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1.
Multiple ion monitoring (MIM)‐dependent acquisition with a triple quadrupole‐linear ion trap mass spectrometer (Q‐trap) was previously developed for drug metabolite profiling. In the analysis, multiple predicted metabolite ions are monitored in both Q1 and Q3 regardless of their fragmentations. The collision energy in Q2 is set to a low value to minimize fragmentation. Once an expected metabolite is detected by MIM, enhanced product ion (EPI) spectral acquisition of the metabolite is triggered. To analyze in vitro metabolites, MIM‐EPI retains the sensitivity and selectivity similar to that of multiple reaction monitoring (MRM)‐EPI in the analysis of in vitro metabolites. Here we present an improved approach utilizing MIM‐EPI for data acquisition and multiple data mining techniques for detection of metabolite ions and recovery of their MS/MS spectra. The postacquisition data processing tools included extracted ion chromatographic analysis, product ion filtering and neutral loss filtering. The effectiveness of this approach was evaluated by analyzing oxidative metabolites of indinavir and glutathione (GSH) conjugates of clozapine and 4‐ethylphenol in liver microsome incubations. Results showed that the MIM‐EPI‐based data mining approach allowed for comprehensive detection of metabolites based on predicted protonated molecules, product ions or neutral losses without predetermination of the parent drug MS/MS spectra. Additionally, it enabled metabolite detection and MS/MS acquisition in a single injection. This approach is potentially useful in high‐throughout screening of metabolic soft spots and reactive metabolites at the drug discovery stage. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
Bioanalysis of unstable compounds such as acyl glucuronide metabolites represents a great analytical challenge owing to poor analyte stability in biological matrices. The primary goal for bioanalytical assay development is to minimize the breakdown of acyl glucuronide metabolite into its parent aglycone during sample collection, transportation, storage and analysis. Samples need to be stabilized ex vivo immediately after sample collection to minimize potential breakdown and thus to ensure accurate concentration measurement of both acyl glucuronide metabolite and its parent aglycone. In this review paper, formation of acyl glucuronide metabolites, the importance of establishing acyl glucuronide exposure measurement and safety coverage, optimization of sample pretreatment to stabilize the acyl glucuronide metabolites, current analytical strategy of assaying them as well as considerations for regulatory filings are discussed. It is important to identify acyl glucuronide metabolites that are capable of undergoing hydrolysis and pH-dependent intra-molecular migration as well as covalently binding to plasma and tissue proteins which can cause toxicity in vivo in the early stages of drug development. Carefully planning analytical experiments, identifying structures of acyl glucuronides and monitoring their concentrations in early drug development can help assess the risks associated with their exposures and potentially predict their concentrations in human circulation.  相似文献   

3.
Reactive metabolites are believed to be one of the main reasons for unexpected drug‐induced toxicity issues, by forming covalent adducts with cell proteins or DNA. Due to their high reactivity and short lifespan they are not directly detected by traditional analytical methods, but are most traditionally analyzed by liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) after chemical trapping with nucleophilic agents such as glutathione. Here, a simple but very efficient assay was built up for screening reactive drug metabolites, utilizing stable isotope labeled glutathione, potassium cyanide and semicarbazide as trapping agents and highly sensitive ultra‐performance liquid chromatography/time‐of‐flight mass spectrometry (UPLC/TOFMS) as an analytical tool. A group of twelve structurally different compounds was used as a test set, and a large number of trapped metabolites were detected for most of them, including many conjugates not reported previously. Glutathione‐trapped metabolites were detected for nine of the twelve test compounds, whereas cyanide‐trapped metabolites were found for eight and semicarbazide‐trapped for three test compounds. The high mass accuracy of TOFMS provided unambiguous identification of change in molecular formula by formation of a reactive metabolite. In addition, use of a mass defect filter was found to be a usable tool when mining the trapped conjugates from the acquired data. The approach was shown to provide superior detection sensitivity in comparison to traditional methods based on neutral loss or precursor ion scanning with a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer, and clearly more efficient detection and characterization of reactive drug metabolites with a simpler test setup. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

