Issue 30, 2007

Lactonisation—a degradation pathway for active pharmaceutical compounds: an in silico study in amorphous trehalose

Abstract

The lactonisation of a CCR1 inhibitor (CC chemokine receptor 1, involved in autoimmune diseases) featuring a hydroxyl group in a γ-position (γ-OH) with respect to an amide group has been investigated in silico. The two key steps of the lactonisation reaction are (i) rearrangement to an optimal conformation and (ii) the formation of the lactone (ring closure) and expulsion of NH3. Quantum chemical calculations in the gas phase were employed to identify conformers of the molecule with favorable starting geometries for a lactonisation reaction. In total, calculations of 1296 conformers revealed that it is energetically feasible for an inhibitor molecule to adopt a conformation where the carbon atom of the amide group (Camide) is suitably close to the oxygen atom of the γ-OH (Oγ) to facilitate a successful lactonisation reaction. Additionally, molecular dynamics methods were used to show that rearrangement to a suitable conformer for lactonisation to occur happens to a lesser extent when the CCR1 inhibitor was embedded in an amorphous trehalose matrix (a model carbohydrateexcipient). The mechanism of the actual lactonisation was investigated using the complete Linear Synchronous Transit/Quadratic Synchronous Transit (LST/QST) method. This was performed in both the gas phase and in water and was found to be a concerted reaction.

Graphical abstract: Lactonisation—a degradation pathway for active pharmaceutical compounds: an in silico study in amorphous trehalose

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Dec 2006
Accepted
05 Jun 2007
First published
28 Jun 2007

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2007,9, 3999-4006

Lactonisation—a degradation pathway for active pharmaceutical compounds: an in silico study in amorphous trehalose

A. Simperler, A. Kornherr, R. Chopra, W. Jones, W. D. Samuel Motherwell and G. Zifferer, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2007, 9, 3999 DOI: 10.1039/B618717J

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