TY - JOUR
T1 - Hydrogen bond dynamics and conformational flexibility in antipsychotics
AU - Pereira, Jose E.M.
AU - Eckert, Juergen
AU - Rudic, Svemir
AU - Yu, Dehong
AU - Mole, Richard
AU - Tsapatsaris, Nikolaos
AU - Bordallo, Heloisa N.
N1 - Funding Information:
J. E. M. P. thanks José Gadelha da Silva Filho for continuous discussions related to the DFT results. We are grateful to Marianne Lund Jensen for her assistance during the thermoanalysis experiments, to Niels Vissing Holst for his support in the X-ray data collection and to Jiwoong Lee for discussions related to the chemistry of these molecules. The authors thank Ivana Gonzales and Panchapakesan Ganesh for assistance with some of the periodic DFT calculations. J. E. M. P.'s research was supported through the Brazilian Science Without Borders (Process number 207740/2014-3) program. JE used resources of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility operated under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. J.E. would also like to thank the Physics and Chemistry of Materials Group (T-1) at LANL for making computing resources available. The thermoanalysis apparatus used in the work was financed by Carlsbergfondets (grants 2013-01-0589 and CF14-0230). We thank the Danish Agency for Science, Technology, and Innovation for funding the instrument center DanScatt. We acknowledge the support of Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (ISIS Facility) and the Australian Center for Neutron Scattering in providing the neutron research facilities used in this work.
Funding Information:
J. E. M. P. thanks JoséGadelha da Silva Filho for continuous discussions related to the DFT results. We are grateful to Marianne Lund Jensen for her assistance during the thermo-analysis experiments, to Niels Vissing Holst for his support in the X-ray data collection and to Jiwoong Lee for discussions related to the chemistry of these molecules. The authors thank Ivana Gonzales and Panchapakesan Ganesh for assistance with some of the periodic DFT calculations. J. E. M. P.’s research was supported through the Brazilian Science Without Borders (Process number 207740/2014-3) program. JE used resources of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility operated under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. J.E. would also like to thank the Physics and Chemistry of Materials Group (T-1) at LANL for making computing resources available. The thermo-analysis apparatus used in the work was financed by Carlsberg-fondets (grants 2013_01_0589 and CF14-0230). We thank the Danish Agency for Science, Technology, and Innovation for funding the instrument center DanScatt. We acknowledge the support of Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (ISIS Facility) and the Australian Center for Neutron Scattering in providing the neutron research facilities used in this work.
Publisher Copyright:
© the Owner Societies 2019.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Effective treatment of disorders of the central nervous system can often be achieved using bioactive molecules of similar moieties to those known to be tolerable. A better understanding of the solid-state characteristics of such molecules could thereby create new opportunities for research on pharmaceutical preparations and drug prescriptions, while information about their rich intramolecular dynamics may well add an important aspect in the field of in silico drug discovery. We have therefore investigated three different antipsychotic drugs: Haloperidol (C21H23ClFNO2, HAL), aripiprazole (C23H27Cl2N3O2, APZ) and quetiapine hemifumarate (C21H25N3O2S·0.5C4H4O4, QTP) based on similarities either in their structures, hydrophobic and hydrophilic moieties, or in their modes of action, typical or atypical. Our aim was to test the structural and molecular stability of these three different antipsychotics. To this end, we compared the molecular vibrations observed by inelastic neutron spectroscopy of these systems with those from theoretical periodic calculations of the crystalline antipsychotics using the Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP). While most of the observed features in the lattice region were reasonably well represented by the calculations, the overall spectra were relatively complex, and hence traditional assignment procedures for the approximately 600 normal modes in the unit cell were not possible. These results indicate that in the search for new drug candidates, not only analysis of the flexibility of the receptor, but also the dynamics of the active molecules play a role in improving the prediction of binding affinities.
AB - Effective treatment of disorders of the central nervous system can often be achieved using bioactive molecules of similar moieties to those known to be tolerable. A better understanding of the solid-state characteristics of such molecules could thereby create new opportunities for research on pharmaceutical preparations and drug prescriptions, while information about their rich intramolecular dynamics may well add an important aspect in the field of in silico drug discovery. We have therefore investigated three different antipsychotic drugs: Haloperidol (C21H23ClFNO2, HAL), aripiprazole (C23H27Cl2N3O2, APZ) and quetiapine hemifumarate (C21H25N3O2S·0.5C4H4O4, QTP) based on similarities either in their structures, hydrophobic and hydrophilic moieties, or in their modes of action, typical or atypical. Our aim was to test the structural and molecular stability of these three different antipsychotics. To this end, we compared the molecular vibrations observed by inelastic neutron spectroscopy of these systems with those from theoretical periodic calculations of the crystalline antipsychotics using the Vienna ab initio simulation package (VASP). While most of the observed features in the lattice region were reasonably well represented by the calculations, the overall spectra were relatively complex, and hence traditional assignment procedures for the approximately 600 normal modes in the unit cell were not possible. These results indicate that in the search for new drug candidates, not only analysis of the flexibility of the receptor, but also the dynamics of the active molecules play a role in improving the prediction of binding affinities.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85069431186&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1039/c9cp02456e
DO - 10.1039/c9cp02456e
M3 - Article
C2 - 31257373
AN - SCOPUS:85069431186
SN - 1463-9076
VL - 21
SP - 15463
EP - 15470
JO - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
JF - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
IS - 28
ER -