Resveratrol (RES) suffers from poor water solubility and extensive metabolism, which lead to low bioavailability. A phospholipid complex (PC) containing RES and a UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) inhibitor was prepared to address these two limiting factors, thereby improving RES bioavailability. First, 11 natural active ingredients metabolized by similar enzyme subtypes to RES were screened in a glucuronidation assay in liver microsomes. Then, glycyrrhetinic acid (GA), the strongest inhibitor, was prepared with RES in a PC. RES-PC was prepared as a control. As expected, the water solubility and the cumulative dissolution of RES were significantly enhanced by RES-PC and RES/GA-PC. Compared with the RES group, the AUC 0−10 of RES and resveratrol-3-glucuronide (R-3-G) in the RES/GA-PC group showed increases of 2.49-and 1.70-fold, respectively, with the proportion of RES absorption to total absorption increasing 1.45 times. These results demonstrated that RES/GA-PC could improve the bioavailability of RES by increasing its water solubility and inhibiting its glucuronidation.
An isoleucine carbamate prodrug of daidzein was designed to address the challenge of its metabolic instability with the aim of improving oral bioavailability. To explore the process of biotransformation between...
Two valine carbamate prodrugs of daidzein were designed to improve its bioavailability. To compare the pharmacokinetic behavior of these prodrugs with different protected phenolic hydroxyl groups of daidzein, a rapid and sensitive method for simultaneous quantification of daidzein, its valine carbamate prodrug, and daidzein-7-O-glucuronide in rat plasma was developed and validated in this study. The samples were processed using a fast one-step protein precipitation method with methanol added to 50 μL of plasma and were analyzed by ultra-high performance liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry. To improve the selectivity, peak shape, and peak elution, several key factors, especially stationary phase and the composition of the mobile phase, were tested, and the analysis was performed using the Kinetex R C18 column (100 × 2.1 mm, 2.6 μm) within only 2.6 min under optimal conditions. The established method exhibited good linearity over the concentration range of 2.0-1000 ng/mL for daidzein, and 8.0-4000 ng/mL for the prodrug and daidzein-7-O-glucuronide. The accuracy of the quality control samples was between 95.5 and 110.2% with satisfactory intra-and interday precision (relative standard deviation values < 10.85%), respectively. This sensitive, rapid, low-cost, and highthroughput method was successfully applied to compare the pharmacokinetic behavior of different daidzein carbamate prodrugs.
Background: A valine carbamate prodrug (7-P) was designed to enhance the low bioavailability of daidzein due to its low water solubility and membrane permeability. Here, we developed a high-throughput HPLC–MS/MS method to measure daidzein and its 7-O-glucuronide after oral administration of daidzein or 7-P. Materials & methods: A HPLC–MS/MS method was validated and successfully applied to assess the pharmacokinetic behavior of daidzein and its 7-O-glucuronide after orally administrating daidzein or 7-P. The validated method on selectivity, linearity (r ≥ 0.995), precision (relative standard deviation <11.4%), accuracy (relative error <7.1%), extraction recovery (>92.4%), matrix effect (<8.2%) and stability were satisfied. Conclusion: The proposed economical, rapid and sensitive method will be an alternative analytical procedure for daidzein and its metabolite in biological samples.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.