Subscribe to RSS





Chemistry News

- Newsflash!
Carbon-Based Curiosities
- Unraveling Thalidomide's Tragic Effects
Chemical & Engineering News: Latest News
- temperatures infograph
Everyday Scientist
- Nonsense About LSD
In the Pipeline
- livescribe Pulse Smartpen: Just what is a smart pen?
ASSETT
- Intermune's Rise
In the Pipeline
- The Age of Wonder
Periodic Tabloid
- 03/10/10 PHD comic: 'Campus Day of Action'
Piled Higher and Deeper RSS Gradfeed
- Another season starting for Breaking Bad
C&ENtral Science
- Vaccines in the Court
In the Pipeline
- Condenser Party
Chiral Jones

Halogen Bonding

by Phil on Aug 23 2008 (2453 Views)

Some of you may be familiar with the term “halogen bonding”. In analogy to hydrogen bonding, this weak interaction occurs between an electron donor, such as nitrogen, and a halogen (Cl, Br, I). The halogen acts as an electrophile.

Halogen Bond N...Br

This is possible because the halogen has a region of positive partial charge at its tip, the so-called sigma-hole, as shown by calculations (doi:10.1007/s00894-006-0130-2). The group of Resnati and Metrangolo in Milan have used this interaction to construct a variety of polymeric chains and networks for crystal engineering. As they discuss in their current Science paper (doi:10.1126/science.1162215), it also plays an important role for drug design, which I am particularly interested in. Many drugs on the market are halogenated aromatics. The exact role of the halogen for binding is not always known, since often it was introduced in order to tune the hydrophobicity of the compound. I suspect that in many instances, halogen bonding to a backbone carbonyl oxygen could be of importance.

Clearly, more work is required to further investigate halogen bonding in a biological context. If people want to incorporate this kind of interaction into rational drug design or crystal engineering, good quantitative models will be needed.





Google Ads





Recent Chemistry

Inhibitory Properties of the P1 Tyr Variant of Antithrombin
(Biochemistry)
ChemFeeds Nav: [Leave a Comment][See Related]

Good Chemistry Books


New Bacterial Vaccines

Advances in Antiviral Drug Design