Large-Scale Evaluation of Collision Cross Sections to Investigate Blood-Brain Barrier Permeation of Drugs

Successful drug administration to the central nervous system requires accurate adjustment of the drugs' molecular properties. Therefore, structure-derived descriptors of potential brain therapeutic agents are essential for an early evaluation of pharmacokinetics during drug development. The col...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pharmaceutics 2021-12, Vol.13 (12), p.2141
Hauptverfasser: Guntner, Armin Sebastian, Bögl, Thomas, Mlynek, Franz, Buchberger, Wolfgang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Successful drug administration to the central nervous system requires accurate adjustment of the drugs' molecular properties. Therefore, structure-derived descriptors of potential brain therapeutic agents are essential for an early evaluation of pharmacokinetics during drug development. The collision cross section (CCS) of molecules was recently introduced as a novel measurable parameter to describe blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeation. This descriptor combines molecular information about mass, structure, volume, branching and flexibility. As these chemical properties are known to influence cerebral pharmacokinetics, CCS determination of new drug candidates may provide important additional spatial information to support existing models of BBB penetration of drugs. Besides measuring CCS, calculation is also possible; but however, the reliability of computed CCS values for an evaluation of BBB permeation has not yet been fully investigated. In this work, prediction tools based on machine learning were used to compute CCS values of a large number of compounds listed in drug libraries as negative or positive with respect to brain penetration (BBB and BBB compounds). Statistical evaluation of computed CCS and several other descriptors could prove the high value of CCS. Further, CCS-deduced maximum molecular size of BBB drugs matched the dimensions of BBB pores. A threshold for transcellular penetration and possible permeation through pore-like openings of cellular tight-junctions is suggested. In sum, CCS evaluation with modern in silico tools shows high potential for its use in the drug development process.
ISSN:1999-4923
1999-4923
DOI:10.3390/pharmaceutics13122141