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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular forces governing non-electrolyte permeation through cell membranes.

TLDR
The relations between the chemical structure of non-electrolytes and their ability to permeate cell membranes are analysed at the level of molecular forces, using the measurements of reflexion coefficients in gall-bladder epithelial cells tabulated in the preceding paper.
Abstract
The relations between the chemical structure of non-electrolytes and their ability to permeate cell membranes are analysed at the level of molecular forces, using the measurements of reflexion coefficients in gall-bladder epithelial cells tabulated in the preceding paper. Stronger solute: water forces and weaker solute: membrane forces are associated with lower permeating power. The portions of the membrane controlling non-electrolyte permeation behave as nearly pure hydrocarbons with very few hydrogen-bonding sites. Most substituents (hydroxyl, ether, carbonyl, ester, amino, amide, urea, nitrile) are shown to decrease permeation in proportion to the number and strength of intermolecular hydrogen bonds which they form with water, while intramolecular hydrogen bonding accelerates permeation. Carbon-carbon double bonds and triple bonds and aromatic residues decrease permeability due to hydrogen bonds involving $\pi $ electrons. Inductive effects, in which a substituent indirectly modifies permeability by withdrawing or releasing electrons at an adjacent hydrogen bonding site, are most noticeable for halogens, the nitro group, double and triple bonds, and branched alkyl groups. Altered forces between membrane hydrocarbons and the solute retard the permeation (weaker forces) of fluorine compounds and branched compounds, and slightly accelerate the permeation (stronger forces) of other halogen derivatives and compounds with long carbon chains. The main factor in the increase of permeability with increasing hydrocarbon chain length is an entropy effect associated with a change in local water structure; and this effect is partly responsible for the decrease in permeability with chain branching, whose origin is particularly complex.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Drug transport across the blood-brain barrier.

TL;DR: Peptide and antisense radiopharmaceuticals are made brain-penetrating with the combined use of RMT-based delivery systems and avidin–biotin technology to enable new solutions to the problem of BBB drug transport.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prediction of drug absorption using multivariate statistics.

TL;DR: Literature data on compounds both well- and poorly-absorbed in humans were used to build a statistical pattern recognition model of passive intestinal absorption, selecting PSA and AlogP98 as descriptors based on consideration of the physical processes involved in membrane permeability and the interrelationships and redundancies between available descriptors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blood-brain barrier delivery.

TL;DR: Brain drug development programs of the future need to be re-configured so that drugs are formulated to enable transport into the brain via endogenous BBB transporters.
Journal ArticleDOI

CNS Drug Design Based on Principles of Blood‐Brain Barrier Transport

TL;DR: It is important to merge CNS drug discovery and CNS drug delivery as early as possible in the overall CNS drug development process to avoid termination caused by negligible blood‐brain barrier transport.
References
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Book

Steric effects in organic chemistry

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose that having more aspects to know and understand will lead to becoming a more precious person, and becoming more precious can be situated with the presentation of how your knowledge much.
Book

The solubility of non-electrolytes

TL;DR: Hildebrand's book is an exception as mentioned in this paper, since the reviewer has taken the opportunity to renew his acquaintance with the earlier as well as the later text, and has found this to be a most interesting experience, since the book is full of matter which is not dealt with adequately in the ordinary text-books of physical chemistry.
Book

Basic principles of organic chemistry

TL;DR: In this article, the basic principles of organic chemistry are discussed and discussed in the context of basic principles in organic chemistry, including basic principles for organic chemistry and its application in the field of biology.