nitrogen or nitrogens in the respective molecules remain neutral since,
as indicated in Figure 12-14, the electron pair is shared by the nitrogen, the adjacent carbon, and to some extent the basic nitrogen.
NH NH
N
H
H2N
N(CH3)2
NH
H2N
N
H
NH
HCl
N(CH3)2
CHAPTER 12
83
(continued)
CH3
CH3
H3C
H3C
H3C
HN
OH
H3C
CH3
OH
H3C
CH3
O
CH3
CH3
H3C
OH
CH3
CH3
O
OH
Epothilone B
Ixabepilone (Ixempra)
N
CH3
CH3
N
CH3
O
O
Rivastigmine
CH3
H3C
N
CH3
H
N
CH3
Psychastigmine
84
(continued)
currently approved Alzheimer treatment. You know the other members of P&T
committee expect you to discuss the chemical basis of your evaluation using the
chemical structure and mechanism of action.
You immediately recognize that both rivastigmine and the new psychastigmine
are carbamate derivatives of carboxylic acids. They are related to an older naturally
occurring carbamate AChE inhibitor, physostigmine. Physostigmine is an alkaloid
isolated from the seeds of the Calabar bean (Physostigma venenosum) and is used
mainly to treat glaucoma because its use to treat AD is limited due to its severe
side effects and narrow therapeutic window. In addition you recognize the amine
moiety of pyschastigmines carbamate is a phenylethylamine that is the pharmacophore for drugs with adrenergic activity such as amphetamine.
You recall that carbamates inhibit AChE by transferring their carbamoyl group
to a serine residue in the active site of AChE. The covalently bound carbamate is
slowly hydrolyzed to reconstitute the active enzyme. During this process, a carbamic acid is released that in turn dissociates into carbon dioxide and an amine.
CO2
O
N((R)2
H O
OH
HN((R)2
Dissociation
N((R)2
O
O
N(R)2
O
N
H
AChE-serine
N
H
Carbamylated-serine
Slow
O
N
H
Reactivated-AChE
CHAPTER
13
SULFONIC ACIDS
n NOMENCLATURE. A single nomenclature is used for sulfonic acids. This nomenclature is illustrated for several of the most common sulfonic acids (Fig. 13-1).
Pharmaceutically, the most commonly encountered sulfonic acid is methane sulfonic acid that is used to prepare water-soluble salts of basic amines. Methane sulfonates are commonly referred to as mesylates.
O
S OH
O
O
H3C S OH
O
H 3C
O
S OH
O
O
H 3C S O
O
Mesylate
FIGURE 13-1. Examples of nomenclature of sulfonic acids.
85
86
R = H3C
SOLUBILITY
(g/100g H2O)
20.0
Soluble
H3C
pKa in H2O
1.2
0.7
67.0
Soluble
SULFONAMIDES
With this brief background, one now turns to the very important derivative of
sulfonic acids, the sulfonamides. This group of compounds is important in
medicinal chemistry, since a wide variety of drugs have the benzene sulfonamide
nucleus.
n NOMENCLATURE. The nomenclature for aryl sulfonamides is fairly straightforward. The name of the substituted benzene followed by the suffix sulfonamide is
commonly used, although a few important common names will also have to be memorized, such as sulfanilamide (Fig. 13-2).
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The aryl sulfonamides tend to be solids with
high melting points and poor water solubility. Similar to carboxylic acid amides, aryl
sulfonamides are chemically quite stable. Benzene sulfonamides are stable to acid,
base, and enzymatic hydrolysis.
Unlike the carboxylic acid amides, which are considered neutral compounds,
the aryl sulfonamides are weak acids. The acidic nature results from the ability
of the SO2 moiety to stabilize the nitrogen anion through resonance (Fig. 13-3).
In the presence of a strong base, such as sodium or potassium hydroxide, aryl
sulfonamides will react to form a salt (Fig. 13-4). The sodium or potassium salt
of a sulfonamide will readily dissociate in water, leading to highly water-soluble
products, the result of ion-dipole bonding. The pH of the aqueous media following dissolution of a sodium or potassium salt of a sulfonamide tends to be
quite alkaline. The water-soluble salts of aryl sulfonamides are incompatible with
acidic media since an acid-base reaction can occur, usually leading to precipitation of the aryl sulfonamide.
CHAPTER 13
87
O
S NH2
O
Common name
IUPAC name
H-
Benzene sulfonamide
Benzene sulfonamide
H3C
p-Toluene sulfonamide
4-Methylbenzene sulfonamide
H2N
p-Aminobenzene sulfonamide
Sulfanilamide
4-Aminobenzene sulfonamide
H
N
Cl
H2N S
O O
Cl
NH
O
O
H
H
S N C N (CH2)2CH3
O
O
Hydrochlorothiazide
H3C
O
CH3
H
S N
N
O
O
H2N
Chlorpropamide
Sulfisoxazole
O
Aryl S NH2
O
H2O
H3O
O
Aryl S
O
O
Aryl S
O
N
H
N
H
O
H
S N
R
O
NaOH
O
S N
R
O
Na
Water-soluble
FIGURE 13-4. Salt formation of benzene sulfonamide.
88
(continued)
A newly hired tech has approached you to report a problem hes having in synthesizing the sodium salt of one of the companys products. He had no trouble
with the other two compounds he was working on, but he just cant get the third
to generate the water-soluble salt he anticipated. He shows you the structure of
the three drugs on his bench.
1. Which of the three sulfonamides was giving this new technician such a difficult
time, and why?
2. Would you advise this technician to try to make the hydrochloride salt (e.g.,
by reacting the recalcitrant structure with HCl rather than NaOH)? Why or
why not?
OH
CH3
N
H
O
H3C S N
H
O
O
H3C
CH3
ClCH2
O
S
SO2
N
H
Cl
NH2
3
S
CH3
SO2 N
CH3
N
N
CH3
H2N
S
O
H
N
O N
Sulfadiazine
N
NH2
Cl
Pyrimethamine
(case study continues on page 89)
CHAPTER 13
89
(continued)
Glucuronide
Conjugation
N4
COOH
O
OH
H
N
OH
H
N
HO
S
O N
H
N
H2N
S
O
H
N
O N
Sulfate
Conjugation
O
H
HO S N
O
S
O
O N
Sulfadiazine
Acetylation
O
H
H 3C C N
S
O
H
N
O N
CHAPTER
14
Nitrogen Functional
Groups
NITRO GROUPS
A common functional group found in many drug molecules is the organic bound
nitro group. In most cases the nitro is present as an aromatic bound nitro such as
those shown in Figure 14-1. While official nomenclature for drug molecules containing the nitro may be quite complicated, one should recognize the presence of
a nitro group since this group is named as nitro in the official nomenclature.
Although the nitro group is a neutral functional group, the resonance structures of
this group exhibit charged species, as shown, and account for the strong electron
withdrawing properties of the group.
Metabolism of aryl nitro groups is that of reduction to the arylamine (see Fig.
14-2). The reduction intermediates, one of which is the hydroxylamine, have been
implicated as possible carcinogens.
NITRATE GROUP
Among the cardiac agents one finds a group of drugs known as the organic nitrates.
One of the better known drugs in this class is nitroglycerin (Fig. 14-3), which is
O
N
Nitro
O
H
N
N
O2 N
CH3
N
CH2CH2OH
Metronidazole
(2-Methyl-5-nitroimidazole1-ethanol)
O2N
Nitrazapam
(1,3-Dihydro-7-nitro-5-phenyl2H-1,4-benzodiazepine-2-one)
90
CHAPTER 14
N
O2N
91
CH3
N
CH2CH2OH
CH3
HN
N
OH CH2CH2OH
H2N
CH3
N
CH2CH2OH
Metronidazole
FIGURE 14-2. Metabolism of the arylnitro group.
actually an ester of nitric acid plus the triol glycerin. The nitrate ester structure accounts for a potential instability in that simple hydrolysis can lead to formation of
nitric acid and the free alcohol. This reaction can also occur in vivo and represents
a potential metabolic fate.
CH 2 -O-NO 2
O2NO
H
O
HC O-NO 2
CH 2-O-NO2
Nitroglycerin
(Glyceryl trinitrate)
Isosorbide Dinitrate
O
H ONO
2
Isosorbide Dinitrate
HO
H
O
H2O or
Enzyme
+ HNO3
O
H ONO
2
NITRITE GROUP
Although not common, the nitrite functional group appears in the drug amyl nitrite
and consists of an ester of nitrous acid and amyl alcohol. The nitrates and amyl nitrite
appear to produce their beneficial effects by releasing NO.
ONO
Amyl nitrite
92
OXIMES
The oxime functional group has found significant application in a number of drug
classes, but especially in the cephalosporin class of antibiotics. Formed from the reaction of a ketone or aldehyde with hydroxylamine, two geometrical isomers may
form (Fig. 14-4). Based upon specific priority rules, when the highest priority substituent (R or R) and the OH group are on the same side of the double bond this
is given the Z designation (or syn configuration) and when the highest priority substituent (R or R) and the OH group are on the opposite side of the double bond
this is given the E designation (or anti configuration). The resulting oxime is generally considered neutral.
O
R C R'
Aldehyde or ketone
H2NOH
Hydroxylamine
N
S
H2N
HO
E or Anti
(R and OH)
OH
H
N
OH
N
C R'
N
C R'
Z or Syn
(R and OH)
S
N
Cefdinir
CH CH2
OH
HYDRAZONE/HYDRAZINE/HYDRAZIDE
Similar to the oxime, the reaction of an aldehyde or ketone with hydrazine gives
rise to a hydrazone (Fig. 14-5). The formation of a carbonnitrogen double bond
is referred to as a Schiff base, while this functionality is known as an imine. Schiff
base formation occurs commonly in biochemical systems when a primary amine
reacts with a ketone or aldehyde. The resulting hydrazone is unstable to aqueous
acid and will hydrolyze back to hydrazine and the ketone or aldehyde. Both the
imine nitrogen and the NH2 nitrogen in the hydrazone are basic. As with
oximes, hydrazones can exist as geometric isomers, but there are no drug examples where separation of the isomers has been reported. Reduction of the hydrazone leads to formation of the hydrazine. The hydrazine is stable to acid or base
hydrolysis and has basic properties. Finally, acetylation of one of the nitrogens
gives rise to a hydrazide in which the NH2 nitrogen retains its basic properties
while the NH nitrogen acts like a neutral amide.
CHAPTER 14
93
CH3
HO
CH3
CH3COO
CH3
CH3O
CH3
OH
CH3
HO
O
OH
CH3
NH
CH N N
OH
Rifampin
N CH3
CH3 O
O
R C R'
H2NNH2
Hydrazine
Aldehyde or ketone
Basic nitrogen
HN
R
O
H
N C R"
NH2
N
C R'
Hydrazone
HN
Acetylation
R
C R'
H
Hydrazide
NH2
C R'
H
Substituted
Hydrazine
H
N NH2
HN NH2
Hydralazine
Isoniazid
[H]
N
N
94
(continued)
Your school is currently tied for first place with the team from top seed
Wyknott U., and you are representing your team in the final round of the competition. Wyknott just blew a tough question on nitrogen functional groups, and the
pressure is on. If you answer the question correctly, your school will win the competition, and big scholarship bucks will be awarded to everyone on your team.
Are you ready to be the hero? Then just answer the following question:
H2 antagonists decrease the risk of gastrointestinal ulceration and
heartburn by blocking histamine-induced gastric acid secretion.
Some H2 antagonists contain a diaminoethene group that must be
substituted with a polar, electron withdrawing functional group (R).
If a net positive charge is allowed to form in this molecular area, the
pharmacological activity changes from H2 antagonist (ulcer-preventing) to H2 agonist (ulcer-promoting). Given the above, which of the
following nitrogen-containing functional groups have the properties
needed to retain H2 antagonist activity if used for the R substituent on diaminoethene-based H2 antagonists?
Diaminoethene
H3C
N
CH3
H
N
H2 Antagonist
H
N CH3
1.
NO2
2.
CH N OH
3.
CH N NH2
4.
H
C N NH2
O
CHAPTER 14
95
(continued)
ONO2
O2NO
OH
C
O2NO
ONO2
O2N
Pentaerythritol tetranitrate
HO
Cl
H
N
Cl
O
Chloramphenicol
COOH
H2N
N
N
N
N
H
Cefixime
O
COOH
functional groups. He considers the ability to look at a chemical structure and read
what its functional groups tell you as a key indication of a students ability in the
chemistry laboratory. The professor hands you a piece of chalk and sends you to the
blackboard.
CHAPTER
Heterocycles
15
This chapter introduces the subject of heterocyclic chemistry. Heterocycles are defined as cyclic molecules that contain one or more heteroatoms in a ring. A heteroatom is an atom other than carbon. One need merely glance through an index
of biologically active structures to recognize the array of heterocycles found in synthetic and naturally occurring molecules. A background in heterocyclic chemistry
is therefore highly desirable. The competencies expected of you from this section
of the book consist of:
1. The ability to match a structure of a heterocycle to its common or official
name
2. The ability to list the physical and chemical properties of representative
heterocycles
3. The ability to draw the structure of expected metabolites of common
heterocycles
It would be impossible to introduce all of the possible heterocycles that are of
medicinal value within the limitations of this book. I have selected a limited number of monocyclic, bicyclic, and tricyclic rings and will confine the discussion to the
heteroatoms of oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur. In addition, only three-, four-, five-,
six-, seven-, and eight-membered monocyclic heterocycles will be considered,
along with the five-six, six-six, and six-seven bicyclic heterocycles. Several important tricyclic rings will also be considered. In systematic nomenclature, one will
recognize a consistent form of nomenclature that follows certain rules for naming
the heteroatom and ring size. Tables 15-1 and 15-2 list the rules for heterocyclic
systems. In addition, as will be noted in the nomenclature section for the individual heterocycles, the numbering of heterocycles usually begins with the heteroatom being designated as the 1 position. In heterocycles that contain multiple
heteroatoms, the convention is that in numbering, the oxygen atom has priority
over the sulfur atom, which in turn has priority over the nitrogen atom.
CHAPTER 15
97
HETEROCYCLES
PREFIX
Oxygen
Oxa
Nitrogen
Aza
Sulfur
Thia
SATURATED
PARTLY SATURATED
UNSATURATED
-iridine
-irine
-olidine
-oline
-ole
-ine
(di or tetrahydro)
-ine
(hexahydro)
(di or tetrahydro)
-epine
(octahydro)
-ocine
-irane
-irene
-olane
-olene
-ole
-ane
(di or tetrahydro)
-ine
-epane
(di or tetrahydro)
-epine
-ocane
-ocin
that contain the epoxide functional group, and you will be introduced to additional
epoxide-containing drugs in medicinal chemistry.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Epoxides are ethers, but because of the
three-membered ring, epoxides have unusual properties. The three-membered
ring forces the atoms making up the ring to have an average bond angle of 60, considerably less than the normal tetrahedral bond angle of 109.5. This highly
strained ring therefore readily opens in the presence of either acid or base catalysts, as shown in Figure 15-2. These reactions are important, since drugs that contain an epoxide ring are also quite reactive both in vitro and in vivo. Such drugs will
98
O
60
Oxirane
O
CH3
O
R
O
Vitamin K 2,3-epoxide
Squalene epoxide
HO
N
H
H2O
HO
OH
react with a nucleophile (N:) in the presence of acid or will react with a base that
acts as a nucleophile to give open-chain compounds. When drugs containing epoxides are administered to a patient, the epoxide can be expected to react with
biopolymers (e.g., proteins), leading to destructive effects on the cell. Such drugs
may find use in cancer chemotherapy but are usually found to be quite toxic.
Nitrogen
n NOMENCLATURE. A saturated three-membered ring containing nitrogen is
known as the aziridine ring (Fig. 15-3). This is the only nomenclature used for such
a unit. Although aziridine rings are not common in nature or in many drugs, their
intermediacy is required and accounts for the biologic activity of a specific class of
anticancer drugs known as the nitrogen mustards.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Similar to the properties of the epoxide,
aziridines are highly strained, highly reactive molecules. The anticancer drug
CHAPTER 15
99
HETEROCYCLES
H
N
Aziridine
O
H2N
O
O C NH2
O
N P N
N
OCH3
NH
H3C
O
TEPA
Mitomycin C
mechlorethamine (Fig. 15-4) owes its activity to the formation of a charged intermediate aziridine (aziridinium ion). Because of its high reactivity, aziridine will
react with most nucleophiles (N:), including water. If the nucleophile is part of a
biopolymer, this reaction, known as an alkylation reaction, can result in the death
of the cell. This reaction is either beneficial, where the cell is a cancer cell, or the
mechanism of toxicity, where the cell is a host cell. The drug mechlorethamine has
only a short half-life when dissolved in water because the aziridinium ion, when
formed, reacts with water to give an alcohol that does not possess biologic activity.
Cl
H3C N
H3C N
Cl
Cl
Cl
Mechlorethamine
Nucleophile
H2O
Nucl
OH
N CH3
Cl
H3C N
Cl
100
O
H
R C N
COOH
-Lactam
S
N
N
O
O
H
R C N
NH
R'
COOH
Penicillin
Cephalosporin
O
CH3
CH3
HO
O
NH
CH3
N
CH3
CH3
CH3
HO
S
N
O
NH2
COOH
COOH
Thienamycin
Meropenem
antibiotics as well as a number of derivatives, both synthetic and naturally occurring, of these well-known antibiotics (Fig. 15-5). The nomenclature for this heterocycle is derived from the fact that cyclic amides are known as lactams, and this
particular system results from cyclization of a -aminocarboxylic acid, thus the lactam name. The notable property of the -lactam, its ease of hydrolysis by aqueous acid, aqueous base, and enzymatic conditions, results from the considerable
strain energy found in this molecule. The four-membered ring distorts the normal
bond angles for carbon, but additionally the presence of the sp2 carbonyl carbon
adds to this strain. The hydrolysis of the -lactam (Fig. 15-6) is a significant problem experienced by many of the penicillins, cephalosporins, and other -lactamcontaining antibiotics.
