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UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5

Carvedilol (CAR), a racemic lipophilic aryloxy propanolamine, acts as a selective α(1)-adrenoreceptor antagonist and a nonselective β-adrenoreceptor antagonist. CAR metabolism mainly produces three active metabolites: desmethyl carvedilol (DMC), 4′-hydroxy carvedilol (4′OHC) and 5′-hydroxy carvedilo...

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Autores principales: Samir, Liza, Hanafi, Rasha, El Deeb, Sami, Spahn-Langguth, Hilde
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9370150/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35956942
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27154998
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author Samir, Liza
Hanafi, Rasha
El Deeb, Sami
Spahn-Langguth, Hilde
author_facet Samir, Liza
Hanafi, Rasha
El Deeb, Sami
Spahn-Langguth, Hilde
author_sort Samir, Liza
collection PubMed
description Carvedilol (CAR), a racemic lipophilic aryloxy propanolamine, acts as a selective α(1)-adrenoreceptor antagonist and a nonselective β-adrenoreceptor antagonist. CAR metabolism mainly produces three active metabolites: desmethyl carvedilol (DMC), 4′-hydroxy carvedilol (4′OHC) and 5′-hydroxy carvedilol (5′OHC). The oxidative S-(-)-metabolites contribute to the β-antagonistic effect, yet not to the α-antagonistic effect to be observed after drug dosage. Therefore, the three β-adrenoceptor blocking metabolites, which are structurally closely related to the parent CAR, are included into the development of a bioanalytical quantitative method for all major active species relevant with respect to adrenoceptor-blockade. Because of the given pharmacological profile, resolution of the enantiomers of carvedilol, of 4′- and 5′-hydroxy carvedilol as well as of DMC, is mandatory. The current study aims to determine the response surface for the enantiomer separation of the parent CAR as well as the major metabolites on a suitable chiral stationary phase. Design of experiment approach (DoE) was utilized in an initial screening phase followed by central-composite design for delimitation of the response surface for resolution of the four enantiomeric pairs in least run time. The impact of chromatographic variables (composition and percentage of organic modifier(s), buffer type, buffer pH, flow rate) on critical peaks resolution and adjusted retention time was evaluated, in order to select the most significant critical quality attributes. On this basis, a robust UHPLC-UV method was developed and optimized for the simultaneous, enantioselective determination of CAR along with its major active metabolites (4′OHC, 5′OHC, and DMC) on Chiralpak IBN-5. The optimized UHPLC-UV method (which includes metoprolol as the internal standard) was validated according to the ICH M10 guidelines for bioanalytical methods and proven to be linear, precise, accurate, and robust. The validated assay was applied to plasma samples from cardiovascular patients treated with rac-CAR (blood randomly drawn at different times after oral CAR intake). In order to provide more insight into the mechanism of the enantiomer separation of CAR and its metabolites on the CSP, docking experiments were performed. Molecular simulation studies suggest the chiral recognition to be mainly due to different binding poses of enantiomers of the same compound.
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spelling pubmed-93701502022-08-12 UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5 Samir, Liza Hanafi, Rasha El Deeb, Sami Spahn-Langguth, Hilde Molecules Article Carvedilol (CAR), a racemic lipophilic aryloxy propanolamine, acts as a selective α(1)-adrenoreceptor antagonist and a nonselective β-adrenoreceptor antagonist. CAR metabolism mainly produces three active metabolites: desmethyl carvedilol (DMC), 4′-hydroxy carvedilol (4′OHC) and 5′-hydroxy carvedilol (5′OHC). The oxidative S-(-)-metabolites contribute to the β-antagonistic effect, yet not to the α-antagonistic effect to be observed after drug dosage. Therefore, the three β-adrenoceptor blocking metabolites, which are structurally closely related to the parent CAR, are included into the development of a bioanalytical quantitative method for all major active species relevant with respect to adrenoceptor-blockade. Because of the given pharmacological profile, resolution of the enantiomers of carvedilol, of 4′- and 5′-hydroxy carvedilol as well as of DMC, is mandatory. The current study aims to determine the response surface for the enantiomer separation of the parent CAR as well as the major metabolites on a suitable chiral stationary phase. Design of experiment approach (DoE) was utilized in an initial screening phase followed by central-composite design for delimitation of the response surface for resolution of the four enantiomeric pairs in least run time. The impact of chromatographic variables (composition and percentage of organic modifier(s), buffer type, buffer pH, flow rate) on critical peaks resolution and adjusted retention time was evaluated, in order to select the most significant critical quality attributes. On this basis, a robust UHPLC-UV method was developed and optimized for the simultaneous, enantioselective determination of CAR along with its major active metabolites (4′OHC, 5′OHC, and DMC) on Chiralpak IBN-5. The optimized UHPLC-UV method (which includes metoprolol as the internal standard) was validated according to the ICH M10 guidelines for bioanalytical methods and proven to be linear, precise, accurate, and robust. The validated assay was applied to plasma samples from cardiovascular patients treated with rac-CAR (blood randomly drawn at different times after oral CAR intake). In order to provide more insight into the mechanism of the enantiomer separation of CAR and its metabolites on the CSP, docking experiments were performed. Molecular simulation studies suggest the chiral recognition to be mainly due to different binding poses of enantiomers of the same compound. MDPI 2022-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9370150/ /pubmed/35956942 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27154998 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Samir, Liza
Hanafi, Rasha
El Deeb, Sami
Spahn-Langguth, Hilde
UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5
title UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5
title_full UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5
title_fullStr UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5
title_full_unstemmed UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5
title_short UHPLC Enantiomer Resolution for the ɑ/β-Adrenoceptor Antagonist R/S-Carvedilol and Its Major Active Metabolites on Chiralpak IB N-5
title_sort uhplc enantiomer resolution for the ɑ/β-adrenoceptor antagonist r/s-carvedilol and its major active metabolites on chiralpak ib n-5
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9370150/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35956942
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27154998
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