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Stacking Interactions of Heterocyclic Drug Fragments with Protein Amide Backbones.

Andrea N BootsmaSteven E Wheeler
Published in: ChemMedChem (2018)
Stacking interactions can be important enthalpic contributors to drug binding. Among the less well-studied stacking interactions are those occurring between an arene and the π-face of an amide group. Given the ubiquity of heterocycles in drugs, combined with the abundance of amides in the protein backbone, optimizing these noncovalent interactions can provide a potential route to enhanced drug binding. Previously, Diederich et al. (ChemMedChem 2013, 8, 397-404) studied stacked dimers of a model amide with a set of 18 heterocycles, showing that computed interaction energies correlate with the dipole moments of the heterocycles and providing guidelines for the optimization of these interactions. We considered stacked dimers of the same model amide with a larger set of 28 heterocycles common in pharmaceuticals, by using more robust ab initio methods. While the overall trends in these new data corroborate many of the results of Diederich et al., these data provide a more refined view of the nature of amide stacking interactions. We present a robust scoring function for amide stacking interaction energies based on the molecular dipole moment and strength of the electric field above the arene.
Keyphrases
  • big data
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • protein protein
  • magnetic resonance
  • machine learning
  • small molecule
  • climate change
  • dna binding
  • single molecule
  • microbial community
  • water soluble
  • wastewater treatment