H or OH /H2O
N
O
-Lactamase
(Enzyme)
HN
OH
CHAPTER 15
101
HETEROCYCLES
5
O
1
O
1
Common:
Furan
Tetrahydrofuran (THF)
IUPAC:
Oxole
Oxolane
O
Cl
O
H2N
S
O
COOH
Furosemide
CH3
HN
H
N
O
HO
N
O
Mixed acetal
N3
AZT
FIGURE 15-7. Five-membered oxygen containing heterocycles and examples
of drugs containing these rings.
oxygen as the 1 position and numbering the ring such that any substituents receive
the next lowest number.
A number of furan-containing drugs can be found, while virtually no pure
tetrahydrofuran-containing drugs exist. What appears to be a tetrahydrofuran is
seen in the ribose-containing anticancer and antiviral drugs, but these sugars are
actually mixed acetal structures.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Although furan looks like an ether, it does not
behave like one; its properties are more like those of benzene. Furan is an aromatic
ring. You may recall that aromatic rings are flat molecules that contain 4N 2
electrons, in which N 1, 2, 3, etc. If one considers the electrons or sp2 electrons present in furan, it will be noted that furan contains four electrons in the
two double bonds and two pairs of sp2 electrons on the oxygen. One pair of the
electrons on oxygen is in the same plane with the four electrons of the two double bonds, thus resulting in a cloud of six electrons located above and below the
plane of the ring (Fig. 15-8). Furan therefore has the properties of an aromatic
compound: namely, it is relatively nonreactive under the conditions encountered in
pharmacy. On the other hand, tetrahydrofuran has quite different properties when
compared to furan. Tetrahydrofuran is simply a cyclic ether but unlike its closest
open-chain relative, diethylether, does not show partial water solubility; it is highly
soluble in water. This is due to the strong bonding between the hydrogen of water
and the unshared pairs of electrons on the ether oxygen (Fig. 15-9).
Tetrahydrofuran is easily oxidized in the presence of air to give peroxides and,
like most ethers, also must be protected from atmospheric oxygen.
102
e
e
e
2e
2e
O
H
n METABOLISM. The metabolism of furan and tetrahydrofuran follow the pattern expected for an aromatic compound and an ether, respectively. While tetrahydrofuran is relatively stable in vivo, furan may undergo the expected aromatic
hydroxylation (Fig. 15-10).
OH
O
Nitrogen
n NOMENCLATURE. Two common five-membered ring heterocycles containing
nitrogen are pyrrole and pyrrolidine (Fig. 15-11). Here again, the common name
should be learned; the official name can be neglected since it is seldom used. For
substituted pyrroles or pyrrolidines, the numbering starts with nitrogen and proceeds clockwise or counterclockwise to give any substituent present the next lowest number. The pyrrole and pyrrolidine heterocycles are common features in
many drugs and naturally occurring substances.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Pyrrole, like furan, is an aromatic compound.
It is an aromatic compound that is a weak base and, for our purposes, will be considered neutral. This property can be explained by accounting for all of the nonbonding electrons present in pyrrole (Fig. 15-12). Nitrogens extra pair of electrons,
CHAPTER 15
103
HETEROCYCLES
HO
COO Na
OH
Cl
CH3
N
CH3
O
N
4
NH
O
N
H
1
N
H
1
Atorvastatin
COOH
Common: Pyrrole
Pyrrolidine
NH2
IUPAC:
Azolidine
Azole
N
H
Clemastine
N
CH3
Nicotine
Tryptophan
FIGURE 15-11. Pyrrole and pyrrolidine and examples of drugs containing these
heterocycles.
e
e
e
2e
N
H
which are usually available for sharing and account for the basic properties of amines,
are not available for sharing. This pair of electrons is part of the cloud of electrons.
In the fully reduced heterocycle, pyrrolidine, one is dealing with a secondary
amine with properties equivalent to any other secondary amine. Unlike pyrrole,
with a pKa of the protonated pyrrole of approximately 0.4, pyrrolidine is a strong
base, with a pKa of the ammonium ion of approximately 11. As might be expected,
pyrrolidine, with only four carbon atoms and the availability of an unshared pair of
electrons for hydrogen bonding, is quite water-soluble.
n METABOLISM. The metabolism of pyrrole and pyrrolidine, as well as of pyrrole- and pyrrolidine-containing molecules, follows the pattern expected for an
aromatic compound and a secondary amine, respectively. Aromatic hydroxylation
would be predicted for pyrrole, while pyrrolidine could be expected to undergo
conjugation with glucuronic acid or sulfuric acid. Acetylation, a common reaction
for secondary amines, might also be expected to occur (see Fig. 10-10, page 57).
104
Sulfur
n NOMENCLATURE. As with the previous oxygen and nitrogen heterocycles, two
sulfur-containing heterocycles, thiophene and tetrahydrothiophene, exist. Here
again, the common nomenclature is used in most instances. With substituted
analogs, the numbering of the rings starts with the heteroatom, proceeding either
clockwise or counterclockwise, such that any substituent receives the next lowest
number (Fig. 15-13). While the thiophene nucleus is common in drug molecules,
the tetrahydrothiophene is quite uncommon.
4
3
2
4
5
S
1
S
1
Thiole
O
C N
Thiolane
S
CH2OCH3
N
N
CH3
N
CH3
Sufentanil
Methapyrilene
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The properties of the five-membered sulfurcontaining heterocycles are based upon the proper recognition of the class of compounds to which they belong. Thiophene is an aromatic ring and is therefore
relatively stable, while tetrahydrothiophene is a thioether. Unlike oxygen ethers,
the thioethers are fairly stable compounds and, also unlike the oxygen analogs, the
sulfur-containing compounds are less water-soluble. In general, the substitution of
sulfur for oxygen results in a significant decrease in hydrophilic character and a corresponding increase in lipophilic character.
n METABOLISM. The predicted metabolic pattern for thiophene is aromatic hydroxylation, with hydroxylation occurring at any hydrogen-substituted position.
For reduced thiophenes, tetrahydrothiophene, oxidation of sulfur would be predicted to occur. This was previously discussed for thioethers and is again shown in
Figure 15-14.
CHAPTER 15
105
HETEROCYCLES
Oxidase
S
S
O
Sulfone
Sulfoxide
3
2
Common:
IUPAC:
O
1
O
1
Oxazole
N2
Isoxazole
1,3-Oxazole
1,2-Oxazole
H 3C
NH
N
O
IUPAC:
2-Oxazoline
R'
Oxazolidine
H2 N
O
S N
H
O
CH3
O
Sulfisoxazole
FIGURE 15-15. Oxazole and isoxazole heterocycles and derivatives of these heterocycles.
106
acetal. An explanation of this terminology would appear valuable. As previously discussed (see Chapter 9), an aldehyde or ketone can react with two alcohols under acidic
conditions to form an acetal or ketal, respectively (Fig. 9-4). In a similar manner an
amine and an alcohol, especially if constituents of the same molecule such as in 1,3ethanolamine, can react with an aldehyde or ketone under acidic conditions to form
a mixed acetal, 2-substituted oxazolidine, or a mixed ketal, 2,2-disubstituted oxazolidine (Fig. 15-16). The mixed designation is used to indicate that unlike a typical
acetal or ketal that is composed of two oxygen atoms replacing the aldehyde or ketone
oxygen, one or more heteroatoms have replaced an oxygen in the acetal or ketal.
Sulfur is another heteroatom that can replace oxygen in an acetal or ketal to again give
a mixed acetal or mixed ketal. Additionally, both oxygens can be replaced with heteroatoms (N or S) to give mixed acetal or ketals (see imidazolidine). Consistent with
the chemistry of acetals and ketals is the fact that mixed acetals and mixed ketals are
unstable in aqueous acid as shown in Figure 15-18.
O
R C R'
Aldehyde or
ketone
Ethanolamine
OH
+
OH
Ethyleneglycol
NH
H 3O
OH
Aldehyde or
ketone
O
R C R'
NH2
R'
Heteroatom
Substituted oxazolidine
(mixed acetal or ketal)
O
H 3O
O
R'
R
Substituted 1,3-dioxolidine
(traditional acetal or ketal)
CHAPTER 15
107
HETEROCYCLES
N
e
2e
2e
2e
2e
2e
2e
Basic nitrogen
FIGURE 15-17. Electron structure of oxazole and isoxazole.
NH
NH2
H3O
OH
+ H C H
N
O
NH
Oxidase
O
OH
108
NH
N
H
N
H
Imidazolidine
2-Imidazoline
4
5
Common:
IUPAC:
N
H
1
Imidazole
3
N
H
1
N 2
Pyrazole
1,3-Diazole
1,2-Diazole
CF3
N
O2 N
N
CH3
H3C
OH
SO2NH2
Metronidazole
Celecoxib
FIGURE 15-20. Imidazole and pyrazole heterocycles, reduction products of imidazole,
and derivatives of imidazole and pyrazole.
Basic nitrogen
H
N
N
R
N
H
Basic nitrogen
e
N
e
2e
Basic nitrogen
e
2e
Neutral nitrogen
FIGURE 15-21. The imidazole heterocycle has one basic nitrogen, which, because
of resonance, may be either nitrogen.
CHAPTER 15
109
HETEROCYCLES
NH
NH2
H3O
+ H C H
NH2
N
H
4
N
5
2
S
1
1,3-Thiazole
OCH3
H
N
N
H2N
S
H2N
N
O
O
S
O
N
S
NH2
COOH
Ceftizoxime
Thiazolsulfone
FIGURE 15-23. Structure of 1,3-thiazole and examples of drugs containing this nucleus.
110
4
N N
5
5N
2
S
1
H2N
N 2
1,2,5-Thiadiazole
1,3,4-Thiadiazole
O
S N
H
O
S
1
OH
N N
N
S
Sulfamethizole
H
N
CH3
N
Timolol
FIGURE 15-24. Structure of thiadiazoles and examples of drugs containing this nucleus.
Several triazoles exist, in which the tri indicates three, az signifies nitrogen,
and ole indicates a five-membered ring (Fig. 15-25). If the three nitrogens are
symmetrically arranged (at the 1, 3, and 4 positions), the compound can be identified as s-Triazole (s for symmetrical), while if not symmetrically arranged the
compound is named 1H-1,2,4-triazole. One additional poly nitrogen-containing
heterocycle is tetrazole.
The oxazolidinone and oxazolidinedione nomenclature should be understandable based on the oxazolidine nomenclature explained earlier, with the one signifying a carbonyl and dione representing two carbonyls at the 2 and 4 positions
(Fig. 15-26).
One additional important heterocycle is the hydantoin nucleus. Here the common nomenclature replaces the official nomenclature of imidazolidinedione. A
number of very important classes of drugs possess these heterocyclic nuclei.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The thiadiazoles, triazoles, and tetrazoles
are typical aromatic nuclei that have two (thiadiazole, triazole) or three (tetrazole)
basic nitrogens in the ring. If one accounts for the electrons required for aromaticity, it should be obvious which nitrogens retain the electrons necessary for
basicity, although the triazoles are weak bases (pKa 12). Little additional information is necessary, since none of these compounds has any unique physicalchemical properties that one needs to be concerned with.
The oxazolidin-2-ones are cyclic analogs of a class of compounds discussed previously, namely the carbamates. Like their straight-chain relatives, the oxazolidin2-ones are readily hydrolyzed by acid or basic media (Fig. 15-27).
CHAPTER 15
111
HETEROCYCLES
N
H
1
N
H
1
s-Triazole
N 2
5N
N N
5
1-H-1,2,4-Triazole
N
H
1
3
N
N 2
Tetrazole
N
N
Cl
F
F
OH
OH
N
N
N
HN N
N
N
Fluconazole
Losartan
FIGURE 15-25. Structure of triazoles and tetrazole, and examples of drugs containing
these nuclei.
O
3 HN
4
1
H
N 2 O
O
2
O1
3 HN
4
O
2
O 1
NH 3
O 4
Oxazolidin-2-one Oxazolidin-2,4-dione
Hydantoin
O
N
F
H
N
O
N
O
NH
O
O
NHAc
Linezolid
Phenytoin
112
O
HN
NH2
H3O
CO2
OH
or OH
Imide
HN
NaOH
Na
N
O
O
H
N
H
N
NaOH
NH
O
O
N
Imide
Na
FIGURE 15-28. Salt formation at the imide nitrogen of oxazolidin-2,4-dione and hydantoin.
Two electron-withdrawing groups on either side of the -NH- group withdraw the
unshared pair of electrons on the nitrogen as well as the electron pair remaining
after dissociation of the hydrogen. This allows the hydrogen to be abstracted by a
strong base, forming an alkaline salt that is quite water-soluble.
The final heterocycle, the hydantoin, is a cyclic urea, but in addition it contains
an imide functional group. The presence of the hydrogen on the imide nitrogen
again results in a compound with acidic properties.
CHAPTER 15
113
HETEROCYCLES
N
H
Common:
Pyridine
IUPAC:
Azine
Piperidine
Hexahydroazine
H
N
O
C O-CH2CH3
O
N
N
CH3
N
CH3
Rosiglitazone
Meperidine
namely the basicity of pyridine. Pyridinium ion has a pKa of 5.36, which can be
compared with the nearly neutral pyrroles pKa of 0.398, yet pyridine is much less
basic than alkylamines, which have pKas of approximately 10 for the alkylammonium ions. Pyridine and substituted pyridines have approximately the same basicity as the aromatic ammonium ions such as aniline (pKa of 4.6). Thus, it would be
difficult to predict a difference in basicity between the two nitrogens in the following compound:
CH2
NH2
On the other hand, piperidine is nothing more than a cyclic alkyl amine. It is
quite basic, with a pKa 11.3 for the piperidinium ion. Other than the reactivity
of pyridine and piperidine toward strong acids, one should consider both of these
compounds as relatively stable.
n METABOLISM. Pyridine, since it is an aromatic compound, acts like the typical
aromatic rings and undergoes hydroxylation. Piperidine acts like a typical secondary amine and would be predicted to undergo conjugation with glucuronic acid or
sulfuric acid.
Dealkylation resulting in ring cleavage would not be expected to occur with
piperidine, since dealkylation occurs primarily with amines that are substituted
with smaller alkyl groups such as methyl or ethyl groups.
114
N
N
Common:
Pyridazine
Pyrimidine
Pyrazine
IUPAC:
1,2-Diazine
1,3-Diazine
1,4-Diazine
pHa (protonated
heterocycle)
2.24
1.23
0.65
PyrimidinesI
n NOMENCLATURE. Three pyrimidine derivatives that are important to the
structure of DNA and RNA, as well as to the structure of medicinally active agents,
are shown in Figure 15-31. While official nomenclature can be derived for these
compounds, it is replaced with the common names presented. Thymine may also
be referred to as 5-methyluracil. It is important to recognize the numbering system
of these heterocycles. A clockwise direction is chosen such that the heteroatoms
appear at the 1 and 3 positions and the carbonyls or carbonyl and amine are at the
2 and 4 positions, respectively. If the numbering were counterclockwise, the substituents on the ring would be at the 2 and 6 positions. The pyrimidine nucleus is
especially important in anticancer and antiviral drugs.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The substituted pyrimidines are complex
molecules because of the nature of the substituents. Uracil and thymine may be
considered to contain the neutral urea unit or the acidic imide moiety, as shown
in Figure 15-32, but they can also be considered to exist in either the keto form
or enol form, as shown in Figure 15-33. The enol form would be expected to
have the acidic properties of a diphenolic compound and the basic properties of a
CHAPTER 15
115
HETEROCYCLES
3
H
N
H
5
6
O 2 N
H
1
Uracil
Cytosine
H2N
N
H
N
H
Thymine
(5-Methyluracil)
N
H
O
H
H2N
CH3
O
HO
CF3
O
HO
O
HO
OH
OH
Trifluorothymidine
5-FU
ARA C
Imide moiety
O
H
N
H
N
H
Urea moiety
FIGURE 15-32. Structural units of the uracil nucleus.
O
H
O
OH
R
N
N
H
Keto
N
HO
Enol
116
pyrimidine. Since the compounds prefer the keto form, they are usually thought
of as weak acids, but the weak acid-weak base properties of the enol form may
account for the reduced solubility in water of uracil and thymine. Cytosine, with
the 4-amino substituent and without an imide moiety, might be expected to be a
weak base.
None of the substituted pyrimidines has any noteworthy instabilities.
n METABOLISM. The metabolism of these unique pyrimidines is important from
the standpoint of both biochemical utilization of these compounds and drug metabolism of pyrimidine derivatives. Figure 15-34 outlines a pathway that converts
uracil to a useful compound, uridylic acid, needed for the synthesis of RNA.
O
H
O
H
O
5-Phosphoribosyl-
N
N
H
pyrophosphate (PRPP)
N
O
O
HO P O
O
OH
HO OH
Uridine-5'-pyrophosphate
(Uridylic acid)
FIGURE 15-34. Metabolism of uracil.
