Panić Čanji, Jelena

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In silico–in vitro estimation of lipophilicity and permeability association for succinimide derivatives using chromatographic anisotropic systems and parallel artificial membrane permeability assay

Vidović, Dunja; Milošević, Nataša; Pavlović, Nebojša; Todorović, Nemanja; Panić Čanji, Jelena; Ćurčić, Jelena; Banjac, Nebojša; Trišović, Nemanja; Božić, Bojan; Lalić-Popović, Mladena

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Vidović, Dunja
AU  - Milošević, Nataša
AU  - Pavlović, Nebojša
AU  - Todorović, Nemanja
AU  - Panić Čanji, Jelena
AU  - Ćurčić, Jelena
AU  - Banjac, Nebojša
AU  - Trišović, Nemanja
AU  - Božić, Bojan
AU  - Lalić-Popović, Mladena
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://TechnoRep.tmf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5150
AB  - Passive permeability is one of the key features that determine absorbability and one of the most studied properties in the early phases of drug development. Newly synthesized succinimide derivatives from two different series (1-aryl-3-methylsuccinimides and 1-aryl-3-ethyl-3-methylsuccinimides) with high biological potential have been subjected to estimation of their passive permeability and their association with (a) experimentally obtained anisotropic lipophilicity, (b) in silico–calculated lipophilicity and (c) in silico–predicted permeability and absorbability. Non-cellular-based parallel artificial membrane permeability assay was applied for quantifying their passive permeation, expressed as logPapp. Passive permeation was governed by the lipophilicity of the analysed compounds, and anisotropic lipophilicity was related with statistically significant passive transcellular diffusion (r2 = 0.614, P < 0.001). Moreover, experimentally determined passive permeability, logPapp, was statistically significantly associated with both in silico–predicted absorption constant, ka (r2 = 0.7886, P < 0.001), and human intestinal absorption (HIA) in percentage (r2 = 0.484, P < 0.001), respectively. However, there was no statistically significant relationship between experimentally obtained permeability on non-cellular-based model and in silico–predicted Caco-2 permeability based on the predictions conducted on two different software. Based on the obtained results, anisotropic systems are promising surrogates for determining lipophilicity, except for compounds with acidic functional groups that are completely ionized under (pH = 7.4).
T2  - Biomedical Chromatography
T1  - In silico–in vitro estimation of lipophilicity and permeability association for succinimide derivatives using chromatographic anisotropic systems and parallel artificial membrane permeability assay
DO  - 10.1002/bmc.5413
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Vidović, Dunja and Milošević, Nataša and Pavlović, Nebojša and Todorović, Nemanja and Panić Čanji, Jelena and Ćurčić, Jelena and Banjac, Nebojša and Trišović, Nemanja and Božić, Bojan and Lalić-Popović, Mladena",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Passive permeability is one of the key features that determine absorbability and one of the most studied properties in the early phases of drug development. Newly synthesized succinimide derivatives from two different series (1-aryl-3-methylsuccinimides and 1-aryl-3-ethyl-3-methylsuccinimides) with high biological potential have been subjected to estimation of their passive permeability and their association with (a) experimentally obtained anisotropic lipophilicity, (b) in silico–calculated lipophilicity and (c) in silico–predicted permeability and absorbability. Non-cellular-based parallel artificial membrane permeability assay was applied for quantifying their passive permeation, expressed as logPapp. Passive permeation was governed by the lipophilicity of the analysed compounds, and anisotropic lipophilicity was related with statistically significant passive transcellular diffusion (r2 = 0.614, P < 0.001). Moreover, experimentally determined passive permeability, logPapp, was statistically significantly associated with both in silico–predicted absorption constant, ka (r2 = 0.7886, P < 0.001), and human intestinal absorption (HIA) in percentage (r2 = 0.484, P < 0.001), respectively. However, there was no statistically significant relationship between experimentally obtained permeability on non-cellular-based model and in silico–predicted Caco-2 permeability based on the predictions conducted on two different software. Based on the obtained results, anisotropic systems are promising surrogates for determining lipophilicity, except for compounds with acidic functional groups that are completely ionized under (pH = 7.4).",
journal = "Biomedical Chromatography",
title = "In silico–in vitro estimation of lipophilicity and permeability association for succinimide derivatives using chromatographic anisotropic systems and parallel artificial membrane permeability assay",
doi = "10.1002/bmc.5413"
}
Vidović, D., Milošević, N., Pavlović, N., Todorović, N., Panić Čanji, J., Ćurčić, J., Banjac, N., Trišović, N., Božić, B.,& Lalić-Popović, M.. (2022). In silico–in vitro estimation of lipophilicity and permeability association for succinimide derivatives using chromatographic anisotropic systems and parallel artificial membrane permeability assay. in Biomedical Chromatography.
https://doi.org/10.1002/bmc.5413
Vidović D, Milošević N, Pavlović N, Todorović N, Panić Čanji J, Ćurčić J, Banjac N, Trišović N, Božić B, Lalić-Popović M. In silico–in vitro estimation of lipophilicity and permeability association for succinimide derivatives using chromatographic anisotropic systems and parallel artificial membrane permeability assay. in Biomedical Chromatography. 2022;.
doi:10.1002/bmc.5413 .
Vidović, Dunja, Milošević, Nataša, Pavlović, Nebojša, Todorović, Nemanja, Panić Čanji, Jelena, Ćurčić, Jelena, Banjac, Nebojša, Trišović, Nemanja, Božić, Bojan, Lalić-Popović, Mladena, "In silico–in vitro estimation of lipophilicity and permeability association for succinimide derivatives using chromatographic anisotropic systems and parallel artificial membrane permeability assay" in Biomedical Chromatography (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1002/bmc.5413 . .
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