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Bioavailability: An Agrochemical Research Perspective

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Title: Bioavailability: An Agrochemical Research Perspective


1
Bioavailability An Agrochemical Research
Perspective
  • Eric Clarke

2
Acknowledgements
  • Syngenta Chemistry Design GroupDavid Adams,
    John Delaney, Torquil Fraser, Patrick Gardinal,
    Kevin Lawson, Graham Mullier, Andy Pierce, Tony
    Seville, Beth Shirley, Graham Sexton, Gail
    Templeman, Francesco Vallorani, Russell Viner
  • UCL Abraham Research Group (LSER)Mike Abraham,
    Kei Enomoto, Jamie Platts (Cardiff Univ) ,
    Caroline Green (Pfizer)
  • GlaxoSmithKline (CHI logD/logP, pKa solubility)

    Derek Reynolds, Chris Bevan, Klara Valko, Alan
    Hill
  • Sirius Analytical Instruments (GLpKa/D-PAS
    Absolv)John Comer, Colin Peake, Karl Box, Lynne
    Trowbridge, Stephen Pouros
  • AstraZeneca (logD/logP pKa solubility)
    Nicola Colclough, Alan
    Wait, Brian Law

3
Bioefficacy of AgrochemicalsPotency Mobility
Stability Balance
  • Factors influencing balance
  • Wide variety of very different target organisms
  • weeds, fungi, insects
  • Range of application modes
  • soil foliar applied herbicides
  • protectant, eradicant systemic fungicides
  • contact, residual and soil applied insecticides
  • Variable environmental conditions
  • climate, location

4
Bioavailability Foliar Application
5
Bioavailability Soil Application
6
Bioavailability of AgrochemicalsLead
Potency-Mobility-Stability Balance
  • potent in vitro leads need to be available in
    vivo to express activity spectrum.
  • bioavailability depends both on mobility
    stability.
  • when mobility OR stability poor we have a problem
    lead.
  • when mobility AND stability poor the nightmare
    begins!
  • dream leads have a balanced potency-mobility-stab
    ility profile.
  • avoid the nightmares address the problems,
    define the balance.

7
Defining the BalancePotency-Mobility-Stability
Profiles
  • Understand profiles for effective compounds to
    enable definition of profile options for leads
  • commercial products
  • development compounds
  • evaluation compounds
  • Profile compounds of diverse molecular
    properties, moa, spectrum, application rate
    time course of action
  • HTS ? Glasshouse ? Field

8
Agrochemicals Physical PropertiesBioavailability
Related Parameters
  • Mobility related (500/yr ? 500/mth ? 500/wk)
  • Organic/water partition (logD/logP oct Log P,
    delta logP )
  • Acid/base dissociation (pKa)
  • Aqueous organic solvent solubilities
  • Volatility (WindTunnel deposit on glass)
  • Stability related (500/yr)
  • Hydrolysis (water/esterase)
  • Thiol reactivity (GSH/GST)
  • Oxidative stability (oxidant/porphyrin)
  • Photostability (SunTest deposit on
    glass/solution)

9
Agrochemicals Mobility PropertiesLogP (Oct)
Aqueous Solubility Methods
  • Octanol/water partition (logD/logP)
  • HPLC(C8/18) hybrid columns (15 cm) physically
    coated with octanol aqueous octanol saturated
    mobile phase _at_ pH 7 (optional pH 2 to 9) logD
    proportional R related to standards range 1 to
    4 routine 0 to 5 possible
  • Aqueous solubility (logSw)
  • Ultrasonic dispersion (1 hr) /- roller shaking
    (16 hrs)sample (1 mg/ml) in aqueous buffer _at_ pH
    7 (pH 2 to 9)centrifuged/filtered prior to
    analysis (RP-HPLC)range 0.1 to 1000 ppm (ug/ml)

10
Measured vs Predicted PropertiesLogP (octanol)
examples (50 ais)
11
Measured vs Predicted PropertiesAqueous
Solubility (Sw ppm ?g/ml) (50 ais)
12
LogP (Octanol), (Hexane), (?logP) CHI Measured
data examples (50 ais)
13
Agrochemical Products Properties Pesticide
Manual 11th Ed. 1997
  • Molecular weight
  • 200 to 500 range (86) lt 200 (11) gt 500 (3)
  • Melting point (C)
  • 50 to 200 range (60) lt 50 (30) gt 200 (10)
  • pKa (acid)
  • 10 compounds with pKa lt 5
  • pKa (base)
  • 1 compounds with pKa gt 5

14
Agrochemical Products logP ProfilePesticide
Manual 11th Ed. 1997 (500 ais)
15
Agrochemical Products logSw (ppm)
ProfilePesticide Manual 11th Ed. 1997 (500 ais)
16
Effective Agrochemicals LogP Profile (3000
ais)
Octan-1-ol
25
Absolv
20
ClogP3
ClogP4
15

10
5
0
lt-8
-7
-5
-3
-1
1
3
5
7
9
gt10
gtx
17
Effective Agrochemicals Property Profiles
(3000 ais)
18
Drug Design BioavailabilityLipinskis Rule of
5
  • Poor adsorption/permeation likely for structures
    where 2 or more of these limits exceeded.
  • LogP octanol lt 5 (via CLOGP)
  • Molecular weight lt 500
  • H-Bond Donors lt 5 (sum of OH NHs)
  • H-Bond Acceptors lt10 (sum of N Os)
  • C. A. Lipinski, F. Lombardo, B. W. Dominy, P.J.
    Feeney
  • Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews, (1997), 23, 3-25
  • Experimental computational approaches to
    estimate solubility permeability in drug
    discovery development settings

19
Agrochemical Design BioavailabilityBriggs Rule
of 3
  • bioavailability likely to be poor for structures
    where 3 or more of these limits exceeded
  • logP octanol ? 3
  • Molecular weight 300
  • Melting point lt300 C
  • H-Bond Donors ? 3 (sum OH NHs)
  • Delta logP lt3 (logP oct - logP alk)
  • G. G. Briggs, Agrevo UK
  • SCI Meeting, Dec 1997, Uptake of Agrochemicals
    Pharmaceuticals
  • Predicting uptake movement of agrochemicals
    from physical properties

20
Agrochemical Design BioavailabilityTices Rules
  • Insecticidal (I) or post-emergence herbicidal (H)
    activity more likely when
  • logP octanol (mlogP) ? 3.5(H) ?0 ? 5(I)
  • (alogP) ? 5.0(H) ?0 ? 6.5(I)
  • Molecular Weight ?150 ? 500 (I H)
  • H-Bond Donors ? 3 (H) ? 2 (I)
  • H-Bond Acceptors ? 2 ? 12(H) ? 1 ? 8(I)
  • C. M. Tice Pest Management Science, 2001, 57,
    3-16
  • Selecting the right compounds for screening
    does Lipinskis Rule of 5 for pharmaceuticals
    apply to agrochemicals

21
Agrochemical Design BioavailabilityClarke-Delane
y Guide of 2
  • Suggest gt probability of lead progression when
  • Molecular weight 200 - 400
  • Melting point (deg C) ? 200
  • LogP oct ? 4 (via 2 methods for
    estimation)
  • ? LogP ? 2 (logP oct - logP alk)
  • pKa (base) 7 ? 2 (- ? 2 for herbicides)
  • LogSw 2 /- 1 (10 -1000 ppm)
  • H-Bond Donors ? 2 (sum OHs NHs)
  • Stability Alerts ? 2
  • (EDC/JD March 2000)
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