In a similar manner to that shown for uracil, cytosine is conjugated with PRPP
to yield cytidine-5-monophosphate (CMP) or cytidylic acid. Thymine is metabolized by conjugation, via a salvage pathway, with PRPP to the thymine ribosyl-5phosphate. This form of thymidylic acid can be utilized in specific RNA molecules.
The biochemically important thymine deoxyribosyl-5-phosphate is important in
the biosynthesis of DNA but is derived from uridylic acid, which is first converted
to deoxyuridylic acid and then into the deoxythymidylic acid (Fig. 15-35).
O
H
Uridylic acid
O
N
O
HO P O
O
OH
O
H
Thymidylate
CH3
synthetase
N
O
O
HO P O
O
OH
HO H
Deoxyuridylic acid
HO H
Thymidylic acid
CHAPTER 15
117
HETEROCYCLES
O
F
N
N
H
O
HO
5-FU
O
H
N
O
HO P O
OH
HO OH
N
N
O
HO OH
5-FUMP
O
H
N
N
O
HO
O
H
HO
O
HO P O
OH
N
N
O
O
HO
5-FUDR
FIGURE 15-36. Metabolism of 5-fluorouracil.
PyrimidinesII
n NOMENCLATURE. Two additional special pyrimidines are barbituric acid and
the substituted barbiturates (Fig. 15-37). The substituted barbiturates represent a
special class of compounds that have been used for their sedative-hypnotic action
since the early 1900s. The numbering system starts with either nitrogen and proceeds such that the substituents (R) appear at the 5 position.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Barbituric acid can exist in any of the four
forms shown in Figure 15-38. Roentgenographic studies have shown that as a solid,
the compound exists in the trioxo form, while in solution evidence rules against the
trihydroxy form but supports the presence of the other enolic forms.
118
H
H
O
O
H
N
H
5
R'
4 O
Barbituric acid
O
N
C2H5
O
N
H
H
O
6
O
N
N
H
3
H 1
O 2
Barbiturate
O
H3C
CH CH2 CH2
H
N
H3C
C2H5
N
O
O
H
Phenobarbital
Amylbarbital
FIGURE 15-37. Structure of barbituric acid and examples of drugs containing the
barbiturate nucleus.
H
H
O
O
N
Trioxo
H
N
H
O
N
H
OH
N
H
Dioxo
H
HO
OH
H
N
N
OH
HO
Dihydroxy
N
N
OH
Trihydroxy
Barbituric acid is a fairly strong acid with a pKa of 4.12, but upon substitution at
the 5 position, the pKa rises dramatically. The 5,5-disubstituted barbiturates have
pKa values of 7.1 to 8.1. Such compounds exist predominantly in the trioxo tautomeric form (Fig. 15-39). The 5,5-disubstituted barbiturates react with sodium
hydroxide to form a salt that is quite water-soluble (Fig. 15-40). Such salts, when
R
R'
O
O
N
N
H
H
O
R'
O
O
N
N
H
OH
CHAPTER 15
119
HETEROCYCLES
R
R'
O
O
N
N
H
NaOH
HCl
R'
O
O
Na
N
O
N
H
added to water, result in an aqueous medium that becomes quite alkaline owing to
the fact that such a salt is made up of a weak acid and a strong base. If the pH of
the medium is titrated to a neutral or acidic pH, the reaction will be reversed, resulting in precipitation of barbituric acid.
6
5
N
H
Piperazine
COOH
N
HN
Ciprofloxacin
N
H
4
2
3
Morpholine
O
F
1
O
O
N
H
CH3
Phenmetrazine
120
N
H
NH
IUPAC: Hexahydroazepine
H3C
O
S N
H
O
Octahydroazocine
O
H3C N
N
HO
H3C
Tolazamide
Pentazocine
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Both hexahydroazepine and octahydroazocine are cyclic secondary amines that are basic compounds and act like ordinary
alkylamines.
CHAPTER 15
121
HETEROCYCLES
5
6
7
NH 2
6
7
Common:
IUPAC:
2
N 1
H
Indole
Isoindole
Benzo[b]pyrrole
Benzo[c]pyrrole
C2H5
COOH
C2H5
N
CH3
NH2
N
H
N
H
Tryptophan
LSD
Neutral nitrogen
Indole and drugs containing the indole nucleus are easily oxidized when allowed
to stand in contact with air. An indication of this reaction is the darkening of the
color of the compound. It is best if indole-containing drugs are protected from atmospheric oxygen by storing under nitrogen.
n METABOLISM. Since indole is an aromatic nucleus, it is expected that aromatic
hydroxylation would occur. Most indole-containing drugs are substituted at the 3
position, and the hydroxylation occurs at the 47 position of the molecule.
Two Heteroatoms
n NOMENCLATURE. Three bicyclic heterocycles that contain two heteroatoms
are shown in Figure 15-45. The common nomenclature is based upon the name
of the five-membered ring, and since it is fused to a benzene ring, they are
122
4
5
6
7
3
N
3
N
3
N
2
N 1
H
2
O 1
2
S 1
H3C
O
S
N
H
Omeprazole
Benzoxazole
Benzimidazole
CH3
O
O CH3
CH3
Cl
N
Benzothiazole
H
N
O
N
O C2 H 5
Chlorzoxazone
SO2NH2
O
Ethoxzolamide
Four Heteroatoms
n NOMENCLATURE. An important bicyclic heterocycle is the purine nucleus
(Fig. 15-46). The purine can be thought of as a pyrimidine fused to an imidazole.
The numbering follows this type of analogy. The six-membered ring is numbered
first, starting with one nitrogen atom and proceeding counterclockwise completely
around the ring, including the bridgehead positions. This is then followed by numbering the five-membered ring.
Three common substituted purines should be familiar to the reader and are also
shown in Figure 15-46. They include the 6-aminopurine (adenine), 2-amino-6-hydroxypurine (guanine) (which actually exists not in the enol but rather in the
CHAPTER 15
123
HETEROCYCLES
6
1N
7
5 N
8
N 4 N
H
3
9
Purine
N
N
NH2
HN
N
H
N
H
H 2N
HN
O
Guanine
Adenine
(6-Aminopurine) (2-Amino-6-hydroxypurine)
N
H
N
H
Xanthine
(2,6-Purinedione)
FIGURE 15-46. Structures of purine and the biologically significant substituted purines.
keto form), and 2,6-purinedione (xanthine). All three of these compounds are
common metabolites found in the human body and are important nuclei in a number of drug molecules.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Purine is an aromatic compound containing
three basic nitrogens. Because of the ability of this compound to hydrogen bond
to water through the unshared pair of electrons on the nitrogens, the compound
is highly soluble in water. With functionalization of the purine ring, as in the case
of adenine, guanine, and xanthine, the water solubility decreases. This is probably
due to intramolecular interactions, which is discussed in Chapter 18. Let it suffice
to say that intramolecular interactions such as those shown in Figure 15-47 decrease the attractions that can occur with water. Finally, xanthine has both basic
H
H
N
N
N
N
H
O
N
HN
H 2N
N
H
N
H2N
N
H
124
properties due to one of the nitrogens in the imidazole ring and acidic properties
due to the imide NH in the pyrimidine ring.
n METABOLISM. The metabolism of the substituted purine is quite systematic
and is shown for adenine in Figure 15-48. The adenine is conjugated with 5phosphoribosylpyrophosphate (PRPP) to give adenylic acid (adenosine-5-phosphate). Adenylic acid in turn may be reduced to deoxyadenylic acid. A similar
pattern of metabolism can lead to guanosine and xanthosine, which in turn can lead
to guanylic acid and xanthylic acid.
NH2
N
N
O
O P O
OH
NH2
NH2
PRPP
N
N
N
H
Adenine
Deoxyadenylate
N
O
O P O
OH
HO
N
NH2
N
HO OH
Adenylate
N
N
O
P O
O
OH 3
HO OH
ATP
FIGURE 15-48. Metabolism of adenine.
O
N
N
H
N
H
Xanthine
Xanthine oxidase
HN
O
OH
N
H
N
H
Uric acid
CHAPTER 15
125
HETEROCYCLES
6
7
8
N
1
5
3
Quinoline
CH3
C2H5
HN C (CH2)3 N
H
C2H5
4
3
N
Isoquinoline
N
N
Cl
N
O
Chloroquine
Praziquantel
FIGURE 15-50. Structures of quinoline, isoquinoline, and examples of drugs containing
these nuclei.
One Oxygen
n NOMENCLATURE. Another important bicyclic heterocycle found in nature and
several synthetic drugs is the coumarin molecule (Fig. 15-51). Although the compound possesses a more complicated official name, the common name is usually used.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The coumarin molecule contains an intramolecular ester known as a lactone. Lactones experience the same types of
126
8
7
1
O
O
2
3
Common:
Coumarin
IUPAC:
2H-Benzopyran-2-one
HO
O
CH3
Warfarin
or OH /H2O
H
O
COOH
CHAPTER 15
127
HETEROCYCLES
1
N
8
7
2
N 3
Quinazoline
O
N
5
2
N 3
H2N
N
N
Pteridine
O
H3CO
8
N
N
N
N
H3CO
NH2
N
NH2
NH2
Triamterene
Prazosin
heteroatoms, one additional nucleus worth mentioning is the benzothiadiazine1,1-dioxide shown in Figure 15-54. This nucleus is important as it serves as the
base for the thiazide diuretics.
1
O
8 O
S
7
6
5
N
4
NH 2
3
1,2,4-Benzothiadiazin-1,1-dioxide
O
Cl
H2NO2S
O
Cl
H2NO2S
N
H
NH
Chlorothiazide
CH3
CH2-S-CH2CF3
Polythiazide
128
Sulfonamide
O
O
S
NH
Basic nitrogen
relatively weak base. Depending on whether the sulfonamide nitrogen is substituted or not determines whether this group is acidic or neutral. The unsubstituted
sulfonamide nitrogen imparts acidic properties, while substitution at this nitrogen
removes the acidic characteristics.
n METABOLISM. No unique metabolic properties are found with this nucleus.
1
N
H
N
H
N
3
6
N4
Cl
H
N
NH-CH3
N
N
Cl
Chlordiazepoxide
Diazepam
CHAPTER 15
HETEROCYCLES
129
a benzene ring (benzo) has been fused to a seven-membered ring (pine), which
in turn contains two nitrogens (diaz). The 1,4- designates the location of the two
nitrogen atoms. Since a seven-membered ring can accommodate only three double
bonds, the 3H tells indirectly that with a hydrogen at the 3 position, the double
bonds are at the site of ring fusion as well as at the 1,2 and 4,5 positions. An alternate arrangement of double bonds is shown for 1H-1,4-benzodiazepine. While 3H1,4-benzodiazepine is the basic nucleus for the drug chlordiazepoxide, most of the
benzodiazepines fall into the class of 1,3-dihydro-2H-1,4-benzodiazepin-2-ones.
This heterocycle has an amide group present at the 1,2 position, with the carbonyl
(one) being present at the 2 position. The numbering system for the benzodiazepines is as shown.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Few distinctive properties of the benzodiazepines need concern us. The nitrogen at the 4 position is a basic, but only weakly
basic, nitrogen. Salt formation at this position to give a water-soluble salt is usually
not practiced, probably because of the weakness of this base (pKa of protonated
compound 3.4). The nitrogen at the 1 position is weakly basic in the 3H-1,4-benzodiazepine and neutral in the amide 1,4-benzodiazepin-2-one structure.
n METABOLISM. Extensive data are available on the metabolism of the benzodiazepines. In many cases, the metabolism involves the additional substituents normally attached to the benzodiazepine nucleus. Metabolism of specific drugs will be
discussed in the medicinal chemistry course. A common metabolic process that involves the 1,3-dihydro-2H-1,4-benzodiazepin-2-one nucleus is hydroxylation of the
3 position. This is seen with many of the anti-anxiety drugs.
TRICYCLIC HETEROCYCLES
n NOMENCLATURE. A wide variety of tricyclic heterocycles, some of which are of
medicinal significance, might be presented. Three representative nuclei are shown
in Figure 15-57: phenothiazine, dibenzazepine, and acridine. The nomenclature and
numbering of these heterocycles are as shown. Note that the numbering system for
each of these compounds is unique.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The phenothiazine nucleus contains a nitrogen that should be considered nearly neutral. Two aromatic rings attached to a nitrogen, each withdrawing electrons, reduce the basic property significantly. In most
cases, this nitrogen will not form a salt with acid. The same reasoning holds for the
nitrogen in 5H-dibenz[b,f]azepine. Acridine, although a weak base, can form salts
with a strong acid.
An interesting physical property of the phenothiazine nucleus is that the molecule is not flat (Fig. 15-58). The shape of this molecule is thought to affect its biologic activity, and the amount of bend from planarity therefore may be important.
A characteristic of the acridine nucleus is the fact that the molecule possesses
color. The nature of the color depends upon the substituents added to the three
rings. The fact that a molecule possesses color indicates a highly conjugated molecule with alternating single and double bonds. With three conjugated rings, a yellow coloration is seen.
130
2
1
5
S
10 11
6
7
N
H
10
8
9
Phenothiazine
N
H
5
5H-Dibenz[b,f]azepine
(CH2)3 N
CH3
CH3
Chlorpromazine
N
(CH2)3 N
Imipramine
CH3
N
10
3
4
Acridine
CH3O
S
Cl
8
7
CH3
C2H5
HN C (CH2)3 N
H
C2H5
N
Cl
CH3
Quinocrine
S
N
H
CHAPTER 15
131
HETEROCYCLES
(continued)
furosemide (Lasix). Specifically, you asked your students to identify two heterocyclic functional groups out of five choices that would be bioisosteric with
furosemides oxygen-containing ring. To be bioisosteric, the replacement rings
must have essentially the same chemical properties as the original ring so that
the original biological activity could reasonably be assumed to be maintained.
Ring replacement candidates:
Cl
H2N SO2
H
N
H
N
COO
Ring of interest
Furosemide (Lasix)
H
N
H
N
Having completed the in-class exercise, your students are now clamoring for
you to reveal the correct choices. Use the space below to write your answer key.
132
(continued)
NH4
NH2
Pi
OH
N
Ribose phosphate
OH
N
N
Ribose phosphate
N
Ribose
Inosine
Pi
Ribose-1-P
H2O2
O
HN
O
O2
OH
N
H
N
H
H2O2
HN
Xanthine oxidase
Uric acid
O2
N
H
N
H
Xanthine oxidase
N
N
H
Hypoxanthine
Xanthine
Acidic functional
group (pKa 5.5)
OH
Given that uric acid, the end product of purine metabolism, is a weak acid
(pKa 5.5) formed by the action of xanthine oxidase on xanthine, and that PMs
urinary pH is 5.0 answer the following questions:
1. Why did the doctor tell PM to immediately switch from cranberry juice to water?
2. What is the role of sodium bicarbonate in treating uric acid kidney stones?
3. Given that the most acidic functional group of uric acid and phenol are aromatic alcohols (phenolic hydroxy groups), can you explain the almost 1,000,000fold difference in their pKas (phenol pKa 11, uric acid pKa 5.5)?
O
OH
HN
OH
N
H
N
H
Uric acid
Phenol
CHAPTER
Oligonucleotides and
Nucleic Acids
16
By far the most important chemicals in all living cells are the nucleic acids deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) and ribonucleic acid (RNA). These polymeric molecules
are the sources of all information needed for the construction of a living organism and the production of the proteins that run the organism, respectively. DNA
found in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells is a double-stranded polymer that makes
up the genes of an organism. DNA uncoils into a sense strand of nucleic acid and
an antisense strand. The antisense strand is transcribed into messenger RNA
(mRNA), which has the same sequence as the sense strand of DNA. The mRNA
leaves the nucleus and in the ribosome serves as the template defining the sequence
for protein synthesis. Thus, DNA and its messenger RNA prescribe the construction of all of the proteins of the body that carry out the day-to-day function of the
living organism.
n NOMENCLATURE. The two nucleic acids, DNA and RNA, are made up of four
heterocyclic bases: guanine, adenine, and cytosine (common to both DNA and
RNA) and uracil or thymine, present in RNA and DNA, respectively (Fig. 16-1).
As discussed in Chapter 15, guanine and adenine are purines, while cytosine,
uracil, and thymine are pyrimidines. Two pentoses are present in the nucleic acids,
and these pentoses are ribose or deoxyribose in RNA or DNA, respectively. When
the pentoses are attached to the N-9 position of the purines or the N-1 position of
the pyrimidines, the resulting product is named a nucleoside. The suffix -side indicates the presence of a sugar. Attachment of the sugar to the bases occurs at the
1 position of the sugar. The linkage between the sugar and the heterocyclic base
is through an acetal functional group. Finally, a phosphoric acid is added to the
5 position of the pentose to give the nucleotide. The phosphate attachment to the
sugar is considered an ester group. Nucleic acids result from the polymerization of
nucleotides through ester formation of the 5-phosphate to the 3 alcohol of the
pentose (Fig. 16-2). The continuous chain of pentose-3,5-diester is present as the
backbone to this polymer.
An oligonucleotide is a short-chain polymer of nucleotides with the same three
components: base, sugar, and phosphate ester. The significance of oligonucleotides
is that they represent a new approach to drug therapy, and such agents are referred
to as antisense drugs. Such drugs are designed to block protein synthesis in diseases associated with an abnormal protein and overexpression of a normal protein.
The antisense drug is designed to interact with mRNA through Watson-Crick base
pairing, leading ultimately to the blockage or termination of the action of mRNA.