4.
Drug bioactivation leading to the formation of reactive species capable of covalent binding to proteins represents an important cause of drug‐induced toxicity. Reactive metabolite detection using in vitro microsomal incubations is a crucial step in assessing potential toxicity of pharmaceutical compounds. The most common method for screening the formation of these unstable, electrophilic species is by trapping them with glutathione (GSH) followed by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) analysis. The present work describes the use of a brominated analog of glutathione, N‐(2‐bromocarbobenzyloxy)‐GSH (GSH‐Br), for the in vitro screening of reactive metabolites by LC/MS. This novel trapping agent was tested with four drug compounds known to form reactive metabolites, acetaminophen, fipexide, trimethoprim and clozapine. In vitro rat microsomal incubations were performed with GSH and GSH‐Br for each drug with subsequent analysis by liquid chromatography/high‐resolution mass spectrometry on an electrospray time‐of‐flight (ESI‐TOF) instrument. A generic LC/MS method was used for data acquisition, followed by drug‐specific processing of accurate mass data based on mass defect filtering and isotope pattern matching. GSH and GSH‐Br incubations were compared to control samples using differential analysis (Mass Profiler) software to identify adducts formed via the formation of reactive metabolites. In all four cases, GSH‐Br yielded improved results, with a decreased false positive rate, increased sensitivity and new adducts being identified in contrast to GSH alone. The combination of using this novel trapping agent with powerful processing routines for filtering accurate mass data and differential analysis represents a very reliable method for the identification of reactive metabolites formed in microsomal incubations. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

5.
Identification and elucidation of the structures of metabolites play major roles in drug discovery and in the development of pharmaceutical compounds. These studies are also important in toxicology or doping control with either pharmaceuticals or illicit drugs. This review focuses on: new analytical strategies used to identify potential metabolites in biological matrices with and without radiolabeled drugs; use of software for metabolite profiling; interpretation of product spectra; profiling of reactive metabolites; development of new approaches for generation of metabolites; and detection of metabolites with increased sensitivity and simplicity. Most of the new strategies involve mass spectrometry (MS) combined with liquid chromatography (LC).  相似文献   

6.
Identification of drug metabolites by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) involves metabolite detection in biological matrixes and structural characterization based on product ion spectra. Traditionally, metabolite detection is accomplished primarily on the basis of predicted molecular masses or fragmentation patterns of metabolites using triple‐quadrupole and ion trap mass spectrometers. Recently, a novel mass defect filter (MDF) technique has been developed, which enables high‐resolution mass spectrometers to be utilized for detecting both predicted and unexpected drug metabolites based on narrow, well‐defined mass defect ranges for these metabolites. This is a new approach that is completely different from, but complementary to, traditional molecular mass‐ or MS/MS fragmentation‐based LC/MS approaches. This article reviews the mass defect patterns of various classes of drug metabolites and the basic principles of the MDF approach. Examples are given on the applications of the MDF technique to the detection of stable and chemically reactive metabolites in vitro and in vivo. Advantages, limitations, and future applications are also discussed on MDF and its combinations with other data mining techniques for the detection and identification of drug metabolites. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
This paper describes the quantitation of acyl‐glucuronide metabolites (M26 and M5) of a cardiovascular‐drug (torcetrapib) from monkey urine, in the absence of their reference standards. LC/MS/MS assays for M1 and M4 (aglycones of M26 and M5, respectively) were characterized from normal and base‐treated urine, as their respective reference standards were available. The in vivo study samples containing M26 and M5 were treated with 1 n sodium hydroxide to hydrolyze them to their respective aglycones. The study samples were assayed for M1 and M4 before and after alkaline hydrolysis and the difference in the concentrations provided an estimate of the urinary levels of M26 and M5. Prior to the main sample analysis, conditions for alkaline hydrolysis of the glucuronides were optimized by incubating pooled study samples. During incubations, a prolonged increase in M4 levels over time was observed, which is inconsistent with the base‐hydrolysis of an acyl‐glucuronide (expected to hydrolyze rapidly). Possible interference of the metabolite M9 (an ether‐glucuronide metabolite isobaric to M4) was investigated to explain this observation using chromatographic and wet‐chemistry approaches. The strategies adopted herein established that the LC/MS/MS assay and our approach were reliable. The metabolite exposure was then correlated to toxicological observations to gain initial insights into the physiological role of these metabolites. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

