Solvent dependency of rotational barriers in ethamivan and comparison to nikethamide.
L S Rosenthal, E Curran, J W Bean, D J Nelson
Index: Biochem. Pharmacol. 38(4) , 581-8, (1989)
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Abstract
Carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques were employed to examine the effects of solvent environment on rotational barriers in two drugs known to cause widespread stimulation in the mammalian central nervous system: ethamivan and nikethamide. Total NMR bandshape analysis was performed for the exchanging alkyl carbon resonances of these compounds as a function of temperature in six solvent systems: D2O, CH3OD, CH3CH2OD, CDCl3, C6D6 and CF3CH2OH. The rate constants for rotation about the amide bond obtained in this way were used to calculate free energy (delta G++), enthalpy (delta H++) and entropy (delta S++) of activation parameters for this process. Our results indicate that the magnitude of rotational barriers is affected markedly by (1) the size and polarity of the solvent molecules, and (2) the nature of the aromatic ring system attached to the amide grouping. Comparative interpretation of the thermodynamic parameters in light of the structures of nikethamide and ethamivan (in the various solvent systems examined) has further clarified the manner in which hydrogen bonding interactions between solvent molecules and the carbonyl oxygen of these analogues stabilize transition state conformers.
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