A rapid and validated method for analysis of levosulpiride in human plasma using liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry was developed. Levosulpiride and tiapride (IS, internal standard) were extracted from alkalized plasma samples with ethylacetate and separation by RP-HPLC. Detection was performed by positive ion electrospray ionization in multiple-reaction monitoring mode, monitoring the transitions m/z 342.1 --> m/z 112.2 and m/z 329.1 --> m/z 213.2, for quantification of levosulpiride and IS, respectively. The standard calibration curves showed good linearity within the range of 2-200 ng/mL (r(2) > or = 0.9990). The lower limit of quantitation was 2 ng/mL. The retention times of levosulpiride (0.63 min) and IS (0.66 min) presented a significant time saving benefit of the proposed method. No significant metabolic compounds were found to interfere with the analysis. This method offered good precision and accuracy and was successfully applied for the pharmacokinetic and bioequivalence study of a 25 mg of levosulpiride tablet in 24 healthy Korean volunteers.
The upstream region of the gene coding for Clostridium botufinum type B (BoNT/B) neurotoxin was cloned and sequenced. There were two open reading frames, which were identified as a nontoxic-nonhemagglutinin component (ntnh/B) and a 22 kDa adjacent open reading frame (orf22/B). Deduced primary structure of ntnh/B showed that it was composed of 1,197 amino acid residues. Pairwise comparisons of the ntnh/B component with other botulinum toxin types showed high degree of homology to ntnh/A (82% identity). Northern blot analysis revealed that toxin gene could be transcribed alone or co-transcribed with the ntnh gene. The orf22/B gene encoding for 178 amino acids (M.W. 21.6 kDa) was located between the 33 kDa hemagglutinin gene and the ntnh gene. Orf22/B also showed high degree of homology to orf22/A (98.9% identity). These results suggested that the upstream region of the BoNT/B gene (containing the ntnh/B and orf22/B genes) might be evolutionarily closely related to the counterparts of the BoNT/A.
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