8.
Using a single platform of a triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer equipped with enhanced resolution and accurate mass capabilities, a strategy for metabolite identification of a drug in a biological matrix has been demonstrated. The strategy is based on first screening for metabolites via neutral loss and precursor ion scan schemes, devised as the result of the product ion spectrum of a matrix-free standard of the drug. The accurate masses of the precursor ions identified via the two scan schemes plus the precursor ions of structurally likely metabolites are then determined by enhanced resolution, accurate mass (AM) selected ion monitoring (SIM). The identities of the metabolites are further established by determining the accurate masses of the product ions via enhanced resolution AM selected reaction monitoring (SRM). The feasibility of the strategy was demonstrated using a liver microsome incubation sample of nefazodone, an antidepressant drug. The neutral loss and precursor ion screening runs were able to identify most of the metabolites of nefazodone. The subsequent SIM and SRM experiments gave mass accuracy of better than +/-0.003 u for the masses of the precursor and product ions of nefazodone and all the metabolites. The ability to perform metabolite screening by using the scan features followed by accurate mass determinations on the same instrument is an attractive feature of using a triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer with enhanced resolution and accurate mass capability.  相似文献   

9.
Stable-isotope trapping combined with mass spectrometry (MS) neutral loss scanning has recently been developed as a high-throughput method for the in vitro screening of major reactive metabolites. In fact, detection and identification of minor reactive metabolites are equally important since the minor metabolites, even though at low levels, may be highly reactive and also play an important role in drug-induced adverse reactions. In this study, 2-acetylthiophene, clozapine, troglitazone and 7-methylindole were selected as model compounds to further validate the advantages of this method for rapid detection and structural characterization of minor glutathione (GSH) adducts derived from reactive metabolites. The utility of the current method was clearly demonstrated by successful identification of novel reactive metabolites at low levels and also minor ones either masked by non-specific responses or co-eluted with other conjugates. In comparison with existing methods, this method is sensitive, efficient, and suitable for rapid screening and more complete profiling of reactive metabolites.  相似文献   

10.
Chemically reactive metabolites may cause hepatotoxicity and as a result liver failure or other adverse side reactions. Therefore, this is a vital topic of interest because early reactive metabolite screening may prevent compound failure at a later stage. In order to address this issue, a screening assay has been developed to detect the formation of reactive metabolites by using glutathione as a trapping reagent, which will allow us to search for phase I metabolites and also glutathiones during in vitro metabolite screening using liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) with exact mass. Glutathione conjugations when fragmented by the mass spectrometer give a common loss corresponding to the pyroglutamic acid moiety, which can be monitored. Until recently, this work has been carried out with triple quadrupole technology using nominal mass. The advantage of the hybrid quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer is the selectivity and sensitivity that can be achieved. Exact neutral loss detection is achieved via sequential low- and high-energy MS acquisitions. After detection of the loss of the pyroglutamic acid moiety, using a window of +/-20 mDa on the high-energy scan, MS/MS is carried out on the parent mass of interest to confirm the common neutral loss.  相似文献   