133
134
Base:
Guanine
Adenine
NH2
N
HN
H2N
HO
Pentose:
Uracil
NH2
N
N
H
Cytosine
N
H
N
O
N
H
N
H
N
H
5'
O 1'
4'
OH
3'
2'
HO OH
HO
Deoxyribose
HN
H2N
N
HO
HO
HO
O
HO P OH
OH
O
N
HN
O
HO P O
CH3
HN
O
HO P OH
OH
H2N
OH
HO
HO OH
Nucleotide
CH3
HN
Phosphoric acid
HN
Ribose
Nucleoside
Thymine
N
O
OH
HO OH
CH3
HN
N
O
O
HO P O
OH
HO
CHAPTER 16
135
Base
O
P O
O
O
P O
O
X = H (DNA); OH (RNA)
Base
O
Base
O
P O
O
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. The most significant physical-chemical properties possessed by oligonucleotides and nucleic acids are their hydrophilic-lipophilic
properties and the ability of the various bases to recognize each other through hydrogen bonding. The backbone of the nucleotide diesters is hydrophilic in nature. At
biologic pH, the phosphate diester is in an ionic state capable of ion-dipole bonding
to water, and the pentose has hydrophilic character. The bases are usually considered
hydrophobic in nature (Fig. 16-3).
The most unusual characteristic of nucleotides is the ability of the various bases
to base pair through hydrogen bonding. The Watson-Crick model states that a
guanine will base pair to a cytosine through three hydrogen bonds, while an adenine will base pair to thymine through two hydrogen bonds (Fig. 16-4). This base
pairing in DNA thus results in the double helix, in which the ratio of guanine to
cytosine is always 1 and the ratio of adenine to thymine is always 1. Because of the
base pairing of the two strands of DNA, the hydrophobic bases are oriented to the
O
P O
O
Base
Lipophilic
O
P O
O
Base
O
O
Hydrophilic O X P O
Base
O
O
O
136
X OH
O
N
O
H3C
N H
N
HO
OH
N
N
N
N
HO
H
H
X OH
H
N
OH
H
O
HO X
HO X
FIGURE 16-4. Base pairing of thymine (T) to adenine (A) and guanine (G) to
cytosine (C).
inside of the double helix and the hydrophilic backbone is oriented to the outside
of the helix.
Unlike DNA, RNA tends to exist as single strands with intermittent intramolecular base pairing, resulting in the formation of loops in the structure.
The design of oligonucleotide drugs (antisense drugs) is based upon the fact that
deoxyribonucleotide analogs can base pair to complementary areas in mRNA and
as a result can bind to a specific region of the mRNA to disrupt protein synthesis.
This does require that one identify stretches of mRNA that are not base paired and
that the chosen mRNA be associated with the aberrant protein.
Oligonucleotides present an in vitro stability problem in that they are prone to
both acid- and base-catalyzed hydrolysis. The site most likely to undergo hydrolysis is at the phospho diester bond. The hydrolytic process leads to formation of
oligonucleotide fragments, with a phosphate ester remaining at either the 3 or 5
position of the pentose. An interesting complication to the base-catalyzed hydrolysis of ribose-containing oligonucleotides has been seen. The ribose oligonucleotides are more likely to undergo base-catalyzed hydrolysis than their deoxyribose counterpart due to the participation of the 2-OH in the hydrolysis reaction
(Fig. 16-5).
n METABOLISM. Common metabolism of oligonucleotides and nucleic acids is
via nuclease enzymes. Such enzymes are common to most tissues of the body, and
they can attack terminal phosphodiester bonds (exonucleases) or internal phosphodiester bonds (endonucleases) to break the backbone of the oligonucleotide or
nucleic acid (Fig. 16-6). The design of nuclease-resistant drugs has turned to modification of the backbone of the oligonucleotide through changes in the structure
of the phosphodiester or changes in the pentose. Examples of the former are phosphorothioates and methylphosphonates, while an example of the latter would be
2-O-methylribonucleotide (Fig. 16-7). Such derivatives show increased stability
toward cellular nucleases.
CHAPTER 16
137
Base
O
HO
Base
O
O
Base
OH
O P O
O
O P O
O
OH
O O H
Base
HO P O
O
H 2O
O P O
O
O P O
O
O OH
Base
OH /H2O
O O
O
OH
Base
O P O
O
HO O
HO P O
O
O
P O
O
Base
O
Endonuclease
Base
O
Base
O P O
O
O
P O
O
Base
O
O P O
O
Base
O P O
O
O
O P O
O
OH
Base
O
O
HO P O
Base
O
O
O
O P O
O
Base
O
138
O
P O
O
S
P O
O
Base
O
P O
O
Base
Base
O
Phosphorothioate
O
P O
O
Base
O
P O
CH3
Methylphosphonate
Base
O
OCH3
O
P O
O
Base
O
2'-O-Methylribonucleotide
FIGURE 16-7. Structural modification of oligonucleotides to protect against
nuclease metabolism.
CHAPTER 16
139
(continued)
NH2
O
HN
O
N
HO CH2
O
O
N
CH3
O
HO
HO OH
What answer are you hoping to get from this future pharmacist?
140
(continued)
The pharmacist on duty knows you are a first-year pharmacy student and takes
this opportunity to reinforce some basics of organic functional groups. She draws
the structures of these two drugs:
O
NH2
HO
CH3
HN
N
N
HO
O
S
H
H
Lamivudine (3TC)
H
N N N
Zidovudine (ZDV)
She tells you the mechanism of action of these drugs is to inhibit viral nucleoside reverse transcriptase. Reverse transcriptase is a type of DNA polymerase
that produces single-strand DNA from single-strand viral RNA. She then asks
you to do the following:
1. Classify these structures as either nucleoside, nucleotide, or nucleic acid analogs.
Explain your answer and can you identify which nucleoside, nucleotide, or nucleic acid these drugs mimic?
2. Explain how you think reverse transcriptase/DNA polymerase creates a DNA
chain.
3. Identify the structural groups in each compound that explains why they can inhibit the viral reverse transcriptase.
CHAPTER
Proteins
17
Another of the important macromolecules present in biologic systems are the polymers composed of amino acids and termed proteins. Derived from the Greek word
proteios (of the first order), proteins have always occupied a significant niche in
biochemistry instruction. From a pharmacologic standpoint, proteins have been
recognized for their importance as enzymes catalyzing the reactions of the cell.
They serve as key components of many, if not most, drug receptor sites. They have
an important role in drug transport, and they have biologic activity as hormones.
These naturally occurring materials may be relatively small molecules consisting of
a few amino acids (Fig. 17-1) to extremely large-molecular-weight compounds
made up of hundreds of amino acids. In the past, medicinal chemistry coverage of
proteins has been limited because only a few protein drugs were available and the
complexity of their synthesis, purification, chemistry, and administration made an
in-depth discussion difficult and unproductive. With the recent discoveries in recombinant DNA technology, methods in hybridoma technology, automated protein
synthesis, and newer methods of drug delivery, however, proteinaceous drugs are
now not only possible but in fact have begun to appear on the market, with the expectation that scores of additional drugs will appear in the near future. As a result
it is extremely important to be familiar with the basic chemical features of protein
stability in vitro as well as potential protein metabolism.
n NOMENCLATURE. Naturally occurring proteins are made up of 20 amino acids.
These 20 amino acids are linked through amide bonds into a polymeric structure
called a polypeptide or the protein. The arrangement of the amino acids within the
protein is determined by the organisms DNA structure, as translated by messenger RNA (mRNA). The amino acids making up the protein may be neutral, acidic,
or basic amino acids (Table 17-1).
The arrangement of amino acids in the protein gives the primary structure of the
protein. The three-dimensional structure of a protein (i.e., how it is arranged in
space) will define the proteins secondary, tertiary, or quaternary structure. The spatial arrangements of a protein are discussed in detail in Foyes Principles of Medicinal
Chemistry, Chapter 7. The presentation of a protein structure may appear in various
forms, examples of which are shown in Figure 17-1. Commonly, the structure is
shown using the abbreviations for the various amino acids, since the other representations are difficult to interpret and to draw.
n PHYSICAL-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES. Although several unique physical-chemical
properties are associated with proteins, some properties are predictable based
141
142
upon the properties of the monomers that make up the polymeric macromolecules.
The individual units that constitute the structure of proteins are the 20 amino
acids, 19 of which are chiral molecules possessing the L-configuration. Amino acids
are characteristically hydrophilic; this same property is found in proteins. Because
of this hydrophilic nature, proteins tend to show poor penetration through
lipophilic membranes, such as the intestinal lining, cell membranes, and bloodbrain barrier.
Chemical instability of proteins follows a pattern related to the functionality of
the individual amino acids present in the protein. The general types of chemical
reactions seen in proteins consist of oxidation-reduction, deamidation, hydrolysis,
and racemization reactions.
CHAPTER 17
143
PROTEINS
COOH
H
ABBREVIATION
STRUCTURE
R=
Neutral:
Glycine
Gly, G
Alanine
Ala, A
H3C
Isoleucine
Ile, I
CH3
C2H5 CH
Leucine
Leu, L
CH3
H3C CH CH2
Valine
Val, V
CH3
H3C CH
Cysteine
Cys, C
HS CH2
Methionine
Met, M
H3 C S CH2 CH2
Serine
Ser, S
HO CH2
Threonine
Thr, T
Asparagine
Asn, N
Glutamine
Gln, Q
Phenylalanine
Phe, F
H3 C CH
OH
O
H2N C CH2
O
H2 N C ( CH2)2
CH2
CH2
Tryptophan
Trp, W
N
H
Proline
Pro, P
Acidic:
OH
N
H
Aspartic acid
Asp, D
Glutamic acid
Glu, E
O
HO C CH2
O
HO C ( CH2)2
Tyrosine
Tyr, Y
HO
Arginine
Arg, R
NH
H
H2N C N (CH2)3
Lysine
Lys, K
H2 N ( CH2 )4
Histidine
His, H
HN
Basic:
CH2
CH2
N
144
H3C
S
CH2
O
CH2
H
H
R C N C C N R'
H
O
H2O2
or
Air
O
S
CH2
O
CH2
H
H
R C N C C N R'
H
O
Disulfide
SH
O
CH2
H
H
R C N C C N R'
H
O
Oxidation
Reduction
S
O
CH2
H
R C N CH
H
R' N C R C
O
O
S
CH2
H
CH C N R'
NH O
CHAPTER 17
145
PROTEINS
O
H
CH2 C C OH
NH2
HN
N
[O]
O
O
H
HO C CH2 C C OH
NH2
Aspartic acid
Histidine
O
H
C C OH
NH2
CH2
O
O
H
C CH2 C C OH
NH2
N C H
H
O
[O]
N
H
Tryptophan
N-Formyl kynurenine
NH2
C
CH2
H
H
N C C N R
H
O
pH < 5
pH > 7.0
OH
C
CH2
H
H
N C C N R
H
O
Aspartyl peptide
H
N R
C
CH2
H
N C C OH
H
O
O
O
H
N
N R
H 2O
Isoaspartyl peptide
FIGURE 17-5. Deamidation of asparagine-containing protein at acidic or basic pH.
146
A similar process can be invoked for hydrolysis of the glutamine side chain, but
at present there is little supportive chemical evidence to suggest that this reaction
is a serious problem in vitro.
Hydrolysis Reaction. Hydrolysis of peptide bonds in a protein generally does
not occur. The typical amide bond is relatively stable with one exception. An aspartate (Asp) residue in the protein greatly increases the potential for hydrolysis of
the peptide at the N-terminal and/or C-terminal position of this amino acid at
acidic pH. The presence of a side chain carboxyl is important since this group assists the hydrolysis reaction, as shown in Figure 17-6. The hydrolysis obviously results in destruction of the protein.
Racemization Reaction. Nineteen of the 20 amino acids contain a chiral
center that in theory could be racemized under basic conditions to the Denantiomer, thus resulting in a protein with large differences in physicalchemical properties and biologic activities. Most amino acids appear to be relatively stable to racemization, although some evidence suggests that aspartate
residues may racemize through a cyclic imide (Fig. 17-7). The formation of the
cyclic imide increases the ease of proton removal at the asymmetric carbon, which
upon reprotonation leads to formation of both isomers. Presumably resonance
stabilization of the -carbanion in the imide plays an important role in the racemization reaction.
Conformational Changes. A unique property found in proteins, but not
commonly found in the low-molecular-weight compounds previously dealt with, is
the high degree of intramolecular and intermolecular bonding that occurs in proteins. The amide functional groups found in protein can act as both a hydrogen
donor and a hydrogen acceptor, leading to hydrogen bonding. If the hydrogen
OH
C
CH2
H
H
R C N C C N R'
H
O
O
O
O
R
HO
N
H
H
N R'
N R'
H
H2O
H2O
OH
C
CH2
H
H
H N C C N R'
H
O
O
N
H HO
+ R C OH
O
OH
C
CH2
H
R C N C C OH +
H
O
O
H2N R'
CHAPTER 17
147
PROTEINS
OH
C
CH2
O
O
H
R C N
H
H
H
R C N C C N R'
O
O
H
R'
O
O
O
H
R C N
R'
O
O
OH
C
CH2
O
O
H
R C N
H
H
R C N C C N R'
O
O
H
R'
bonding occurs intramolecularly between the first and fourth peptide bond, the
-helix conformation results (Fig. 17-8), but if the hydrogen bonding occurs intermolecularly (or intramolecularly with a distant portion of the same protein), the
-sheet conformation is found (Fig. 17-9). The conformation of the protein resulting from the spatial arrangement and interactions due to nearby amino acids is
referred to as the secondary structure of the protein. This secondary structure for
the protein leads to a great deal of rigidity, but a rigidity that can be broken by temperature variations, changes in pH, or the presence of organic solvents. Molecules
that are coiled or tightly packed due to hydrogen bonding have different physicalchemical and biologic properties than their nonbonded form. Another phenomenon seen with proteins is that they fold in such a way that the hydrophobic groups
are buried in the interior of the polypeptide, while the hydrophilic groups are on
the surface of the protein. The protein becomes globular in structure. The globular
R1 CH
H
N C O
R2 CH
C O
H N CH
HN
C O
CH
CH
N
C
R3
R4
H
O
Intramolecular H-bonding
R5
148
O
R
H
O
R
H
H
H
H
C
C
N
C
C
N
C
N
C
C
N
C
C
H
R
R
H
O
R
H
O
R
R
O
H
R
O
H
R
R
H
C
C
N
C
C
N
C
N
C
C
N
C
C
H
H
H
H
R
O
H
R
O
CHAPTER 17
H
N
O
H
N
R
O
149
PROTEINS
O
R'
NH
H
S
CH2
H
NH C C N R"
H
O
[H]
Native protein
[O]
H
N
R
O
HS
N
H
SH
H
N
O
N
H
H
N
O
N
H
R'
O
O
N
H
SH
SH
H
N
R"
[O]
S S
O
R'
N
H
H
N
Linear chain
[H]
O
R"
Nonnative protein
FIGURE 17-10. Reduction of the disulfide bond in a protein and oxidation of the
thiol to the disulfide.
150
SELECTIVITY
Trypsin
Thrombin
Chymotrypsin
Pepsin
Carboxypeptidase A
Carboxypeptidase B
Elastase
Carboxypeptidase (2)
S
S
Cys
Tyr
Phe
Gln
Asn
Cys
Pro
Carboxypeptidase (3)
S
Cys
Arg
Gly
NH2
Trypsin (1)
S
Tyr
Phe
Gln
Asn
Cys
COOH
Pro
Arg
Gly
Pressinoic acid
FIGURE 17-11. Intestinal metabolism of arginine vasopressin.
Cys
Tyr
Phe
Gln
Asn
Cys
Pro
Arg
Gly
NH2
N-Terminus aminopeptidase
HOOC Cys S
H2N Asn
S
Cys
Pro
Arg Gly
NH2
CHAPTER 17
151
PROTEINS
C C Tyr2 Ile3
H
O
S
Gln4 Asn5
CH2
Cys6
Pro7
Leu8
Gly9
C NH2
O
Cys1
Oxytocin
Late Friday night a tropical storm blows through the area and, on Monday
morning, you find that the power to the cold box was lost. Its not clear how
long the oxytocin solution was stored outside the approved temperature range
(3677F), but weekend highs were close to 100F. The oxytocin solution appears
a bit hazy and the physician tells you to discard it. However, since he just read an
interesting article by A. Hawe et al. on oxytocin stability in the April 3, 2009 issue
of Pharmaceutical Research, he first wants to test your knowledge of peptide
degradation. He tells you two things:
1. Some of the oxytocin in the warm solution is most probably existing as a dimer
(accounting for the haziness).
2. The oxytocin solution may contain ammonia (NH3) as a by-product of degradation.
Based on these two clues, he asks you to predict at least one structure that
could be found in the decomposed oxytocin solution. How do you respond?
152
(continued)
she has had pain in the upper right part of her abdomen, is extremely lethargic,
and hardly has any appetite. When her skin and eyes started to take on a yellow
color, her mother took her to the doctor. She had blood tests done and her
alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase enzyme plasma levels
were above the upper limit of normal. You know that she has been an injectiondrug user in the past, but has received drug abuse treatment and has been drug
free for the last 6 months. When she goes back to the doctor, she is diagnosed
with Hepatitis C and prescribed the drug Pegasys (Peg-interferon alfa-2a).
Fortunately, this diagnosis wont disrupt your vacation plans; however, your
friend complains that the medication must be administered subcutaneously, that
her injection sites often hurt, and it is psychologically difficult for her to use
needles anymore. As a pharmacy student, she asks you why she cannot take her
medication orally. What is your answer for her?
