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Drug Discovery Exam 2
USF Introduction to Drug Discovery
90
Chemistry
Undergraduate 4
11/03/2017

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Term
What is a hit?
Definition
A compound that demonstrates activity in an assay that meets a threshold set by the investigator
Term
What are the four main types of patent claims?
Definition
Composition of matter
Method of use
Method of manufacture
Device
Term
Where is the application for a patent published?
Definition
World Intellectual Property Organization of the UN
Term
When does a regular patent expire?
Definition
20 years after the filing date
Term
When is a regular patent application published by the WIPO?
Definition
6 months after the filing date
Term
What kind of patent does not require an examination?
Definition
Provisional
Term
When does a provisional patent expire?
Definition
1 year after the filing date
Term
To whom are patents now awarded after the Leahy-Smith Act took effect?
Definition
The first person to file rather than the first person to invent
Term
What are the 6 basic requirements for patentability?
Definition
Usefulness
Novelty
Nonobviousness
A written description
Enablement
Best Mode
Term
What are the main nonobvious characteristics?
Definition
Improved absorption, metabolism, and efflux
Activity against a different target
Term
What are the two components of enablement in a patent?
Definition
How they were able to prepare and practice the invention, and teach others with "ordinary skill" how to do so
Term
What happens if a judge determins that a person with ordinary skill in the art would have contemplated a better mode of enablement than that described in the claim?
Definition
The claim can be invalidated
Term
What do patent trolls do?
Definition
Buy up patents in order to sue large companies to extort payment vs. large sums of legal fees
Term
What are the four main sources of hits?
Definition
Screening
Modification of standard
Literature/patent mining
Docking
Term
What are the five main sources for screening?
Definition
Folklore/word of mouth
Natural products/chemical defense
Synergistic effects
Microbial/soil samples
Screening libraries
Term
What is the main limiting factor of screening?
Definition
Cost/availability of reagents
Term
How are hits generated from screening?
Definition
By running millions of assays through automation
Term
What does it mean for a hit to be a modification of the standard?
Definition
Analogs/mimics natural substrates/modulators
Term
What are "me-too" drugs?
Definition
Analogs that are essentially modifications of older drugs
Term
What are the main concerns about "me too" drugs?
Definition
Cost of development
Intellectual property
Term
What is required for docking?
Definition
Known structural biology assets
Term
What are the three main methods of identifying the structural biology assets?
Definition
X-ray crystallography
Protein NMR
Cryo-electron microscopy
Term
What is required to use biomolecule modeling?
Definition
The protein sequence of the molecule
Term
How does biomolecule modeling allow you to create homology models?
Definition
If you know the 3D structure of the target molecule, you can predict the structural results of small modifications
Term
If you have a target model, what can you use to find a hit?
Definition
Programs such as DOCK and databases of chemicals
Term
What are the two main drawbacks of screening?
Definition
Natural products often have poor PK
Commercial libraries are heavily mined
Term
What is the main drawback of modification of standard?
Definition
Typically synthetically complex
Term
What is the main drawback of literture/patent mining?
Definition
Creating novel intellectual property
Term
What are the two main drawbacks of docking?
Definition
Binding pockets are dynamic
Lack of hard data
Term
What is the first step in confirming that a hit is real?
Definition
Resynthesize and eliminate artifacts
Term
What is the strength of a covalent bond?
Definition
200kJ/mol
Term
What is the strength of an ionic bond?
Definition
30kJ/mol
Term
What is the strength of a hydrogen bond?
Definition
20kJ/mol
Term
What does SAR stand for?
Definition
Structure activity relationship
Term
Why are drug interactions with covalent bonds not always desirable?
Definition
Typically irreversible
Term
What is the most common type of interaction between drug candidates and targets?
Definition
Hydrogen bonds
Term
What is the main requirement of a hydrogen bond acceptor?
Definition
A lone pair of electrons on the heteroatom
Term
Is an amine a hydrogen bond donor or acceptor?
Definition
Acceptor
Term
Is an alcohol group a hydrogen bond donor or acceptor?
Definition
Both
Term
Is an ester a hydrogen bond donor or acceptor?
Definition
Acceptor
Term
Are hydrogen halides hydrogen bond donors or acceptors?
Definition
Both
Term
Are ethers hydrogen bond donors or acceptors?
Definition
Acceptor
Term
Are ketones hydrogen bond donors or acceptors?
Definition
Both
Term
Are aldehydes hydrogen bond donors or acceptors?
Definition
Both
Term
Why are ketones and aldehydes considered both hydrogen bond donors and acceptors?
