2019
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.9b01277
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Prediction of Partition Coefficients of Environmental Toxins Using Computational Chemistry Methods

Abstract: The partitioning of compounds between aqueous and other phases is important for predicting toxicity. Although thousands of octanol–water partition coefficients have been measured, these represent only a small fraction of the anthropogenic compounds present in the environment. The octanol phase is often taken to be a mimic of the inner parts of phospholipid membranes. However, the core of such membranes is typically more hydrophobic than octanol, and other partition coefficients with other compounds may give co… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 108 publications
(185 reference statements)
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“…When determining the properties of other small organic compounds, the SMD model has proven to be the most precise solvation method as well. [34][35][36] In this respect, we recommend application of the SMD solvation model during the process of designing novel local anesthetics. The COSMO-RS solvation model, which also proved to yield comparably reliable n-octanol/water partition coefficients, is unfortunately not implemented in Gaussian 16.…”
Section: Solvent Reaction Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…When determining the properties of other small organic compounds, the SMD model has proven to be the most precise solvation method as well. [34][35][36] In this respect, we recommend application of the SMD solvation model during the process of designing novel local anesthetics. The COSMO-RS solvation model, which also proved to yield comparably reliable n-octanol/water partition coefficients, is unfortunately not implemented in Gaussian 16.…”
Section: Solvent Reaction Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The COSMO-RS solvation model, which also proved to yield comparably reliable n-octanol/water partition coefficients, is unfortunately not implemented in Gaussian 16. 35 It should be emphasized that among the applied solvent reaction field methods only SMD was parametrized to reproduce solvation free energy in n-octanol. The critical elements of parametrization are always nonbonding interactions with the solvent that include reversible work for cavity creation, a dispersion component of the solvation energy and an interaction between the charge distribution and dielectric continuum.…”
Section: Solvent Reaction Fieldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As shown, the best performing empirical methods are miLOGP, ALOGPS, and ALOGP where the deviations are consistently below 0.5 log units. Interestingly, XLOGP3, which was previously identified as a reasonably robust method for predicting the log P of simple fluorinated compounds, [20][21][22] displayed a mean absolute deviation (MAD) of 0.82 and maximum absolute deviation (AD max ) of 1.25 log units, which is beyond the acceptable error range. This highlights one of the limitations of empirical methods as their performance can be less predictable when they are applied to molecules dissimilar to those in their training set, e.g.…”
Section: Conformational Searchesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The results here echo the observations from several recent studies where physics-based implicit and explicit solvent models do not necessarily yield more accurate log P predictions compared with empirical models. [20,21] An important consideration when evaluating the performance of empirical models is whether there is significant overlap between the test and training sets. Given that this is the first time experimental log P values have been reported for the novel fluorinated molecules in this study, the miLOGP, ALOGP, and ALOGPS can be considered to be reasonably robust.…”
Section: Conformational Searchesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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