Since you are a P-1 pharmacy student you are unfamiliar with Peg-interferon
alfa-2a, so you look up the structure and discover that it is a high molecular
weight branched monomethoxy polyethylene glycol conjugate of interferon
alfa-2a.
O
CH3O(CH2CH2)n O C NH
CH2
Monomethoxy
CH2
polyethylene glycol
CH2
O CH2
H
CH3O(CH2CH2)n O C CH N IFN alfa-2a
CHAPTER
Predicting Water
Solubility
18
153
154
Bonding may occur between dissimilar functional groups through both an intermolecular and intramolecular type, and this bonding may be quite strong. In order for a
molecule to dissolve in water, the intramolecular and intermolecular bonding must
first be broken so that the water molecules can bond to the functional groups.
Intramolecular Bonding
One of the most significant examples of a mixed functional group intramolecular
bond is seen with -amino acids. Due to the basicity of an amine and the acidic character of the carboxylic acid, -amino acids can exist in a zwitterion (internal salt) form
through ion-ion bonding. The intramolecular bond destroys the ability of the individual groups to bond to water leading to reduced water solubility. The -amino acids
O
R
O
NH3
also demonstrates a critical factor essential to intramolecular bonding, and that is that
the functional groups must be in close proximity to each other (commonly within two
to four carbon atoms of each other or within a molecule flexible enough to bring the
two units into close proximity). With dipole-dipole or dipole-ion intramolecular
bonding between mixed functional groups a pseudo five to seven member arrangement can be drawn (Fig. 18.1, AD). Larger or smaller arrangements of bonding
atoms are less favored. This arrangement and the types of functional groups involved
are shown in Figure 18.1. The functional groups capable of donating a hydrogen for
dipole-dipole bonds have been discussed individually in the appropriate chapters and
include alcohols, phenols, the enol of a ketone, carboxylic acids and to a lesser but
still potentially significant extent 1 and 2 amines. The functional groups which can
dipole-dipole bond through acceptance of an hydrogen due to their electron-rich environment include the oxygen atom of alcohols, phenols, ethers, ketones and aldehydes, carboxylic acids, and the nitrogen atom of unionized 1, 2 and 3 amines. It
should be noted that several functional groups are capable of both donation of hydrogen as well as acceptance of a hydrogen through an electron-rich environment
(Fig. 18.1, A). Also shown in Figure 18.1 (D) that ion-dipole bonding between mixed
functional groups can occur with ionized carboxylates and hydrogen-donor functional
groups, while protonated amines form ion-dipole bonds with electron-rich regions in
the dipoles of alcohols, phenols, ethers, ketones and aldehydes, and carboxylic acids.
Examples of several drugs in which intramolecular bonding influences physicalchemical properties of these drugs are shown in Figure 18.2.
Intermolecular Bonding
In the individual functional group chapters, consideration was given to the ability of a functional group to bond to water or to bond to the same group in a second molecule. This property was used to predict water solubility and boiling
CHAPTER 18
155
H
R
A.
H
O
or
H
O
Alcohol/phenol
O
O
R
Ether
R'
Aldehyde/
Ketone
Aldehyde or Ketone
Ether
Dipole-dipole bond
H
Alcohol/phenol
O
H
O
Enol
CH
Alcohol/phenol
O H
R"
Ketone - enol form
N
H
or
B.
X H
Dipole-dipole bond
OH
O
Dipole-dipole bond
O
C.
O
H
or
Dipole-dipole bond
0-1
0-1
D.
N
H
Ion-dipole bond
Ion-dipole bond
0-1
0-1
Y = electronegative atom (oxygen or nitrogen) capable of accepting an hydrogen (i.e., the oxygen of
an alcohol, phenol, enol, ether, carbonyl of a ketone or aldehyde, and the nitrogen of an amine).
156
O
O
H
O
F
H
N
H
Salicylic acid
Cl
O
HO
H3C
CH3
N
CH3 H
O H
O
O
O
O
O
O
H
H
H
Ciprofloxacin
NH2
Chlorotetracycline
points, respectively. Whether the functional group bonds to its counterpart in a second molecule or to a different functional in the second molecule the process is the
same as the intramolecular process discussed above. The only difference is that intramolecular bonding tends to be stronger than intermolecular bonding. Thus, the
same discussion and figure (Fig. 18-1) can represent mixed functional group intermolecular bonding. In this case the two functional groups are not brought together
through covalent bonds, but instead through space. Two molecules and their respective functional groups must come close to each other and electron-rich regions
need to be attracted to electron-deficient regions found in dipoles or ions for bonding to occur. Thus, alcohols, phenols, aldehydes and ketones, amines, and carboxylic
acids and their derivatives can be attracted to dissimilar functional groups forming
intermolecular bonds. And once again this bonding will potentially effect biologic
activity, pharmacokinetic properties, and physical-chemical properties.
CHAPTER 18
157
Carboxylic acid
O
H
CH2 C C OH
NH2
O
H
CH2 C C O
NH3
HO
HO
Zwitterionic form
(Water Insoluble)
1 Amine
Phenol
Tyrosine
(Solubility in H2O 0.45 g/100 ml at 25)
CH2
Na
O
H
C C O
NH2
NaOH/H2O
Na
HO
Very soluble
HCl/H2O
O
H
CH2 C C OH
NH3
Cl
Very soluble
FIGURE 18-3. Solubility of tyrosine in water, aqueous base, and aqueous acid.
158
MONOFUNCTIONAL
MOLECULE
POLYFUNCTIONAL
MOLECULE
Alcohol
5 to 6 carbons
3 to 4 carbons
Phenol
6 to 7 carbons
3 to 4 carbons
Ether
4 to 5 carbons
2 carbons
Aldehyde
4 to 5 carbons
2 carbons
Ketone
5 to 6 carbons
2 carbons
Amine
6 to 7 carbons
3 carbons
Carboxylic acid
5 to 6 carbons
3 carbons
Ester
6 carbons
3 carbons
Amide
6 carbons
2 to 3 carbons
2 carbons
are tertiary amines and tertiary amines are weak dipoles showing little potential
for dipole-dipole bonding. Because of the location of the amines intramolecular
bonding does not occur.
With paradimethylaminobenzaldehyde (Fig. 18.4), a nine-carbon molecule, the
liberal estimate would predict solubility, since the amine is capable of solubilizing
up to 7 carbon atoms and an aldehyde could solubilize up to 5 carbon atoms. On
the other hand, the conservative estimate would predict insolubility with the
C6H5
N
H3C
CH3
C13H20N2
CHO
H3C N CH3
C9H11NO
7 + 7 = 14
7 + 5 = 12
3 + 3=6
3 + 2=5
Water-soluble
Slightly water-soluble
FIGURE 18-4. Prediction of water solubility of organic molecules using mono- and
polyfunctional estimates for the functional groups.
CHAPTER 18
159
amine worth 3 and the aldehyde worth 2 carbon atoms. This molecule is listed as
slightly soluble, a result that falls between the two estimates. This simply shows
that these are only predictions and, with borderline compounds, may lead to inaccurate results.
The next examples shown in Figure 18.5 lead to a more accurate prediction. In
the first compound, one should recognize the presence of three ethers, a phenol,
and a tertiary amine. Using the monofunctional solubilizing potential, one would
expect enough solubility from these groups to dissolve this 19-carbon compound,
since each ether would be assigned 5 carbons, the phenol 7 carbons of solubilizing
potential, and the amine 7 carbons worth of solubilizing potential. If one uses the
more conservative estimate, which takes into consideration the intra- and intermolecular bonding, each ether contributes 2 carbons with of solubility, while the
phenol and amine contribute 3 and 4 carbons worth of solubilizing potential, respectively. The prediction now is that the molecule is insoluble in water, and this
turns out to be the case.
Ether
Phenol
HO
Ether
OCH3
3 Amine
Ester
O
O
O
CH3
Ether
N
CH3
O
N
O
CH3
Ester
C19H19NO4
3 Amine
C21H23NO5
5 + 5 + 5 + 7 + 7 = 29
6 + 6 + 5 + 7 = 24
2 + 2 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 13
3 + 3 + 2 + 3 = 11
Water-insoluble
CH3
Water-insoluble
FIGURE 18-5. Prediction of water solubility of organic molecules using mono- and
polyfunctional estimates for the functional groups.
The second structure in Figure 18.5 has two esters, an ether, and a 3 amine.
Once the functional groups are identified one needs only to assign the solubilizing
potential to each group. Again, the monofunctional potentials are inappropriate
since this is a polyfunctional molecule and if used would have resulted in a prediction of water solubility. Using the polyfunctional solubilizing potential gives the
more accurate prediction of the molecule being water-insoluble. The polyfunctional potential is more appropriate since this molecule would be expected to have
both intramolecular and intermolecular bonding.
Additional examples of the empirical approach to predicting water solubility can
be found within the problem sets of the Student Workbook CD-ROM.
160
(Eq. 1)
(Eq. 2)
To use this procedure, the student must fragment the molecule into basic units and
assign an appropriate value corresponding to the atoms or groups of atoms present. Table 18.2 lists the common fragments found in organic molecules and their
VALUES
C (aliphatic)
0.5
C (alkene)
0.33
Phenyl
2.0
Cl (halogen)
0.5
0.0
N (amine)
1.0
1.0
O2NO
0.2
O2N (aliphatic)
0.85
O2N (aromatic)
0.28
O C O
0.7
0.7
IMHB
0.65
CHAPTER 18
161
values. Positive values for mean that the fragment, relative to hydrogen, is
lipophilic or favors solubility in octanol. A negative value indicates a hydrophilic
group and thus an affinity for water. While the environment of the substituent can
influence the value, such changes are small, and for our purposes this factor can
be neglected.
Through the examination of a large number of experimentally obtained log P
and solubility values, an arbitrary standard has been adopted whereby those chemicals with a positive log P value over 0.5 are considered water-insoluble (i.e., solubility is less than 3.3% in watera definition for solubility used by the USP). Log
P values less than 0.5 are considered water-soluble.
This method of calculating water solubility has proved quite effective with a
large number of organic molecules containing C, Cl, N, and O, but several additional factors may have to be considered for specific drugs. A complicating factor
is the influence of intramolecular hydrogen bonding (IMHB) on values. As discussed in the previous empiric approach to predicting water solubility, IMHB
would be expected to decrease water solubility, and, therefore, where IMHB exists, a value of 0.65 is added to the calculations. An example of using this factor is shown for salicylic acid (Fig. 18.6).
OH
OH
O H
C
O H
Intramolecular
H-bonding
Solubility 0.2%
Calc. log P without IMHB
Phenyl..................... +2.0
Phenyl..................... +2.0
O-H......................... 1.0
O-H......................... 1.0
O=C-O.................... 0.7
O=C-O.................... 0.7
IMHB...................... +0.65
Total...................... +0.3
Total....................... +0.95
Prediction
Soluble
Prediction
Insoluble
FIGURE 18-6. Calculation of water solubility of salicylic acid without and with the
intramolecular hydrogen bonding (IMHB) factor.
The log P values of a drug with acid or base character are influenced by the pH
of the media in which the drug is placed. This is not surprising, since acid or base
groups will become ionic under appropriate conditions. Although the values
given in Table 18.2 were obtained under conditions in which the amine, phenol, or
carboxylic acid are unionized, which would allow an accurate prediction of log P,
observed log Ps at various pH values may not be accurate for water prediction. The
experimental log Ps found for procaine are 0.32 (pH 7) and 0.14 (pH 8), both of
162
O
C2H5
C O CH2 CH2 N
C2H5
H2N
Procaine
Phenyl..................... +2.0
6 - C @ +0.5........... +3.0
2 - N @ 1.0 ........... 2.0
O=C-O .................... 0.7
Total........................ +2.3
Prediction
Insoluble
which would lead to the prediction that procaine is water-soluble. In fact, procaine
is soluble to the extent of 0.5% at pH 7. The calculated log P 2.3 (Fig. 18.7)
correctly predicts that procaine is water insoluble.
H3C
H2C
HO
CH3
CH3
CH3
CH3
OH
O
OCH3
Buprenorphine
H3C
N
HO
HO
O
OH
Morphine
Levorphanol
You inform this physician that opioids are relatively lipophilic structures, and
they attempt to get out of the aqueous circulation by distributing into body fat
CHAPTER 18
163
(continued)
(a peripheral storage site) and brain (the site of action). Drug manufacturers take
this into account when establishing the dose. In a person of normal body weight,
the amount of drug reaching the brain is enough to induce analgesia, but not
enough to cause life-threatening side effects like respiratory depression. The
more lipophilic the drug, the more readily it is sequestered into the fat, and the
more willingly it will cross the blood-brain barrier from the bloodstream.
After reminding LNs attending of this important pharmacokinetic reality, you
evaluate the impact of the functional groups of the three opioid structures on
relative water/lipid solubility and make your decision. Which opioid will you recommend for LN?
OH
F
CH3
NH
HO
HO
HO HO
COOH
HN
CH2OH
HO
O
O
HO
HO
CH2OH
O
O
HO
HO
OH
2
O
O
C OCH3
H3C
HO
OH
APPENDIX
Stereoisomerism
Asymmetric Molecules
A carbon atom substituted with four different substituents does not possess a plane
or point of symmetry and as a result is an asymmetric molecule. A carbon atom substituted with two or more of the same substituents has either a plane or point of
symmetry and as a result is a symmetric molecule. With the compound 2-methyl2-butanol, carbon atoms 2, 3, and 4 and the OH and one hydrogen lie in a single
plane with the remaining four methyls and two hydrogens symmetrically located
above and behind the plane of the page (Fig. A-1). This compound is said to have
a plane of symmetry and is a symmetric molecule. On the other hand, 2-butanol
does not have a plane of symmetry, is said to be asymmetric, and consists of two
nonsuperimposable molecules or a pair of enantiomers. The second enantiomer
can be easily generated by reflecting the initial molecule in a mirror as shown in
OH
CH3 C CH2 CH3
H
OH
CH3 C CH2 CH3
CH3
OH
CH2
CH3
H
OH
CH3
C
C
CH3
CH3 H
H
H
Figure A-2. If the mirror image is rotated by 180, one can see that the enantiomers
are not superimposable. 2-Butanol is said to be a chiral molecule with two enantiomeric forms. What is the significance of chirality? The two enantiomers have the
same empirical formula, and behave similarly with the exception that the individual enantiomers will rotate plane polarized light in opposite directions. One of the
isomers, when placed in a polarimeter, rotates the plane of polarization to the right
(clockwise), is said to be dextrorotatory and is labeled the D isomer or (+) isomer.
The other isomer causes a counterclockwise rotation of the plane of polarization
164
APPENDIX A
165
STEREOISOMERISMASYMMETRIC MOLECULES
OH
OH
CH3
C
CH2
CH2
CH3
H3 C
CH3
H
OH
CH3
C
H
CH3
CH2
Rotation 180
and is thus the levorotatory isomer abbreviated as the L isomer or () isomer. The
degree of rotation is the same for both enantiomers but in opposite directions. The
fact that enantiomers can bend plane polarized light has caused such compounds
to be referred to as optically active isomers. If a compound exists as an equal mixture of both isomers, the material is said to be racemic, with a net rotation of polarization of zero. The significance of chirality and its role in medicinal chemistry
relates to the fact that chiral molecules are capable of recognizing the difference
between two enantiomeric molecules. An example of this relates to the interaction
or bonding of a small molecular weight molecule (a drug) with a protein. Enzymes
and drug receptor sites are generally proteins that in turn are made up of chiral
amino acids. Many chiral enzymes and drug receptors react selectively with one of
the enantiomers of a chiral drug, producing a biologic response. The second enantiomer may have little or no biologic activity. One must recognize the presence of
a chiral center in a drug molecule and appreciate the importance of this property
as it affects biologic activity.
Another aspect of a chiral center should be reviewed and that is their nomenclature. The direction of rotation of plane polarized light is a relative property
and does not indicate the absolute configuration around the chiral center. The
CahnIngoldPrelog R and S nomenclature is used to indicate absolute configuration. A set of arbitrary sequence rules assigns to the atoms around the chiral center priorities of 1 through 4, with number 1 being the highest priority. The
molecule is then physically rotated so that the number 4 group is placed behind
the remaining three groups and farthest from the eye of the viewer. One then
notes the direction in which the eye travels in going from groups 1 to 2 to 3. If
the direction is clockwise, the molecule is assigned the absolute configuration of
R, while if the direction is counterclockwise the center is assigned the S absolute
configuration (Fig. A-3). While many sequence rules are used for the many different functional groups encountered in organic chemistry, the one that suffices
166
Eye
R
(End view)
Eye
S
(End view)
CH3
H
CH3
C
H2N
(3)
(2) OH
OH
(4) H
H2N
(1) O
for most situations is that the atom with a higher atomic number precedes a lower
atomic number atom. Thus, for the amino acid alanine shown in Figure A-4, the
N (atomic No. 7) has higher priority than C (atomic No. 6), which has higher priority than H (atomic No. 1). To differentiate between the CH3 and the COOH
group, one must go to the atoms attached to the carbons, and the O (atomic No. 8)
has priority over H.
APPENDIX
Throughout the book, considerable emphasis has been placed on the physicalchemical properties of the various functional groups. One of the major physicalchemical properties emphasized has been that of acidity/basicity. If a functional group
is acidic, conversion of that group to a salt that can dissociate in water dramatically improves water solubility through ion-dipole bonding. In a similar fashion, if a functional
group is basic, it can be converted to a salt by treatment with an acid. If the salt dissociates in water, water solubility will be increased through ion-dipole bonding. Since
water solubility is quite important for drug delivery, it is felt that a short review of the
concept of acidity and basicity is called for. In addition, a compilation of the important
acids and bases, drawn from this book, will be presented in this appendix.