Definition
They form geminal diols when placed in water, and they tautomerize into enols
Term
Why aren't carboxylic acids considered hydrogen bond donors?
Definition
Because at physiological pH it is always an anion
Term
Are carboxylic acids considered hydrogen bond donors or acceptors?
Definition
Acceptors
Term
What is the main hydrophobic interaction?
Definition
Pi-stacking
Term
What does QSAR stand for?
Definition
Quantitative structure activity relationships
Term
What is the benefit of making single changes?
Definition
It allows you to directly relate those changes to activity
Term
To what do floppy molecules tend to bind?
Definition
Albumin
Term
What does cyp tend to do to sulfur?
Definition
Oxidize it
Term
What tends to happen to alcohols and amines?
Definition
They are bioconjugated or oxidized
Term
What do benzene rings tend to attract?
Definition
CYPs for oxidation
Term
What does the topliss tree assume?
Definition
An unsubstituted benzene ring
Term
What are the two primary drivers for substitutents in a topiss tree?
Definition
Sterics
Electronics
Term
What is the logP?
Definition
The log of the concentration that goes into water divided by the concentration that goes into 1-octanol
Term
What is the ideal logP
Definition
0-5
Term
How do you use a table of pi values of aromatic substituents to predict changes to logP?
Definition
Add the pi value of the substituent to the logP of the original compound
Term
What is the clogP?
Definition
The calculated logP
Term
What three factors are typically considered in a Hansch analysis?
Definition
Hydrophobicity
Electronics
Sterics
Term
What does QSAR stand for?
Definition
Quantitative structure activity relationships
Term
What factors does QSAR try to incorporate?
Definition
pKa
Charge
Dipole Moment
Surface area
Number of rotatable bonds
Hydrogen bond donors and acceptors
Term
What does CADD stand for?
Definition
Computer assisted drug design
Term
What do you use to determine if something binds to a protein or receptor if you don't have an assay?
Definition
NMR shift
Term
What method of lead optimization does not require any knowledge about the target's binding site?
Definition
Pharmacophore mapping
Term
How does pharmocophore mapping work?
Definition
It looks for similarities among initial hits and proposes additional compounds to assay
Term
What are the two main drawbacks of CADD?
Definition
Simultaneously changes multiple variables
Most designed molecules are synthetically complex
Term
What are Lipinski's 5 rules?
Definition
logP<5
Molecular weight<500g/mol
Hydrogen bond donors<5
Hydrogen bond acceptors<10
Term
How do you calculate logD?
Definition
Log of the concentration of the drug in octanol divided by the sum of the concentration of the unionized drug in water plus the concentration of the ionized drug in water
Term
What is the pH of the buffer in which D is typically measured?
Definition
7.4
Term
What are lipinski's three extended rules?
Definition
logD<5
Rotatable bonds<10
Polar surface area<140 square angstroms
Term
What type of reaction is useful for binding fragments?
Definition
Click chemistry
Term
What is the main premise of click chemistry?
Definition
If two fragments are bound close enough together, they can be tethered while bound to their target
Term
What are the two main drawbacks of fragment-based discovery?
Definition
Leap of faith that fragments are close by
Floppy molecules (Bad PK)
Term
What are the four strong advantages of solid-phase chemistry?
Definition
No multiple layers
Can use excess reagents without affecting yield
No cross couplings
Can sequentially perform multiple steps
Term
Solid state media behave as what kind of group?
Definition
Protecting group
Term
What kind of chemistry is used in automated peptide synthesis?
Definition
Solid-phase chemistry
Term
What is the general idea of combinatorial chemistry?
Definition
Making a lot of combinations of starting materials to generate a large number of products
Term
What is the primary drawback of solid-phase organic synthesis?
Definition
Compounds are typically cleaved with trifluoroacetic acid
Term
What are the two drawbacks of using trifluoroacetic acid?
Definition
Decomposition of the product
Inefficient removal of TFA leads to a limited shelf life
Term
What is the suzuki reaction?
Definition
[image]
Term
What is the buckwald reaction?
Definition
[image]
Term
What is a good isostere for an alcohol group?
Definition
Azide (N3)
Term
What is a common isostere for hydrogen?
Definition
Fluorine
Term
Why is hydrogen replaced with fluorine?
Definition
Carbon-fluorine bonds are not broken by CYPs
Block oxidation of a methyl group
Term
What is a widely accepted carboxylate isostere?
Definition
Tetrazole
Term
What can serve as a bioisostere for aromatic rings?
Definition
Heterocycles
Term
What suffix generally indicates that a drug is a biologic?
Definition
-ab
Term
What are the two main drawbacks of biologics?
Definition
Only IV
Very expensive
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