Autotaxin (ATX) is an extracellular enzyme that hydrolyses lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) to lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), which has a role in the mediation of inflammation, fibrosis and cancer. ATX is a drug target that has been the focus of many research groups during the last ten years. To date, only one molecule, Ziritaxestat (GLPG1690) has entered the clinic; it is currently in Phase 3 clinical trials for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Other small molecules, with different binding modes, have been investigated as ATX inhibitors for cancer including compounds possessing a boronic acid motif such as HA155. In this work, we targeted new, improved inhibitors of ATX that mimic the important interactions of boronic acid using a benzoxaborole motif as the acidic warhead. Furthermore, we aimed to improve the plasma stability of the new compounds by using a more stable core spacer than that embedded in HA155. Compounds were synthesized, evaluated for their ATX inhibitory activity and ADME properties in vitro, culminating in a new benzoxaborole compound, 37, which retains the ATX inhibition activity of HA155 but has improved ADME properties (plasma protein binding, good kinetic solubility and rat/human plasma stability).
The usefulness of applying an integrated LC-NMR and LC-MS approach to acarbose bulk drug impurity profiling is demonstrated. LC-MS and LC-NMR methodologies were employed for the online separation and structural elucidation of a final drug product. Combining data provided by the stop-flow LC-NMR and LC-MS experiments made it possible to identify the main components present in the acarbose sample. Spectral analysis revealed that A and B were known impurities while C was an unknown compound. LC-MS and LC-NMR analyses revealed that C was a pentasaccharide differing from the acarbose in number and nature of sugar subunits in the molecule. It was subsequently isolated and its structure was confirmed by the offline 1- and 2-D NMR experiments, and atom assignment was made.
Praziquantel (PZQ) is a biopharmaceutical
classification system
(BCS) class II anthelmintic drug characterized by poor solubility
and a bitter taste, both of which can be addressed by inclusion complexation
with cyclodextrins (CD). In this work, a comprehensive investigation
of praziquantel/cyclodextrin (PZQ/CD) complexes was conducted by means
of UV–vis spectroscopy, spectrofluorimetry, NMR spectroscopy,
liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS/MS),
and molecular modeling. Phase solubility studies revealed that among
four CDs tested, the randomly methylated β-CD (RMβCD)
and the sulfobutylether sodium salt β-CD (SBEβCD) resulted
in the highest increase in PZQ solubility (approximately 16-fold).
The formation of 1:1 inclusion complexes was confirmed by HRMS, NMR,
and molecular modeling. Both cyclohexane and the central pyrazino
ring, as well as an aromatic part of PZQ are included in the CD central
cavity through several different binding modes, which exist simultaneously.
Furthermore, the influence of CDs on PZQ stability was investigated
in solution (HCl, NaOH, H
2
O
2
) and in the solid
state (accelerated degradation, photostability) by ultra-high-performance
liquid chromatography–diode array detection–tandem mass
spectrometry (UPLC-DAD/MS). CD complexation promoted new degradation
pathways of the drug. In addition to three already known PZQ degradants,
seven new degradation products were identified (
m
/
z
148, 215, 217, 301, 327, 343, and 378) and their
structures were proposed based on HRMS/MS data. Solid complexes were
prepared by mechanochemical activation, a solvent-free and ecologically
acceptable method.
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