H2O
Base
H3O
Conjugate acid
X
Conjugate base
donate its proton unless there is another substance (a base) to accept that proton.
Several additional examples of acids and bases are shown in Figure B-1.
Several interesting phenomena should be noted in these examples. Water is acting as a base in the first three examples and as an acid in the latter three examples.
167
168
Since water can act as either an acid or a base, it is said to be amphoteric. Also seen
in Figure B-1 are examples of compounds that demonstrate another useful definition of a base. Lewis defined a base as an electron-pair donor. This definition is useful in identifying organic bases such as amines. Alkyl and aryl amines are basic by
virtue of their ability to donate a pair of electrons.
HCl
H2O
Acid
H3O
Base
O
H3C C OH
Acid
CH3CH2 NH3
Conjugate acid
H3O
Base
Conjugate acid
Acid
Base
CH3CH2 NH2
Base
O
H3C C O
Base
NH3
Base
H2O
Conjugate base
O
H3C C O
H2O
Cl
Cl
H3O
Conjugate base
+ CH3CH2 NH2
Cl
Conjugate acid
Conjugate base
+
OH
Conjugate base
H2O
Acid
H 2O
OH
Acid
Conjugate base
H2O
OH
Acid
Conjugate base
CH3CH2 NH3
Conjugate acid
O
H3C C OH
Conjugate acid
NH4
Conjugate acid
APPENDIX B
169
HX
H2O
H3O
Weak acid:
HX
H2O
H 3O
H2O
H3O
Base
Weak conjugate
acid
Cl
Weak conjugate
base
those compounds that have a poor tendency to dissociate in water (e.g., carboxylic
acids, phenols, sulfonamides, imides). Such compounds are characterized as having relatively strong conjugate bases. In all cases, the equilibrium will tend to favor
the direction that gives the weaker acid and the weaker base.
O
H3C C OH +
Weak acid
H2O
H3O
Weak base
Strong conjugate
acid
O
H3 C C O
Strong conjugate
base
In a similar fashion, the relative strength of a base depends upon the ability of
the chemical to give up a hydroxyl or the tendency to accept a proton. Table B-1 is
a listing of common acids and bases in order of acidity. The table actually becomes
compressed when water is specified as our solvent. All of the acids above the
hydronium ion show a reduction in apparent acidity because of the leveling effect
in water. Since the strong acids (e.g., H2SO4, HCI, HNO3) are nearly completely
170
I
n
c
r
e
a
s
i
n
g
B
a
s
i
c
i
t
y
H3O
RCO2H
ArOH
RSO2NH2
O H O
C N C
H2O
N
ArNH2
I
n
c
r
e
a
s
i
n
g
A
c
i
d
i
t
y
NH
R C NH2
Alkyl NH2
NH
R HN C NH2
NaOH, KOH
BASES
dissociated in water to form hydronium ions, their acidities become equal in water
and the hydronium ion becomes the strongest ion. The leveling effect also affects
strong bases. In water, the strongest base that can exist is the hydroxide ion; therefore, sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide, which completely dissociate, become equivalent in basicity.
APPENDIX B
171
A brief reminder about the acid-base properties of water, which can dissociate to
form hydronium ion and hydroxide ion, is shown. The hydronium ions and hydroxide ions formed by this dissociation are present in equal concentrations (i.e., there is
no excess of either hydronium ions or hydroxide ions). Hence, water is neutral.
H2O +
Acid
H2O
H3O
Conjugate acid
Base
OH
Conjugate base
HNO3
H2O
H3 O
NO3
KOH
H2O
OH
H3O
+ OH
+ K
+ NO3
2 H2O+ K
+ NO3
acid-base reaction between acetic acid and sodium hydroxide, sodium acetate, the
weak conjugate base of acetic acid, and water, the weak conjugate acid of the hydroxide ion, are formed. The sodium acetate will partially dissociate in water, however, to afford acetic acid and hydroxide ion. This will result in a slight excess of
hydroxide ion in solution when the neutralization reaction is complete, and the
pH of the solution will be greater than 7, or alkaline.
CH3COOH
Weak acid
+ NaOH
Strong base
CH3COO
Na + H2O
Base
Acid
H2O
CH3COO
Weak acid
CH3COOH
Na
Weak base
+
OH
Na
172
ion. The resulting solution from this neutralization reaction will have a pH less than
7 (acidic), in that the strength of the hydronium ion is more acidic than the amine
is basic. The amount of hydronium ion formed depends on the extent of dissociation of the amine salt.
(CH3CH2)3NH
(CH3CH2)3N + HCl
Weak base
Strong acid
(CH3CH2)3NH
Acid
Weak acid
H2O
Base
+ Cl
Weak base
(CH3CH2)3N +
H3 O
This concept is quite important if one considers what happens to the pH of water
if a sodium or potassium salt of an organic acid is dissolved in water. The organic
anion is the conjugate base of a weak acid, and when placed in water the pH of the
solution becomes alkaline. Another way of considering this is that, in water, one has
the salt of a weak acid and a strong base. Since the strong base is farther up the pH
scale than the weak acid is down the scale, the net sum of this is that the pH remains
greater than 7 (Fig. B-2). When a sulfate, chloride, or nitrate salt of an organic base
Salt of a strong base and a weak acid
pH 7
pH 7
pH 7
pH 7
is dissolved in water, one has a salt of a weak base and a strong acid. The strong acid
is farther down the pH scale than the base is up the scale, and the pH of the solution
therefore is below 7. Using this concept, one can successfully predict the pH of many
salts after dissolving the salt in water (Table B-2). The clue to predicting the correct
answer is in being able to recognize whether one is dealing with salts of strong acids
and weak bases or weak acids and strong bases. A rule of thumb that is most helpful
is that the strong acids are hydrochloric, sulfuric, nitric, perchloric, and phosphoric
acid. All other acids are weak. The strong bases are sodium hydroxide and potassium
hydroxide. All other bases are weak.
APPENDIX B
173
ZnCl2
Lewis acid
Na2CO3
Base
Ca(NO3)2
Base
2 H2O
H3O
Base
Strong acid
2 H2O
2 Na
Cl
2 OH
Acid
Strong base
2 H2O
H 3O
Acid
Strong acid
Zn(OH)Cl
Weak base
H2CO3
O
Base
Basic
Weak acid
NO3 Ca(OH)NO3
Acidic
Weak base
O
N
Acidic
O
Na
H2O
Acid
Na
OH
Strong base
N H
Basic
O
Weak acid
174
ACIDITY (pKa)
R SO3H
R COOH
45
Ar SO2NHR
69
Ar OH
811
O
R
R'
N H
810
because such groups destabilize the phenolate anion. Finally, common to a number of heterocycles is the imide functional group, which must have a proton on the
nitrogen to be acidic.
All of the organic acids (with the exception of sulfonic acid) are weak acids,
which is to say that, in water, the equilibrium will favor the undissociated molecule.
This also explains why salts of organic acids and strong bases, when dissolved in
water, produce an appreciable quantity of hydroxide ion, and the aqueous solution
is alkaline. The degree of alkalinity will depend on the strength of the acid. Alkaline
metal salts of phenols will result in a very basic aqueous solution, while alkaline
metal salts of carboxylic acids are less basic.
y H
Weak acid
H2O
Weak base
H3O
Y
Strong base
Strong acid
Table B-4 lists the organic bases that have been reviewed in this book.
Guanidines are the most basic organic functional group, followed by the alkylamines. Within the class of alkylamines the usual order of basicity is secondary
amines are more basic than tertiary amines, which are more basic than primary
amines. Aromatic amines are significantly (1010) less basic than alkylamines
(104), owing to the fact that electron-releasing groups (alkyls) increase basicity,
while electron-withdrawing groups (aryls) reduce basicity (see Chap. 10). Aromatic
heterocycles containing a nitrogen with a pair of nonbonding electrons are also
basic; however, these compounds are weak bases.
B
Weak base
H2O
Weak acid
BH
Strong acid
OH
Strong base
APPENDIX B
175
BASES
NH
~13
R HN C NH2
R NH2 ; R2 NH ; R3 N
1011
NH
R C NH2
910
Ar NH2
15
14
All the organic bases are weak bases, which is to say that in water the equilibrium will favor the free base. Thus, when salts of the organic bases made with
strong acids are dissolved in water, an appreciable quantity of hydronium ion will
exist and the pH of the aqueous solution will be acidic, the degree of acidity depending on the strength of the base.
APPENDIX
Drug Metabolism
INTRODUCTION
The biologic transformation of a drug molecule by enzymes present in the body is
commonly referred to as drug metabolism. The process of drug metabolism is usually considered to be a process that leads to detoxification and increased water solubility. In actual fact, metabolism as a chemical transforming process can lead to an
increase in toxicity, an activation or deactivation of the biologic action, and in some
cases a decrease in water solubility. In addition, drugs represent only one small
group of substrates that may undergo metabolism. Any substance foreign to the
body can potentially be metabolized after entering the body. A more general term
for exogenous substances is the term xenobiotics. Xenobiotics represent any foreign
chemical and include intentional and unintentional food additives (i.e., herbicides
and pesticides), volatile chemicals (i.e., substances in cigarette smoke), chemicals
in the drinking water, environmental pollutants in the home and the workplace, as
well as drugs. Finally, xenobiotic metabolism, while primarily occurring in the liver,
may also occur at extrahepatic sites, including intestine (both within the lumen and
the intestinal mucosa), kidney, lungs, nervous tissue, and plasma.
METABOLIC ENZYMES
Xenobiotic metabolism is generally divided into two types of reactions, referred
to as phase 1 reactions and phase 2 reactions. Phase 1 reactions include oxidation,
reduction, and hydrolysis reactions. These reactions generally involve introduction
of a new functional group into the molecule. Phase 2 reactions, which normally
follow phase 1, involve conjugation reactions such as acetylation, sulfation, glucuronidation, and conjugation with amino acids. Generally, conjugation reactions
lead to inactivation of drug molecules. In many instances xenobiotic metabolism involves a combination of both phase 1 and phase 2 reactions. In any case, xenobiotic
metabolism can be predicted and relies on the nature of the functional group or
groups present in the organic molecule.
Oxygenase Enzymes
CYTOCHROME P450
A major oxidative enzyme system, and the most studied human enzyme system, is
the cytochrome P450 monooxygenase family of enzymes (commonly abbreviated
as CYP450). Found in the smooth endoplasmic reticulum of the liver, as well as in
176
APPENDIX C
DRUG METABOLISM
177
some extrahepatic tissue, CYP450 is a very complex enzyme made up of ironprotoporphyrin, NADPH, flavin protein, phospholipids, phosphatidylcholine, and
molecular oxygen. CYP450 monooxygenase is not a single enzyme, but instead a
family of closely related isoforms. A large number of different isoforms of CYP450
have been identified, each showing a different degree of selectivity and range of
activity towards various xenobiotics. It appears that at least eight isoforms of
CYP450 play important roles in drug metabolism. Genetic variation appears to
play a role in defining the content of each isoform present in human beings and
may account for the variations and extent of drug metabolism seen in individual
patients. Scientists are just beginning to understand and characterize the structural requirements for selectivity associated with the isoforms of CYP450. The
emerging area of pharmacogenomics (i.e., the selection of the right drug for the
right patient) can be expected to rely heavily on defining the genetic makeup of
CYP450 isoforms of individuals. For a more detailed look at this family of enzymes, their mechanisms of metabolism, and the potential for drug-drug interaction, the reader is referred to Foyes Principles of Medicinal Chemistry, 6th ed.
Chapter 10.
CYP450 CATALYZED REACTIONS
The common metabolic oxidation reactions involving CYP450 are shown in Table
C-1. Oxidation of hydrocarbons is usually dependent upon the nature of the hydrocarbon. While aromatic hydroxylation is quite common, the oxidation of an
alkane or alkene is not very common. Oxidation of the alkane carbon adjacent to an
aromatic ring is more likely to occur than other sites of alkane oxidation. Alkene
metabolism of natural substrates is more likely than is oxidation of alkene xenobiotics.
Dealkylation of short straight chain ethers and amines is a common reaction catalyzed by CYP450. In the case of ethers, it is common for methyl, ethyl, or propyl
aryl ethers to be dealkylated, giving rise to phenols and formaldehyde, acetylaldehyde, or propanaldehyde, respectively. Primary amines undergo deamination,
while secondary and tertiary short chain amines undergo dealkylation, giving ammonia, a primary amine, or a secondary amine, respectively. Deamination and
dealkylation are both identical processes.
Finally, thioethers are oxidized by CYP450 enzymes, leading to a sulfoxide, a
single oxidation, or a sulfone, a second oxidation. While thioethers are prone to this
type of oxidation, CYP450 is not the usual catalyst for this reaction (see below).
Since the CYP450 family of enzymes are common metabolizing enzymes for a
wide variety of xenobiotics, it should not be surprising to find drug-drug, drugfood, and drug-environmental chemical interactions, which will be generically referred to as drug-drug interactions. These drug-drug interactions may result
from more than one xenobiotic interacting with the same CYP450 isoform. One
simple explanation for why such interactions can occur is shown for two chemical substances, D1 and D2, which react with the same subfamily of CYP450. If
K1K2, then D1 will be metabolized in preference to D2, leaving unexpectedly
high levels of unmetabolized D2. A large number of drugs are recognized as
inhibitors of specific subfamilies of CYP450. Thus, through this or similar
178
SUBSTRATE
ENZYME
PRODUCT
Alkane
CYP450
Alcohol
Uncommon
Alkene
CYP450
Peroxide
Uncommon
Aromatic ring
CYP450
Phenol
Common
Alcohol
ADH
Aldehyde/ketone
Common
Ether
CYP450
Phenol/
Common
Aldehyde
Aldehyde/ketone
ADH
1/2 alcohol
Uncommon
Aldehyde
Aldehyde
Carboxylic acid
Common
dehydrogenase
1 Amine
CYP450
Aldehyde
10
Common
2/3 Amine
CYP450
1/2 amine
10
Common
FMO
Hydroxylamines
Common
3 Alkylamine
FMO
N-oxide
Common
Ester/amide/
Hydrolase
Carboxylic acid
12
Common
CYP450
Sulfoxide/
14
Uncommon
14
Common
carbonate/carbamate
Thioether
Sulfone
FMO
Sulfoxide/
Sulfone
Thiol
FMO
Disulfide
Common
D1
CYP450
K1
D2
CYP450
K2
OH
D1
OH
D2
APPENDIX C
179
DRUG METABOLISM
FLAVIN MONOOXYGENASE
FMO
R1 N R 2
R3
FMO
R1 N R 2
OH
R S H
FMO
R S S R
O
R S R'
FMO
R S R'
FMO
R S R'
O
ALCOHOL DEHYDROGENASE
Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), a soluble enzyme found in the cytosol, is a nonhepatic enzyme capable of oxidizing primary and to a lesser extent secondary alcohols to aldehydes and ketones, respectively. While CYP450 is known to also have
the ability of oxidizing selected alcohols to aldehydes, alcohol dehydrogenase appears to be the major alcohol-oxidizing enzyme. Alcohol dehydrogenase is also capable of reducing aldehydes and ketones to alcohols, although this does not appear
to be as common a reaction.
R CH2 OH
ADH
O
R C H
Aldehyde
dehydrogenase
O
R C OH
180
ALDEHYDE DEHYDROGENASE
There are a number of enzymes with the ability to catalyze the oxidation of an aldehyde to the corresponding carboxylic acid. Such enzymes are collectively categorized as aldehyde dehydrogenases. Included in this group is the enzyme ADH.
These enzymes are commonly found in the cytoplasm.
Hydrolase Enzymes
Another collection of enzymes are those that generically may be called hydrolases. These enzymes attack the functional derivatives of carboxylic acids, leading
to hydrolysis. Examples of such enzymes are carboxyesterases, arylesterases,
cholinesterase, and serine endopeptidases. These enzymes are found in a wide
variety of tissues and fluids. The hydrolase enzymes tend to be more effective in
hydrolyzing esters than amides, but amidase enzymes do exist that break down
amides to a carboxylic acid and an amine.
Amide hydrolysis tends to occur more commonly with highly lipophilic amides.
Conjugation Reactions
Phase 2 reactions consist of reactions in which new chemical bonds are formed between an organic functional group and a substrate such as glucuronic acid, sulfuric
acid, acetic acid, or methyl groups. Generally, one thinks of a conjugation reaction
as one that leads to metabolites with increased water solubility, but if one considers acetylation and methylation as conjugation reactions, it can be seen that water
solubility may actually decrease. Also, it has been generally thought that conjugation of an organic functional group leads to loss of biologic activity, but recent examples have shown that in some cases the conjugates have increased activity. In
most cases the conjugation reactions require the action of a cofactor to complete
the reaction. The substrate and an endogenous molecule are brought together,
leading to the formation of a new chemical bond. A phase 2 conjugation reaction
can follow an initial phase 1 reaction, but it is not uncommon for a phase 2 reaction to occur as the only metabolic reaction. Also, it is possible that multiple conjugation reactions can occur to the same substrate, although this is unlikely since if
the water solubility of the initial conjugation metabolite is high the product will be
rapidly excreted, thus preventing further metabolism.