11.
The knowledge of drug metabolism in the early phases of the drug discovery process is vital for minimising compound failure at later stages. As chemically reactive metabolites may cause adverse drug reactions, it is generally accepted that avoiding formation of reactive metabolites increases the chances of success of a molecule. In order to generate this important information, a screening strategy for the rapid detection of in vitro generated reactive metabolites trapped by glutathione has been developed. The bioassay incorporated the use of native glutathione and its close analogue the glutathione ethyl ester. The generic conditions for detecting glutathione conjugates that undergo constant neutral loss of 129 Da were optimised using a glutathione‐based test mix of four compounds. The final liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry constant neutral loss method used low‐resolution settings and a scanning window of 200 amu. Data mining was rapidly and efficiently performed using LightSight® software. Unambiguous identification of the glutathione conjugates was significantly facilitated by the analytical characteristics of the conjugate pairs formed with glutathione and glutathione ethyl ester, i.e. by chromatographic retention time and mass differences. The reliability and robustness of the screening strategy was tested using a number of compounds known to form reactive metabolites. Overall, the developed screening strategy provided comprehensive and reliable identification of glutathione conjugates and is well suited for rapid routine detection of trapped reactive metabolites. This new approach allowed the identification of a previously unreported diclofenac glutathione conjugate. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
LC coupled to single (LC–MS) and tandem (LC–MS/MS) mass spectrometry is recognized as the most powerful analytical tools for metabolic studies in drug discovery. In this article, we describe five cases illustrating the utility of screening xenobiotic metabolites in routine analysis of forensic samples using LC–MS/MS. Analyses were performed using a previously published LC–MS/MS general unknown screening (GUS) procedure developed using a hybrid linear IT–tandem mass spectrometer. In each of the cases presented, the presence of metabolites of xenobiotics was suspected after analyzing urine samples. In two cases, the parent drug was also detected and the metabolites were merely useful to confirm drug intake, but in three other cases, metabolite detection was of actual forensic interest. The presented results indicate that: (i) the GUS procedure developed is useful to detect a large variety of drug metabolites, which would have been hardly detected using targeted methods in the context of clinical or forensic toxicology; (ii) metabolite structure can generally be inferred from their “enhanced” product ion scan spectra; and (iii) structure confirmation can be achieved through in vitro metabolic experiments or through the analysis of urine samples from individuals taking the parent drug.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The prediction of drug metabolism is an important task in drug development. Besides well-established in vitro and in vivo methods using biological matrices, several biomimetic models have been developed. This review summarizes three different nonenzymatic strategies, including metalloporphyrins as surrogates of the active centre of cytochrome P450, Fenton’s reagent, and the electrochemical oxidation of drug compounds. Although none of the systems can simulate the whole range of cytochrome P450-catalyzed reactions adequately, the biomimetic models show some advantages over standard in vitro methods. For example, metalloporpyhrin catalysts allow the synthesis of certain metabolites in sufficient amounts and with sufficient purities to permit characterization and further pharmacological and toxicological tests. The electrochemical generation of metabolites coupled on-line to liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry is a promising tool for studying reactive metabolites and can be applied in automated high-throughput screening approaches. In this paper, detailed comparisons with cytochrome P450 catalysis are drawn, advantages and disadvantages of the respective methods are revealed, and possible applications are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
In the present study, a method for the analysis of reactive metabolites via liquid chromatography (LC) with inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry (MS) was developed. A ferrocenyl-modified glutathione (GSH) reagent, consisting of GSH and succinimidyl-3-ferrocenylpropionate, was synthesized. Derivatization of the tripeptide was performed at the N-terminus, leaving the nucleophilic thiol group vacant for the attack of electrophilic compounds. The potential of ferrocenylpropionate (FP)-GSH as a trapping agent for reactive metabolites was investigated using an electrochemical flow-through cell for metabolism simulation coupled online to a LC system with electrospray ionization mass spectrometric detection. The pharmaceuticals amodiaquine, an antimalarial agent, and clozapine, an antipsychotic compound, served as model substances. By proving the successful adduct formation between the reactive metabolite and ferrocene-labeled GSH, it could be shown that FP-GSH is an effective trapping agent which eases routine reversed-phase LC analyses. In contrast to GSH, which is usually used for the conjugation of reactive metabolites and where the resulting adducts often show no or only very little retention, FP-GSH facilitates the detection of the corresponding metabolite adducts due to higher retention times.  相似文献   

16.
The sensitivity achieved by the described thin-layer chromatographic (TLC) method greatly exceeds that of previously published TLC methods for the determination of cocaine and its principal metabolite, benzoylecgonine, in urine. Sensitivity for cocaine and benzoylecgonine approaches 0.1 and 0.25 mug/ml, respectively, for a 5.0-ml specimen. A simple extraction with a mixed organic solvent provides the basic mechanism for isolating the drugs from biologic specimens. Cocaine and its metabolites are stable in sulfuric acid solutions but labile in aqueous media containing certain other inorganic and organic acids; therefore, an emphasis on the utilization of sulfuric acid solutions is employed throughout the procedure. An evaluation of sensitivities achieved for cocaine and benzoylecgonine by various detection reagents is presented. The technique is applicable to drug screening programs.  相似文献   

