Danofloxacin is a new synthetic fluoroquinolone antibacterial agent under development for exclusive use in veterinary medicine. Such use could lead to deposition of low levels of danofloxacin residues in the environment in manure from treated livestock. This study was conducted to evaluate the potential for indigenous soil microorganisms to metabolize danofloxacin. Cultures of 72 soil microorganisms representing a diverse panel of bacteria, fungi and yeast were incubated with danofloxacin mesylate substrate and samples analyzed periodically by high performance liquid chromatography for loss of danofloxacin and formation of metabolites. Some samples were further analyzed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and mass spectrometry to confirm metabolite identification. Twelve organisms, representing eight different genera, biotransformed danofloxacin to metabolites detectable by the chromatographic methods employed. Two Mycobacterium species, two Pseudomonas species, and isolates of Nocardia sp, Rhizopus arrhizus and Streptomyces griseus all formed N-desmethyldanofloxacin. The formation of the 7-amino danofloxacin derivative, 1-cyclopropyl-6-fluoro-7-amino-4-oxo-1,4-dihydroquinoline-3-carboxylic acid by cultures of Candida lipopytica, Pseudomonas fluorescens, two Mycobacterium species and three Penicillium species demonstrates the propensities of these cultures to completely degrade the piperazine ring. At least two additional and unidentified metabolite peaks were observed in chromatograms of Aspergillus nidulans and Penicillium sp cultures. Radiolabled [2-14C]danofloxacin added to cultures of the fungus Curvularia lunata was apparently mineralized, with approximately 31% of the radiolabel recovered as volatile metabolites after 24 h of incubation, indicating the susceptibility of the quinolone ring to microbial metabolic degradation.
The ease of use of the newer liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry interfaces has made possible the automated acquisition of spectra from large batch queues of samples. This fact, combined with the realization that unit molecular mass determination was the only datum desired by a majority of drug discovery synthetic chemists, led us to develop open access mass spectrometry in the early 1990s. Open access spectrometers now scan over 100,000 samples per year from synthesis laboratories at Pfizer. Our experiences with this novel use of mass spectrometry in a large research facility are discussed and we detail some of the pitfalls we believe to be common to this approach. In addition, we offer some reflection on the cultural changes we have observed in our research environment since this experiment began.
The generation of large numbers of samples during early drug discovery has increased the demand for rapid and selective methods of analysis. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS-MS), because of its sensitivity, selectivity, and robustness, has emerged as a powerful tool in the pharmaceutical industry for many analytical needs. This work presents a high-throughput selected reaction monitoring LC-MS bioanalytical method for the determination of idoxifene, a selective estrogen receptor modulator, and its pyrrolidinone metabolite in clinical human plasma samples. The described method uses short, small-bore columns, high flow rates, and elevated HPLC column temperatures to perform LC separations of idoxifene and its metabolite within 10 s/sample. Sequential injections were accomplished with a 215/889 multiple probe liquid handler (Gilson, Inc.), which aspirates eight samples simultaneously and performs its rinse cycle parallel to sample injection, resulting in minimum lag time between injections. This high-throughput method was applied to the determination of idoxifene and its metabolite in clinical human plasma samples. Sample preparation employed liquid/liquid extraction in the 96-well format. Method validation included determination of intra- and interassay accuracy and precision values, recovery studies, autosampler stability, and freeze-thaw stability. The LOQ obtained was 10 ng/mL for idoxifene and 30 ng/mL for the metabolite. Using idoxifene-d5 as an internal standard, idoxifene showed acceptable accuracy and precision values at QC level 1 (QC1, 15 ng/mL), level 2 (QC2, 100 ng/mL), and level 3 (QC3, 180 ng/mL) (85.0% accuracy +/- 12.0% precision, 95.1 +/- 4.9%, and 90.3 +/- 4.7%, respectively). The pyrrolidinone metabolite also showed acceptable accuracy and precision values (using no internal standard for quantitation) at QC1 (60 ng/mL), QC2 (100 ng/mL), and QC3 (180 ng/mL) (104.9 +/- 14.4%, 91.1 +/- 13.0%, and 90.8 +/- 12.2%, respectively). The validated method was applied to the analysis of 613 human clinical plasma samples. An average run time of 23 s/sample (approximately 37 min/ 96-well plate or over 3,700 sample/day) was achieved. The successful validation presented indicates that rapid methods of analysis can efficiently and reliably contribute to the fast sample turnaround required for high sample number generating processes.
The Cope rearrangement of 1,Sdienes with an anionic oxygen on C-3 has been shown to proceed in the gas phase, using ICR spectrometry, for the case where the precursor is a tertiary alcohol. The secondary alcohol, if it reacts at all, is slower than the ICR time scale. A similar rate difference is observed in THF or Me,SO solvents. The rate variation is ascribed to an intrinsic structural effect, not to differential ion pairing or solvation effects. ( 5 ) Steigerwald, M. L.; Goddard, W. A,, 111; Evans, D. A. J. Am. Chem. (6) Zimmerman, A. H.; Brauman, J. I.
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