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Publications (2)6.56 Total impact

  • Article: Bio-generation of stable isotope labeled internal standards for absolute and relative quantitation of drug metabolites in plasma samples by LC-MS/MS.
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    ABSTRACT: In order to achieve a better understanding of the toxicity of drug candidates, quantitative characterization of circulatory drug metabolites has been of increasing interest in current pharmaceutical research. Stable isotope labeled (STIL) internal standards (IS) are ideally used to simplify drug metabolite quantitation via liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis, primarily due to their capability to compensate matrix effects, thereby leading to faster method establishment by using generic assay conditions. However, chemical synthesis of STIL metabolites can often be resource intensive, requiring lengthy exploratory synthesis route development and/or extensive optimization to achieve the required stability for some metabolites. To overcome these challenges, we developed a general method that could generate STIL metabolites in a matter of hours from STIL parent drugs through the utilization of an appropriate in vitro metabolic incubation. This methodology can potentially save valuable synthesis resources, as well as provide timely availability of STIL IS. The following work demonstrates the proof-of-concept that multiple STIL metabolites can be generated simultaneously to provide satisfactory performance for both absolute quantitation of drug metabolites and for potential use in assessment of relative exposure coverage across species in safety tests of drug metabolites (MIST).
    Journal of chromatography. B, Analytical technologies in the biomedical and life sciences 03/2013; 926C:92-100. · 2.78 Impact Factor
  • Article: Overcoming the genotoxicity of a pyrrolidine substituted arylindenopyrimidine as a potent dual adenosine A(2A)/A(1) antagonist by minimizing bioactivation to an iminium ion reactive intermediate.
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    ABSTRACT: 2-Amino-4-phenyl-8-pyrrolidin-1-ylmethyl-indeno[1,2-d]pyrimidin-5-one (1) is a novel and potent selective dual A(2A)/A(1) adenosine receptor antagonist from the arylindenopyrimidine series that was determined to be genotoxic in both the Ames and Mouse Lymphoma L5178Y assays only following metabolic activation. Compound 1 was identified as a frame-shift mutagen in Salmonella typhimurium tester strain TA1537 as indicated by a significant dose-dependent increase in revertant colonies as compared to the vehicle control. The metabolic activation-dependent irreversible covalent binding of radioactivity to DNA, recovery of 1 and its enamine metabolite from acid hydrolysis of covalently modified DNA, and protection of covalent binding to DNA by both cyanide ion and methoxylamine suggest that the frame-shift mutation in TA1537 strain involved covalent binding instead of simple intercalation to DNA. Compound 1 was bioactivated to endocyclic iminium ion, aldehyde, epoxide, and α,β-unsaturated keto reactive intermediates from the detection of cyano, oxime, and glutathione conjugates by data-dependent high resolution accurate mass measurements. Collision-induced dissociation of these conjugates provided evidence for bioactivation of the pyrrolidine ring of 1. The epoxide and α,β-unsaturated keto reactive intermediates were unlikely to cause the genotoxicity of 1 because the formation of their glutathione adducts did not ameliorate the binding of compound related material to DNA. Instead, the endocyclic iminium ions and amino aldehydes were likely candidates responsible for genotoxicity based on, first, the protection afforded by both cyanide ion and methoxylamine, which reduced the potential to form covalent adducts with DNA, and, second, analogues of 1 designed with low probability to form these reactive intermediates were not genotoxic. It was concluded that 1 also had the potential to be mutagenic in humans based on observing the endocyclic iminium ion following incubation with a human liver S9 preparation and the commensurate detection of DNA adducts. An understanding of this genotoxicity mechanism supported an evidence-based approach to selectively modify the structure of 1 which resulted in analogues being synthesized that were devoid of a genotoxic liability. In addition, potency and selectivity against both adenosine A(2A) and A(1) receptors were maintained.
    Chemical Research in Toxicology 06/2011; 24(7):1012-30. · 3.78 Impact Factor