17.
Validated liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometric (LC/MS/MS) methods are now widely used for quantitation of drugs in post-dose (incurred) biological samples for the assessment of pharmacokinetic parameters, bioavailability and bioequivalence. In accordance with the practice currently accepted within the pharmaceutical industry and the regulatory bodies, validation of a bioanalytical LC/MS/MS method is performed using standards and quality control (QC) samples prepared by spiking the drug (the analyte) into the appropriate blank biological matrix (e.g. human plasma). The method is then declared to be adequately validated for analyzing incurred biological samples. However, unlike QC samples, incurred samples may contain an epimer or another type of isomer of the drug, such as a Z or E isomer. Such a metabolite will obviously interfere with the selected reaction monitoring (SRM) transition used for the quantitation of the drug. The incurred sample may also contain a non-isomeric metabolite having a molecular mass different from that of the drug (such an acylglucuronide metabolite) that can still contribute to (and hence interfere with) the SRM transition used for the quantitation of the drug. The potential for the SRM interference increases with the use of LC/MS/MS bioanalytical methods with very short run times (e.g. 0.5 min). In addition, a metabolite can potentially undergo degradation or conversion to revert back to the drug during the multiple steps of sample preparation that precede the introduction of the processed sample into the LC/MS/MS system. In this paper, we recommend a set of procedures to undertake with incurred samples, as soon as such samples are available, in order to establish the validity of an LC/MS/MS method for analyzing real-life samples. First, it is recommended that the stability of incurred samples be investigated 'as is' and after sample preparation. Second, it is recommended that potential SRM interference be investigated by analyzing the incurred samples using the same LC/MS/MS method but with the additional incorporation of the SRM transitions attributable to putative metabolites (multi-SRM method). The metabolites monitored will depend on the expected metabolic products of the drug, which are predictable based on the functional groups present in the chemical structure of the drug. Third, it is recommended that potential SRM interference be further investigated by analyzing the incurred samples using the multi-SRM LC/MS/MS method following the modification of chromatographic conditions to enhance chromatographic separation of the drug from any putative metabolites. We will demonstrate the application of the proposed strategy by using a carboxylic acid containing drug candidate and its acylglucuronide as a putative metabolite. Plasma samples from the first-in-man (FIM) study of the drug candidate were used as the incurred samples.  相似文献   

18.
High-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) is an important technology for studying biotransformations of drugs in biological systems. In order to process complex HRMS data, bioinformatics, including data-mining techniques for identifying drug metabolites from liquid chromatography/high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC/HRMS) or multistage mass spectrometry (MSn) datasets as well as elucidating the detected metabolites’ structure by spectral interpretation software, are important tools. Data-mining technologies have widely been used in drug metabolite identification, including mass defect filters, product ion filters, neutral-loss filters, control sample comparisons and extracted ion chromatographic analysis. However, the metabolites identified by current different technologies are not the same, indicating the importance of technique integration for efficient and complete identification of metabolic products. In this study, a universal, high-throughput workflow for identifying and verifying metabolites by applying the drug metabolite identification software UNIFI is reported, to study the biotransformation of verapamil in rats. A total of 71 verapamil metabolites were found in rat plasma, urine and faeces, including two metabolites that have not been reported in the literature. Phase I metabolites of verapamil were identified as N-demethylation, O-demethylation, N-dealkylation and oxidation and dehydrogenation metabolites; phase II metabolites were mainly glucuronidation and sulfate conjugates, indicating that UNIFI software could be effective and valuable in identifying drug metabolites.  相似文献   

19.
Acyl glucuronides are key metabolites for many carboxylic acid-containing drugs, notably those of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory class. In the processes of drug safety assessment and new drug development, it is essential that acyl glucuronides, if formed in vivo, should be made conveniently available for bioevaluation. We recently showed that selective acylation of allyl glucuronate is a promising method for the synthesis of these metabolites in good yield and with excellent β-anomeric selectivity. We now give fuller details of the allyl ester method and further report that benzyl glucuronate performs at least equally well in the acylation step, offering the advantage of very mild deprotection by catalytic transfer (or conventional) hydrogenation. Depending on the compatibility of other functional groups, as discussed below, this will be the method of choice for many acyl glucuronide syntheses. The value of the method is demonstrated in particular by the synthesis of several acyl glucuronides that are known metabolites of important drugs.  相似文献   

20.
Voltammetric sensors made with films of polyions, double‐stranded DNA and liver microsomes adsorbed layer‐by‐layer onto pyrolytic graphite electrodes were evaluated for reactive metabolite screening. This approach features simple, inexpensive screening without enzyme purification for applications in drug or environmental chemical development. Cytochrome P450 enzymes (CYPs) in the liver microsomes were activated by an NADPH regenerating system or by electrolysis to metabolize model carcinogenic compounds nitrosamine and styrene. Reactive metabolites formed in the films were trapped as adducts with nucleobases on DNA. The DNA damage was detected by square‐wave voltammetry (SWV) using Ru(bpy) as a DNA‐oxidation catalyst. These sensors showed a larger rate of increase in signal vs. reaction time for a highly toxic nitrosamine than for the moderately toxic styrene due to more rapid reactive metabolite‐DNA adduct formation. Results were consistent with reported in vivo TD50 data for the formation of liver tumors in rats. Analogous polyion/ liver microsome films prepared on 500 nm silica nanoparticles (nanoreactors) and reacted with nitrosamine or styrene, provided LC‐MS or GC analyses of metabolite formation rates that correlated well with sensor response.  相似文献   

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