GLUCURONIDATION
Glucuronidation consists of the addition of D-glucuronic acid to a variety of substrates, including alcohols, phenols, primary, secondary and occasionally tertiary
amines, and carboxylic acids (Table C-2). The glucuronic acid is transferred to
the substrate from the cofactor uridine-5-diphospho--D-glucuronic acid
(UDPGA). The enzyme responsible for catalyzing this reaction is a UDP-glucuronosyl transferase, which like the CYP450 represents a family of enzymes.
These transferases are found in the endoplasmic reticulum of the liver and in
APPENDIX C
181
DRUG METABOLISM
CHAPTER
REFERENCE
SUBSTRATE
OCCURRENCE
Glucuronidation
Alcohol
Common
Phenol
Common
1/2 Amine
10
Common
3 Amine
10
Uncommon
Carboxylic acid
11
Common
Sulfation
Alcohol
Common
Phenol
Common
1/2 Amine
10
Uncommon
Arylamine
10
Common
Common
Acetylation
Phenol
Methylation
Common
Alcohol
Common
Phenol
Common
Thiol
Common
O
HN
COO
O H
O
N
O
O
OH
O P O P O H2C
HO
O
O
O
OH
HO OH
Uridine-5'-diphospho--D-glucuronic acid
(UDPGA)
R X H
(X = O, N,S, O C )
O
UDPGA
Hydrophilic groups
COO
O X R
OH
H
HO
OH
Glucuronide
182
Sulfation consists of the addition of sulfuric acid to a variety of substrates, including alcohols, phenol, and to a lesser extent primary and secondary amines (see
Table C-2). The sulfuric acid is transferred to the substrate from the cofactor 3phosphoadenosine-5-phosphosulfate (PAPS). The enzymes responsible for catalyzing these reactions are again a family of transferases, the sulfotransferases.
These transferases are found primarily in hepatic tissue. Water solubility of the sulfate conjugate is greatly increased since the sulfate is nearly completely ionized at
physiologic pH.
NH2
N
N
N
O
O
O S O P O H2C
O
O
O
H2O3P O OH
3'-Phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate
(PAPS)
R X H
(X = O, N )
PAPS
Hydrophilic ion-dipole
O
O S X R
O
Sulfate
ACETYLATION
Acetylation consists of the addition of an acetate to primary aryl amines (common reaction) and to a lesser extent primary alkyl amines (see Table C-2). The
acetate is transferred to the substrate from the cofactor acetylcoenzyme A
(acetyl-CoA). The enzymes responsible for catalyzing these reactions are again
a family of transferases, the N-acetyltransferases. These transferases are found
primarily in hepatic tissue. Depending on the genetic makeup of the patient, the
acetylation may be a fast reaction or a slow reaction. Slow acetylators will have
higher blood levels of the substrate, while fast acetylators will have higher blood
levels of the metabolite. Acetylation products usually show a decrease in water
solubility.
APPENDIX C
183
DRUG METABOLISM
NH2
N
N
N
O OH CH3
O
O
HN C C C CH2 O P O P O H2C
H
O
CH2
CH3
O
O
H
H2C C N CH2CH2 S C CH3
H2O3P O OH
O
O
Acetylcoenzyme A (Acetyl-CoA)
R'
NH2
Acetyl-CoA
O
H
N C CH3
R'
Acetylated metabolite
METHYLATION
Methylation consists of the addition of a methyl group to primarily alcohols, phenols, amines, and thiols (see Table C-2). The methyl is transferred to the substrate
from the cofactor S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM). The enzymes responsible for
catalyzing these reactions are again a family of O-, N-, and S-methyltransferases.
Methylation products usually show a decrease in water solubility. Methylation reactions are quite common with endogenous substrates such as norepinephrine and
dopamine and drugs that have structural similarities to the natural endogenous
metabolites.
NH2
N
N
NH2
N
HOOC
S H2C
O
CH3
HO OH
S-Adenosyl-L-methionine
(SAM)
+
NH2
HO
OH
OH
OH
OH
or
SAM
NH2
HO
OCH3
NHCH3
HO
OH
Methylation
APPENDIX
Learning Objectives
NOMENCLATURE
Students should be able to:
1. Identify the organic functional groups present in drug molecules.
2. Correctly identify or draw the general structure of an organic functional
group from its generic name.
3. Identify a heterocyclic nucleus given its commonly used nomenclature.
4. Identify and assign stereochemical nomenclature to individual functional
groups and to functional groups within polyfunctional molecules.
184
APPENDIX D
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
185
HETEROCYCLIC MOLECULES
Students should be able to:
16. Assign pH characteristics to the common heterocycles and identify the
atom(s) responsible for the heterocycles acidity or basicity.
17. Predict whether the heterocycle is aromatic or not.
18. Predict and draw/identify the structure of instability products (in vitro) of
common to heterocycles where appropriate.
19. Predict and draw/identify the structure of metabolic products (in vivo)
formed from common heterocycles.
PROTEINS
Students should be able to:
26. Identify the natural occurring amino acids and assign the common abbreviations to each of these amino acids.
186
27. Discuss the common chemical instabilities (in vitro) of proteins and identify protein-derived instability products.
28. Distinguish between primary, secondary, and tertiary structures of proteins.
29. Predict the common metabolic products (in vivo) formed in proteins and
identify the products of metabolism.
Glossary
acid. a substance that can give up or donate a proton (Brnsted-Lowry) or has
the ability to accept a pair of electrons (Lewis).
aromatic ring. an exceptionally stable ring system that results from overlapping
electrons, most commonly six electrons within a five- or six-membered ring.
base. a substance that can donate a pair of electrons (Lewis) or can accept a
proton (Brnsted-Lowry).
carbonyl. a carbon doubly-bonded to an oxygen. A carbonyl is not considered
an organic functional group, but is part of the following functional groups:
ketone, aldehyde, and carboxylic acid and its derivatives.
chiral or chirality. refers to an asymmetric center (usually a carbon with four
different substituents) within a structure resulting in two nonsuperimposable
structures. These structures are enantiomers of each other.
conjugation reaction. a form of metabolism, normally referred to as a phase 2
metabolism, consisting of glucuronidation, sulfation, acetylation, or
methylation.
dipole. unequal sharing of a pair of electrons resulting in a partial negative ()
and partial positive () charge within a molecule.
E and Z nomenclature. a nomenclature assigned to isomeric compounds
resulting from a lack of free rotation around a double bond or a cyclic ring.
When the two top-priority substituents appear on the opposite sides of the
molecule the E configuration is assigned (previously trans or anti), while if the
two top-priority groups appear on the same side of the molecule the Z
configuration is assigned (previously cis or syn).
electrophile. electron loving and as such is commonly a positively charged
species which will react with an electron-rich substance (nucleophile).
enantiomer. two compounds with the same molecular formula, but which are
nonsuperimposable mirror images of each other. They are able to bend plane
polarized light to the same degree in opposite directions.
hydrophilic. water loving. Hydrophilic refers to the ability of an organic
functional group to bond to water due to the affinity it has for water.
International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). the organization
responsible for defining and setting the official nomenclature for chemical
substances.
intermolecular bonding. chemical bonding between two separate identical or
nonidentical molecules.
intramolecular bonding. chemical bonding within a specific molecule.
ion. a formally charged atom that can be either a cation () or an anion ().
isoforms, protein. different forms of the same protein that can result from
various modifications prior to or after formation of the protein.
lipophilic. fat-loving. Lipophilic refers to the affinity that an organic functional
group has for an oily or lipid layer such as octanol or a lipid membrane.
187
188
GLOSSARY
Index
Page numbers in italics indicate figures; those followed by t indicate tables.
A
Acetal, 45, 45
Acetaldehyde, 43
Acetic acid, 62
Acetone, 43
Acetylation, 103, 181t, 182183
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitor, case
study, 8384
Acid
defined, 30
reaction of, with base in water, 171172, 173t
Acid-base chart, 170t
Acid-base pair, conjugate, 167168, 168
Acidic organic functional groups, 173174, 174t
Acidity, 167175
of carboxylic acid, 65
defined, 167168
of phenols, 3032, 31
of piperidine, 113
relative strengths of, 169
of sulfonamides, 86, 87
in water solubility, 161162, 162
Acridine, 129, 130
Adenine, 122124, 123, 124
Aerosol dusting products, case study, 21
Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), 25, 179
Alcohols
aldehydes and, chemical reaction between,
4445
case studies, 2728
ketones and, chemical reaction between,
4445
metabolism of, 2526, 26
nomenclature of, 23, 23
physical-chemical properties of, 2425
boiling points, 24, 24t
oxidation, 25
solubility of, 2425, 24t, 26, 153, 158t
stability, 25
Aldehyde dehydrogenases, 180
Aldehydes, 4248
case studies, 4748
hydrazine and, 92, 93
metabolic oxidation/reduction reactions of,
178t
metabolism of, 4547, 4647
189
190
Amines (Cont.)
physical-chemical properties of, 5055
boiling points of, 50, 51t
conjugation reactions of, 57, 57
dealkylation of, 5556
salts of, 5355, 55
solubility of, 50, 51t, 158t, 159, 159
quaternary ammonium salts, 5859
Amino acids (See also Proteins)
conformational changes, 146, 147148,
147148
deamidation reactions of, 145, 145146
hydrogen bonding of, 147148, 147148
hydrolysis reaction of, 146, 146
oxidation reactions of, 144, 144145
in proteins, 141
racemization reaction of, 146, 147
structures of various, 143t
4-Aminobenzene sulfonamide, 87
Aminoglycoside, antibiotics, 45
2-Aminopropane, 49
Ampicillin, case study, 6061
Amyl nitrite, 91, 91
Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor,
case study, 7172
Anisole, 36, 38
Anthracene, 16
Anthracycline anticancer drugs, case study, 5960
Antihistamines, case study, 70
Antisense drugs, 133, 134, 136
ARA C, 115
Arachidonic acid, 64
Arginine, 81
Arginine vasopressin (AVP), 142, 149, 150
Aromatic hydrocarbons, 1618
metabolism of, 1718, 18
nomenclature of, 16, 16
physical-chemical properties of, 1617
hydroxylation, 16
Arylamine, 90
Aryl nitro groups
metabolism of, 90, 91
Aryl sulfonamides
nomenclature of, 86, 87
physical-chemical properties of, 86
Aspartate (Asp), 146, 146, 147
Asymmetric molecules, 164166
Atorvastatin, 103
ATP, 124
Aziridine, 9899, 99
AZT, 101
B
Barbiturates, 117, 118, 118
Barbituric acid, 117119, 118
Base
INDEX
defined, 50
reaction of acid with, in water, 171172,
173t
strength of, 5051
strong, 51
weak, 51
Basicity, 167175
of amidines, 8182, 82
of amines, 5053, 51, 52
of carboxylic acids, 6768
defined, 167168
electrons and, 51, 52
of guanidines, 8182, 82
of pyridine, 113
relative strengths of, 169170
in water solubility, 161, 162
Basic organic functional groups, 174175, 175t
Benzene, 16
Benzene sulfonamide, 87
Benzene sulfonic acid, 85
Benzimidazole, 122, 122
Benzodiazepines, 128, 128129
Benzopyrroles, 120121, 121
Benzothiadiazine-1,1-dioxide, 127, 127128, 128
Benzothiazole, 122
Benzoxazole, 122
Benzylpenicillin, case study, 6061
Beta-lactam, 76, 76, 99100, 100
hydrolysis of, 100, 100
Bicyclic heterocycles
five-membered ring plus six-membered
four heteroatoms, 122124, 123, 124
nitrogen, 120121, 121
ring, 120124
two heteroatoms, 121122, 122
six-membered ring plus seven-membered
ring, 128, 128129
six-membered ring plus six-membered ring
nitrogen, 125, 125, 127, 127
oxygen, 125126, 126
sulfur, 126128, 127, 128
Boiling points
of alcohols, 24, 24t
of aldehyde, 43, 44t
of alkanes, 7t
of alkenes, 13
of amides, 77, 77t
of amines, 50, 51t
of carboxylic acids, 65
of esters, 74, 74t
of ethers, 3637, 37
of halogenated hydrocarbon, 20
of ketones, 43, 44t
of n-hexane, 7t
of phenols, 30, 30t, 31
of thioethers, 38
INDEX
of various carboxylic acids, 63t
Bonding, 15
cation-, 5, 5
covalent, 2, 2
dipole-dipole, 23, 3
hydrogen, 23, 3
ion-dipole, 4, 45
ionic attraction, 3, 34
2-Bromo-4-methylpentane, 19, 19
Buprenorphine, case study, 162163
iso-Butane, 6
N-Butane, 6, 7t
2-Butanone, 43
cis-2-Butene, 12
trans-2-Butene, 12
t-Butyl acetate, 73
tert-Butyl alcohol, 23
Butylbarbital, metabolism of, 10
1-Butylene, 11
iso-Butylene, 11
t-Butylethylmethylamine, 49
N-Butyliodide, 19
t-Butyl phenyl carbonate, 79
Butyric acid
ethanol and, chemical bonding between, 66
C
Caproic acid, 62
Carbamates, 7981, 158t, 178t
metabolism of, 8081, 81
nomenclature of, 79, 80
physical-chemical properties of, 80
Carbolic acid, 29
Carbonates, 7981, 158t, 178t
metabolism of, 8081, 81
nomenclature of, 79, 79
physical-chemical properties of, 80
Carbontetrachloride, 19
flammability of, 20
Carbonyl, defined, 42
Carboxylic acids, 45
carbonyl, 65
case studies, 7072
conjugation reactions of, 6869, 69
functional derivatives of, 7384
amides, 7679
amidines and guanidines, 8182
carbonates, carbamates, and ureas,
7981
case studies, 8284
esters, 7375
metabolism of, 6869
nomenclature of, 62, 6265
physical-chemical properties of, 6568
acidity of, 65
basicity of, 6768
191
boiling points of, 63t, 65
solubility of, 65, 158t
Catechol, 29
Cation-, bonding, 5, 5
Cefdinir, 92
Cefixime, case study, 9495
Ceftizoxime, 109
Celecoxib, 108
Cephalosporin, 99, 100
Chemical reactivity
of aldehydes, 4445
of ketones, 4445
of phenols, 32, 32
Chemical stability, of alkanes, 9
Chiral center, 165
Chirality, 165
Chiral molecules, 9
Chloramphenicol, case study, 9495
Chlordiazepoxide, 128
Chloroform, 19, 20
oxidation of, 20, 20
Chloroquine, 125
Chlorothiazide, 127
Chlorpromazine, 38, 39, 130
Chlorpropamide, 87
Chlorzoxazone, 122
Cimetidine, 38
Ciprofloxacin, 119
Clonidine, 81
Coenzyme A (CoA), 69
Combivir, case study, 139140
Conformational isomers, 1415, 15
Congestive heart failure (CHF), 59
Conjugate acid-base pair, 167168, 168
Conjugated estrogens, case study, 35
Conjugation reactions, 180183, 181t
acetylation, 181t, 182183
of amines, 57, 57
of carboxylic acids, 6869, 69
glucuronidation, 180182, 181t
methylation, 181t, 183
sulfation, 181t, 182
Corticosteroid ointment, case study, 48
Coumarin, 125126, 126
o-Cresol, 29
Cycloalkanes, 1315
Cyclohexane, 14, 14
Cyclohexanol, 30
Cyclopentane, 14, 14
Cyclopropane, 13, 14
CYP450 catalyzed reactions, 177178, 178t
Cysteines, 144, 144, 148
Cytidine-5'-monophosphate (CMP), 116
Cytidylic acid, 116
Cytochrome P450, 17, 176178
Cytosine, 114117, 115
192
D
Dealkylation
of amines, 5556, 177
of ethers, 38, 38, 177
metabolic, 38, 38, 39, 39
of piperidine, 113
of thioethers, 39, 39
Deamidation reactions, of amino acids, 145,
145146
Demethylation, of amines, 55
Deoxyadenylate, 124
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) (See Nucleic acids
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA))
Deoxyuridylic acid, 116, 116
Desimipramine, 55
Diamine oxidase (DAO), 56
Diazepam, 128
Diazines, 114, 114
Dibenzazepine, 127
Diethylether, 36
1,2-Dihydroxybenzene, 29
1,3-Dihydroxybenzene, 29
1,4-Dihydroxybenzene, 29
3,3-Dimethylbutanal, 43
Dimethylketone, 43
2,4-Dimethyl-4-phenylpentanoic acid, 62
Diphenhydramine, glucuronidation of, 58
Dipole-dipole bonding, 23, 3
Dipole-induced dipole attraction, 2
5,5-disubstituted barbituric acids, 118, 118, 119
DNA polymerase, case study, 138139
Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), 64
Drug-drug interactions, 177178, 178t
Drug interactions, cytochrome P450 and,
177178, 178t
Drug metabolism, 176183
conjugation reactions (See Conjugation
reactions)
defined, 176
hydrolase enzymes, 180
oxygenase enzymes (See Oxygenase
enzymes)
Drugs
phenolate salts and, 32
solubility of, 1
E
Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), 64
Electrons, basicity and, 51, 52
Emulsions, case study, 163
Enantiomeric forms, of molecules, 9
Enantiomers, 164165, 165
Enzymes
metabolic (See Metabolic enzymes)
protein hydrolyzing, 149, 150t
INDEX
Epothilone B, case study, 8283
Epoxides, 17, 9698, 98
Essential fatty acids, 64
Esterase, 80
Esters, 7376
metabolic oxidation/reduction reactions of,
178t
metabolism of, 75, 75
nomenclature of, 73, 73
physical-chemical properties of, 7375
boiling points of, 74, 74t
solubility of, 74, 74t, 158t
Ethanal, 43
Ethane, 6
Ethanoic acid, 62
Ethanol, 23, 6566
butyric acid and, chemical bonding between,
66
Ether anesthetics, case study, 41
Ethers
case studies, 4041
metabolic oxidation/reduction reactions of,
178t
metabolism of, 38, 38
nomenclature of, 36, 36
physical-chemical properties of, 3637, 37
boiling points, 3637, 37
oxidation, 37
solubility of, 3637, 37, 158t, 159, 159
Ethoxyethane, 36
Ethoxzolamide, 122
Ethyl alcohol, 23
Ethylchloride, 19
4-Ethyl-2,7-dimethyloctane, 67, 7
Ethylene, 11
Ethylene chloride, 19
Ethyl isopropyl carbonate, 79
Ethylmethylamine, 49
Ethylmethylether, 36
Ethylmethylketone, 43
N-Ethyl-N-methyl-2-methyl-2-aminopropane,
49
Ethyl 2-propyl carbonate, 79
F
Five-membered ring heterocycles
complex, 109112
nitrogen, 102103, 103
oxygen, 100102, 101, 102
sulfur, 104, 104105, 105
with two or more heteroatoms, 105112
Flavin monooxygenase (FMO), 39, 56, 179
Fluconazole, 111
5-Fluorouridine-2'-deoxyribosyl phosphate
(5-FUDR), 117, 117
193
INDEX
5-Fluorouridine monophosphate (5-FUMP),
117, 117
FMO (See Flavin monooxygenase (FMO))
Formaldehyde, 43
Formamide, 77
Formic acid, 62
Four-membered ring heterocycle, 99100, 100
5-FU, 115, 117
Furans, 100101, 101
Furosemide (Lasix), 101
case study, 130131
G
Glucuronic acid, 45, 46
Glucuronidation, 180182, 181t
of diphenhydramine, 58
Guanidines, 8182
physical-chemical properties of, 8182
Guanine, 122123, 123
H
Halogenated hydrocarbons, 1922
case studies, 2122
metabolism of, 20, 2021
nomenclature of, 19, 19
physical-chemical properties of, 1920, 20
boiling points, 20
flammability, 20
oxidation, 20, 20
solubility, 20
H2 antagonists, case study, 9394
Hemiacetal, formation and instability, 45
Hemiketal, formation and instability, 45
N-Heptane, 7t
Heteroatom
defined, 96
prefixes for, 97t
Heterocycles, 96132
bicyclic (See Bicyclic heterocycles)
case studies, 130132
defined, 96
five-membered ring
complex, 109112
nitrogen, 102103, 103
oxygen, 100102, 101, 102
sulfur, 104, 104105, 105
with two or more heteroatoms, 105112
four-membered ring, 99100, 100
seven- and eight-membered ring, 120, 120
six-membered ring, 112113, 113
saturated, 119, 119
suffixes for, 97t
with two heteroatoms, 114119
three-membered ring, 9699
nitrogen, 9899, 99
I
Imidazole, 107109, 108
Imidazolidine, 107, 108, 109
Imidazoline, 107, 109
2-Imidazoline, 107, 108
Imine, 92
Imipramine, 55, 130
Indole, 120121, 121
Induced dipole attraction, 2
Intermolecular bonding (See Bonding)
International Union of Pure and Applied
Chemistry (IUPAC) (See also specific
organic group)
194
International Union of Pure and Applied
Chemistry (IUPAC) (Cont.)
