Journal:PMC:1

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<scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/3'>Methadone has a unique structure compared to other opioids since it does not possess a heterocyclic ring.</scene> An argument that a pharmacologically active methadone conformation includes a 'virtual heterocyclic ring' is based on the following assumptions:
<scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/3'>Methadone has a unique structure compared to other opioids since it does not possess a heterocyclic ring.</scene> An argument that a pharmacologically active methadone conformation includes a 'virtual heterocyclic ring' is based on the following assumptions:
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1) <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/7'>Methadone contains a ketone group which also exists in equilibrium as an enol tautomer</scene>. 2) The <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/8'>OH in the enol tautomer can form an intramolecular
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<scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/7'>Methadone contains a ketone group which also exists in equilibrium as an enol tautomer</scene>. The <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/9'>OH in the enol tautomer can form an intramolecular
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H-bond with the tertiary nitrogen and produce a seven member heterocyclic ring.</scene> According to Pauling, the N-H-O bond is near linear. Therefore, the virtual ring has characteristics of a 6 member nitrogen containing ring which can
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H-bond with the tertiary nitrogen and produce a seven member heterocyclic ring</scene> <span style="color:lime;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">(colored in lime)</span>. According to Pauling, the N-H-O bond is near linear. Therefore, the virtual ring has characteristics of a 6 member nitrogen containing ring which can
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be shown to be positioned in a plane similar to the piperidine ring of morphine.
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be shown to be positioned in a plane similar to the <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv/9'>piperidine ring of morphine</scene> <span style="color:lime;background-color:black;font-weight:bold;">(also colored in lime)</span>. The formation of the heterocyclic ring positions a methyl group connected to the chiral carbon which has steric influences on activity. <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/10'>In the chair conformation of the d isomer, the methyl group hinders the heterocyclic ring</scene> and the medication has minimal analgesic activity, but in the <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/11'>l isomer there is no ring hindrance</scene> and substantial analgesic effects. Similar to the steric blocking effects observed with naloxone and naltrexone, these <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv2/12'>steric effects explain why l-methadone is active and d-methadone is relatively inactive</scene>.
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'''Proposition #4. The piperidine ring of Fentanyl can assume the morphine position under conditions of nitrogen inversion.'''
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<scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv3/1'>A rigid tertiary amine moiety of fentanyl limits conformational changes which would allow the piperidine ring to assume a position similar to that found in morphine unless nitrogen inversion exists.</scene>
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'''Proposition #5. The first 3 amino acid sequences of β-endorphin (l-Tyr-Gly-Gly) and the active opioid dipeptide, l-Tyr-Pro, (as a result of a peptide turn and zwitterion bonding) form a virtual piperazine-like ring which is similar in size, shape and location to the heterocyclic rings of morphine, meperidine, and methadone.'''
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<scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv4/2'>Tyr-Gly-Gly- is the N terminus amino acid sequence of beta-endorphin.</scene> However, many apparently dissimilar, di, tri, tetra, penta, and polypeptides are known to have opioid activity, the smallest being l-Tyr-Pro. Within the peptide turn of <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv4/3'>Tyr-Gly-Gly an ionic bond and virtual heterocyclic ring exists formed by the intramolecular zwitterion attraction of the negative carbonyl oxygen to the positively charged nitrogen of tyrosine.</scene> This piperazine-like ring of Tyr-Gly-Gly and piperidine ring of morphine have similar conformations. Tyr-Pro is the minimal length peptide which has been shown to possess opioid
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activity. <scene name='Journal:PMC:1/Cv4/4'>Tyr-Pro can also form a H-bonded virtual ring and peptide turn which is consistent with this proposition.</scene>
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'''Conclusion'''. A unified theory based on the stereochemistry of a common aromatic-heterocyclic relationship in opioids and opioid peptides is presented. This theory is supported by five propositions which include experimental data derived from the literature and stereochemical observations from the author’s perspective. Some of the support for the propositions explains new relationships about steric hindrance and optical activity of opioids. This theory could be important for future analgesic drug design.
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[[Category:Opioid]]

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  1. Joel S. Goldberg, Perspectives in Medicinal Chemistry 2010:4 1-10, Stereochemical Basis for a Unified Structure Activity Theory of Aromatic and Heterocyclic Rings in Selected Opioids and Opioid Peptides doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/PMC.S3898

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