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Substitution Effect of the Trifluoromethyl Group on the Bioactivity in Medicinal Chemistry: Statistical Analysis and Energy Calculations.

Amina AbulaZhijian XuZhengdan ZhuCheng PengZhaoqiang ChenJianming ZhuHaji Akber Aisa
Published in: Journal of chemical information and modeling (2020)
The substitution of methyl (Me or -CH3) by trifluoromethyl (TFM or -CF3) is frequently used in medicinal chemistry. However, the exact effect of -CH3/-CF3 substitution on bioactivity is still controversial. We compiled a data set containing 28 003 pairs of compounds with the only difference that -CH3 is substituted by -CF3, and the statistical results showed that the replacement of -CH3 with -CF3 does not improve bioactivity on average. Yet, 9.19% substitution of -CH3 by -CF3 could increase the biological activity by at least an order. A PDB survey revealed that -CF3 prefers Phe, Met, Leu, and Tyr, while -CH3 prefers Leu, Met, Cys, and Ile. If we substitute the -CH3 by -CF3 near Phe, His, and Arg, the bioactivity is most probably improved. We performed QM/MM calculations for 39 -CH3/-CF3 pairs of protein-ligand complexes and found that the -CH3/-CF3 substitution does achieve a large energy gain in some systems, although the mean energy difference is subtle, which is consistent with the statistical survey. The -CF3 substitution on the benzene ring could be particularly effective at gaining binding energy. The maximum improvements in energy achieved -4.36 kcal/mol by QM/MM calculation. Moreover, energy decompositions from MM/GBSA calculations showed that the large energy gains for the -CH3/-CF3 substitution are largely driven by the electrostatic energy or the solvation free energy. These findings may shed some light on the biological activity profile for -CH3/-CF3 substitution, which should be useful for further drug discovery and drug design.
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