nomenclature of, 6, 67
Intramolecular hydrogen bonding (IMHB),
161, 161
Ion-dipole bonding, 4, 45
Ionic attraction, 3, 34
Isoindole, 120121, 121
Isomers, 12, 164165
alkene, 1315
cis, 12, 15
conformational, 1415, 15
diazine, 114, 114
geometric, 12
trans, 12, 15
Isoniazid, 93
Isopropyl alcohol, 23
Isopropylamine, 49
Isopropyl propionate, 73
Isoquinoline, 125, 125
Isosorbide dinitrate, 91
Isoxazole, 105, 105106, 107
IUPAC (International Union of Pure and
Applied Chemistry) (See also specific
organic group)
nomenclature of, 6, 67
Ixabepilone (Ixempra), case study, 8283
K
Ketones, 4248
case studies, 4748
hydrazine and, 92, 93
metabolism of, 4547, 4647
nomenclature of, 42, 43
oximes and, 92, 92
physical-chemical properties of, 42, 4345
boiling points of, 43, 44t
chemical reactivity of, 4445
oxidation of, 44, 44, 46
solubility of, 44t, 158t
L
Lactam, 76, 76
Lactone, 73, 74, 125126
Lamivudine (3TC), case study, 139140
Levorphanol, case study, 162163
Linezolid, 111
Linoleic acid, 64
Linolenic acid, 64
Lipophilic molecule, defined, 1
Lipophobic molecule, defined, 1
Log P, 160162
Losartan, 111
LSD, 121
Lunamine, case study, 21
INDEX
M
Mechlorethamine, 99, 99
Meperidine, 113
Meprobamate, metabolism of, 10
Meropenem, 100
Messenger RNA (mRNA), 133, 136, 141 (See
also Nucleic acids)
Mesylates, 85, 85
Metabolic dealkylation, 38, 38, 39, 39
Metabolic enzymes, 176183
conjugation reactions, 180183, 181t
acetylation, 181t, 182183
glucuronidation, 180182, 181t
methylation, 181t, 183
sulfation, 181t, 182
hydrolase enzymes, 180
oxygenase enzymes, 176180
alcohol dehydrogenase, 179
aldehyde dehydrogenase, 180
cytochrome P450, 176178
flavin monooxygenase, 179
Metabolic oxidation, 39, 39
Metabolism
of alcohol, 2526, 26
phases, 2526, 26
of aldehydes, 4547, 4647
of alkanes, 910, 10
of alkenes, 13
of amides, 7779
of amines, 5558
of aromatic hydrocarbons, 1718, 18
of aryl nitro groups, 90, 91
of butylbarbital, 10
of carbamates, 8081, 81
of carbonates, 8081, 81
of carboxylic acids, 6869, 70
of esters, 75, 75
of ethers, 38, 38
of halogenated hydrocarbons, 20, 2021
of ketones, 4547, 4647
of meprobamate, 10
of nucleic acids, 136, 137
of oligonucleotides, 136, 137
of phenols, 33, 33
of proteins, 148150
of pyrimidine, 116, 116117, 117
of thioethers, 39, 39
of ureas, 8081
xenobiotic, 176
Methadone maintenance program, case study,
47
Methanal, 43
Methane, 6
Methane sulfonic acid, 85, 85
Methanoic acid, 62
195
INDEX
Methanol, 23
Methapyrilene, 104
Methionine, 144
Methoxybenzene, 36
2-Methoxy-4,4-dimethylpentane, 36
Methoxyethane, 36
Methyl alcohol, 23
N-Methylaminoethane, 49
Methylation, 33, 181t, 183
Methylation reaction, 57, 57
4-Methylbenzene sulfonamide, 87
Methylene chloride, 19
Methylfluoride, 19
N-Methyl-N-isopropylvaleramide, 76
N-Methyl-N-phenylbenzamide, 76
N-Methyl-N-2-propylpentanamide, 76
2-Methylphenol, 29
Methylphenylether, 36
Methylphenylketone, 43
2-Methyl-2-propanol, 23
2-Methyl-2-propyl ethanoate, 73
6-Methylthiopurine, 38, 39
5-methyluracil, 114117, 115
Metronidazole, 90, 108
Mevalonic acid, 62, 63
Monoamine oxidase (MAO), 56
Monomethoxy polyethylene glycol, case study,
152
Monounsaturated fatty acids, 6364
Morphine, case study, 162163
Morpholine, 119, 119
N
Naphthalene, 16
Nicotine, 103
Nitrate group, 9091, 91
Nitrazapam, 90
Nitrite group, 91, 91
Nitrogen
in five-membered ring heterocycles,
102103, 103
in five-membered ring heterocycles with two
or more heteroatoms, 105109, 105109
in five-membered ring plus six-membered
bicyclic heterocycles, 120121, 121
functional groups
case studies, 9395
hydrazide, 92, 93
hydrazine, 92, 93
hydrazone, 92, 93
nitrate, 9091, 91
nitrite, 91, 91
nitro, 90
oximes, 92, 92
oxidation of tertiary amine, 56, 56
O
Octahydroazocine, 120, 120
N-Octane, 7t
Oleaginous ointment (See Corticosteroid
ointment, case study)
Oleic acid, 64
Oligonucleotides, 133140
case studies, 138140
functions of, 133134
metabolism of, 136, 137
physical-chemical properties of, 135,
135136, 136, 137
ribose, 136, 137
Omega fatty acids, 64
Omeprazole, 122
Opioids, case study, 40, 162163
Organic nitrates, 90, 91
Oxazole, 105, 105106, 107
Oxazolidinones, 110111, 111, 112
Oxidation
of alcohols, 25, 25
of aldehydes, 44, 44, 46
of alkenes, 13, 13
of carboxylic acids, 69, 69
of chloroform, 20, 20
196
Oxidation (Cont.)
of ethers, 37
of ketones, 44, 44
metabolic, 39, 39
nitrogen, of tertiary amine, 56, 56
of phenols, 32, 33
of thioethers, 39, 39
of thiol group, 3940
Oxidation reactions, of amino acids, 144,
144145
Oxidation reductions, in protein metabolism,
148, 149
Oximes, 92, 92
and aldehydes, 92, 92
and ketones, 92, 92
Oxiranes, 9698, 97t, 98
Oxolane, 101
Oxole, 101
Oxygen
in five-membered ring heterocycles,
100102, 101, 102
in five-membered ring heterocycles with two
or more heteroatoms, 105107, 105107
in six-membered ring plus six-membered
ring bicyclic heterocycles, 125126, 126
in three-membered ring heterocycles, 9698,
97t, 98
Oxygenase enzymes, 176180
alcohol dehydrogenase, 179
aldehyde dehydrogenase, 180
cytochrome P450, 176178
flavin monooxygenase, 179
Oxytocin, case study, 151
P
Palmitoleic acid, 64
Paradimethylaminobenzaldehyde, 158, 158
Pegasys, case study, 152
Peg-interferon alfa-2a, case study, 152
Penicillin, 100
Pentaerythritol tetranitrate, case study, 9495
N-Pentane, 7t
Pentazocine, 120
Peptides, hydrolysis of, 149, 150t
Peroxides, 37, 37
Phenanthrene, 16
Phenmetrazine, 119
Phenobarbital, 118
Phenols
case studies, 3435
metabolism of, 33, 33
nomenclature of, 29, 29
physical-chemical properties of, 2932, 30t,
3133
acidity, 3032, 31
INDEX
boiling points, 30, 30t, 31
chemical reactivity, 32, 32
oxidation, 32, 33
salt formation, 32
solubility of, 30, 30t, 31, 158t, 159, 159
Phenothiazine, 129, 130
Phentolamine, 81
Phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase
(PNMT), 57
1-Phenylethanone, 43
Phenylethylamine, case study, 27
Phenyl 2-methyl-2-propyl carbonate, 79
N-Phenyl-N-(2-propyl)-2-aminopentane, 49
Phenytoin, 111
Phosgene, 20
Piperazine, 119, 119
Piperidine, 112113, 113
Polythiazide, 127
Polyunsaturated fatty acids, 64
Praziquantel, 125
Prazosin, 127
Premarin, case study, 35
Procaine, 161162, 162
Propanal, 43
Propane, 6, 7t
Propanoic acid, 62
2-Propanol, 23
2-Propanone, 43
Propionaldehyde, 43
Propionic acid, 62
Propylbromide, 19
Propylene, 11
2-Propyl propanoate, 73
Protein hydrolyzing enzymes, 149, 150t
Proteins, 141152 (See also Amino acids)
case studies, 151152
metabolism of, 148150
hydrolysis of peptides, 149, 150t
oxidation reductions, 148, 149
nomenclature of, 141, 142
physical-chemical properties of, 141148
conformational changes, 146, 147148,
147148
deamidation reactions, 145, 145146
hydrolysis reaction, 146, 146
oxidation reactions, 144, 144145
racemization reaction, 146, 147
Psychastigmine, case study, 8384
Pteridine, 126, 127
Purine, 122124, 123, 124
Pyrazine, 114
Pyrazole, 107109, 108
Pyridazine, 114
Pyridine, 112114, 113
Pyrimethamine, case study, 8889
197
INDEX
Pyrimidine, 114, 114119
metabolism of, 116, 116117, 117
nomenclature of, 114, 115, 117, 118
physical-chemical properties of, 114116,
115, 117119, 118119
Q
Quaternary ammonium salts, 5859
nomenclature of, 58
physical-chemical properties of, 5859
Quinazoline, 126, 127
Quinocrine, 130
Quinoline, 125, 125
R
Racemization reaction, of amino acids, 146, 147
Resorcinol, 29
Ribonucleic acid (RNA) (See also Nucleic acids)
functions of, 133
nomenclature of, 133134
physical-chemical properties of, 136
uracil in synthesis of, 116, 116117
Ribose oligonucleotides, 136, 137
Rifampin, 93
Rivastigmine, case study, 8384
Rosiglitazone, 113
S
S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), 33, 57
Salts
of amines, 5355, 55
of carboxylic acids, 68
of 5,5-disubstituted barbituric acids, 119
of phenols, 32
quaternary ammonium, 5859
of sulfonamide, 86, 87
SAM (See S-adenosylmethionine (SAM))
Schiff base, 92
Six-membered ring heterocycles, 112113, 113
saturated, 119, 119
with two heteroatoms, 114119
Sodium chloride, solubility of, 8, 8
Solubility, 15, 153163, 158t
of alcohol, 2425, 24t, 26, 153, 158t
of aldehydes, 44t, 158t
of alkenes, 13
of amides, 77, 77t, 158t
of amines, 50, 51t, 158t, 159, 159
of carboxylic acids, 65, 158t
dipole-dipole bonding, 23, 3
of drugs, 1
of esters, 74, 74t, 158t
of ethers, 3637, 37, 158t, 159, 159
of halogenated hydrocarbon, 20
ion-dipole bonding, 4, 45
ionic attraction, 3, 34
of ketones, 44t, 158t
key to, 1
of n-hexane, 8
of phenols, 30, 30t, 31, 158t, 159, 159
predicting, 153163
analytic method for, 160162
case studies, 162163
chemical bonding, 153156
empiric method for, 156159
of sodium chloride, 8, 8
of sulfonic acids, 86t
of thioethers, 39
van der Waals forces, 2, 2
of various carboxylic acids, 63t
Stability
of alcohol, 25
of amides, 78
of carboxylic acids, 66
Stereoisomerism, 9, 9, 164166
Substituted barbiturates, 117, 118, 119
Sufentanil, 104
Sulfadiazine, case study, 8889
Sulfamethizole, 110
Sulfation, 181t, 182
Sulfisoxazole, 87
Sulfonamides
acidity of, 86, 87
case study, 8788
nomenclature of, 86, 87
physical-chemical properties of, 86
Sulfone, 178t
Sulfonic acids
nomenclature of, 85, 85
physical-chemical properties of, 85
solubility of, 86t
Sulfoxide, 178t
Sulfur
in five-membered ring heterocycles, 104,
104105, 105
in five-membered ring heterocycles with two
or more heteroatoms, 109, 109
in six-membered ring plus six-membered
ring bicyclic heterocycles, 126128,
127, 128
Symmetric molecules, 164, 164
T
Taxane therapy, case study, 27
Tetraethyl ammonium (TEA) sulfate, 58
Tetrahydrofuran, 100102, 101, 102
Tetrahydrothiophene, 104, 104, 105
2,5,7,7-Tetramethyl-4-octanone, 43
Tetrazoles, 110, 111
Thiadiazole, 110, 110
198
Thiazide diuretics, 127, 127128, 128
1,3-Thiazole, 109, 109
Thiazolsulfone, 109
Thienamycin, 100
Thioethers, 178t
metabolism of, 39, 39
nomenclature of, 38, 38
physical-chemical properties of, 3839
Thiol, 178t
Thiol oxidation, 3940
Thiophene, 104, 104
Three-membered ring heterocycles
nitrogen, 9899, 99
oxygen, 9698, 97t, 98
Thymidylic acid, 116, 116
Thymine, 114116, 115
Timolol, 110
Tolazamide, 120
p-Toluene sulfonamide, 87
p-Toluene sulfonic acid, 85
Triamterene, 127
Triazoles, 110, 111
Tricyclic heterocycles, 129130, 130
Trifluorothymidine, 115
3,6,6-Trimethyl-3-heptene, 11, 1112
Tryptophan, 144, 145
Tyrosine, 144, 145, 156, 157
U
UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT)
in alcohol metabolism, 26
UGT (See UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT))
Uracil, 114116, 115
INDEX
Ureas, 7981, 158t
metabolism of, 8081
nomenclature of, 79, 80
physical-chemical properties of, 80
Uric acid, 124, 124
case study, 131132
Uridylic acid, 116, 116
V
Van der Waals forces, 2, 2
W
Warfarin, 125126, 126
Water
acid-base properties of, 171
reaction of acid with base in, 171172, 173t
Water solubility (See Solubility)
Watson-Crick model, 135
X
Xanthine, 123, 123124, 124
Xenobiotic metabolism, 176
Xenobiotics, 176
Z
Zidovudine (ZDV), case study, 139140
Zwitterion, 157, 157