Synthesis and Determination of the Configurations of the 23-Hydroxylated Metabolites of Calcipotriol (MC 903) and their Epimers

Vitamin D ◽  
1994 ◽  
pp. 33-34
1991 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rene M L Aerts ◽  
Irma M Egberink ◽  
Cornelis A Kan ◽  
Henk J Keukens ◽  
Wim M J Beek

Abstract A simple, rapid liquid chromatographic (LC) method that uses UV/VIS detection has been developed for the determination In eggs of residues of the hlstomonostats dlmetridazole (DMZ), ronldazole (RON), Ipronidazole (IPR), and side-chain hydroxylated metabolites of DMZ and RON. Sample pretreatment Includes an aqueous extraction, purification with an Extrelut® cartridge, and acid partitioning with Isooctane. An aliquot of the final aqueous extract Is Injected Into a reversephase LC system; detection Is performed at 313 nm. The limits of determination are in the 5-10 µgkg range. A UV/ VIS spectrum can be obtained at the 10 µg/kg level by using diode-array UV/VIS detection. Recoveries are between 80 and 98% with a coefficient of variation of about 5%. Some 20 samples can be analyzed per day. A side-chain hydroxylated metabolite of IPR can also be detected with this method, as demonstrated with samples from animal experiments. After a single oral dose of the drugs to laying hens, residues of the parent compound and/or the hydroxylated metabolites could be detected In eggs 5-8 days after dosing. Plasma distribution and excretion in feces were established both with and without deconjugatlon. DMZ and IPR were extensively metabolized to hydroxylated nltrolmldazole metabolites; RON was excreted mainly as the parent compound.


Author(s):  
Jakob Wallgren ◽  
Svante Vikingsson ◽  
Tobias Rautio ◽  
Enas Nasr ◽  
Anna Åstrand ◽  
...  

Abstract Fentanyl analogs constitute a particularly dangerous group of new psychoactive compounds responsible for many deaths around the world. Little is known about their metabolism, and studies utilizing liquid chromatography quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry (LC-QTOF-MS) analysis of hepatocyte incubations and/or authentic urine samples do not allow for determination of the exact metabolite structures, especially when it comes to hydroxylated metabolites. In this study, seven motifs (2-, 3-, 4- and β-OH as well as 3,4-diOH, 4-OH-3-OMe and 3-OH-4-OMe) of fentanyl and five fentanyl analogs, acetylfentanyl, acrylfentanyl, cyclopropylfentanyl, isobutyrylfentanyl and 4F-isobutyrylfentanyl were synthesized. The reference standards were analyzed by LC-QTOF-MS, which enabled identification of the major metabolites formed in hepatocyte incubations of the studied fentanyls. By comparison with our previous data sets, major urinary metabolites could tentatively be identified. For all analogs, β-OH, 4-OH and 4-OH-3-OMe were identified after hepatocyte incubation. β-OH was the major hydroxylated metabolite for all studied fentanyls, except for acetylfentanyl where 4-OH was more abundant. However, the ratio 4-OH/β-OH was higher in urine samples than in hepatocyte incubations for all studied fentanyls. Also, 3-OH-4-OMe was not detected in any hepatocyte samples, indicating a clear preference for the 4-OH-3-OMe, which was also found to be more abundant in urine compared to hepatocytes. The patterns appear to be consistent across all studied fentanyls and could serve as a starting point in the development of methods and synthesis of reference standards of novel fentanyl analogs where nothing is known about the metabolism.


1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 56-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
P C Kao ◽  
D W Heser

Abstract With this dual-cartridge system we extract 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D [1,25(OH)2D] from a single serum sample by using a nonpolar octadecylsilanol silica cartridge to adsorb the vitamin D metabolites and other nonpolar substances; the polar substances wash through the cartridge. The eluted material is then applied to a second alkylamine cartridge, which adsorbs the relatively polar hydroxylated metabolites; the less-polar substances are washed from the second cartridge. Elution from the second cartridge purifies and also separates 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D with analytical recoveries near 90%. The monohydroxyl metabolites are determined by "high-performance" liquid chromatography (HPLC); the dihydroxyl metabolites are further purified by HPLC and determined by radioreceptor assay according to established procedures. Mean (+/- SD) winter normal values (34 subjects of both sexes; blood drawn in mid-April) were 18 +/- 5 micrograms/L for 25(OH)D and 25 +/- 7 ng/L for 1,25(OH)2D. In nine laboratory volunteers, the mean increase in the serum 25(OH)D3 value 5 h after ingestion of 50 micrograms of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (Calderol) was 9 (SD 4) micrograms/L.


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