Transacylation and hydrolysis of the acyl glucuronides of ibuprofen and its α-methyl-substituted analogues investigated by 1H NMR spectroscopy and computational chemistry: Implications for drug design

  • Selena E. Richards
  • , Peter R. Bradshaw
  • , Caroline H. Johnson
  • , Andrew V. Stachulski
  • , Toby J. Athersuch
  • , Jeremy K. Nicholson
  • , John C. Lindon
  • , Ian D. Wilson

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    1 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Drugs and drug metabolites containing a carboxylic-acid moiety can undergo in vivo conjugation to form 1-β-O-acyl-glucuronides (1-β-O-AGs). In addition to hydrolysis, these conjugates can undergo spontaneous acyl migration, and anomerisation reactions, resulting in a range of positional isomers. Facile transacylation has been suggested as a mechanism contributing to the toxicity of acyl glucuronides, with the kinetics of these processes thought to be a factor. Previous 1H NMR spectroscopic and HPLC-MS studies have been conducted to measure the degradation rates of the 1-β-O-AGs of three nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (ibufenac, R-ibuprofen, S-ibuprofen) and a dimethyl-analogue (termed here as “bibuprofen”). These studies have also determined the relative contributions of hydrolysis and acyl migration in both buffered aqueous solution, and human plasma. Here, a detailed kinetic analysis is reported, providing the individual rate constants for the acyl migration and hydrolysis reactions observed in buffer for each of the 4 AGs, together with the overall degradation rate constants of the parent 1-β-O-AGs. Computational modelling of the reactants and transition states of the transacylation reaction using density functional theory indicated differences in the activation energies that reflected the influence of both substitution and stereochemistry on the rate of transacylation/hydrolysis.

    Original languageBritish English
    Article number116238
    JournalJournal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis
    Volume246
    DOIs
    StatePublished - 15 Aug 2024

    Keywords

    • H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
    • Acyl glucuronide migration
    • Density Functional Theory
    • Drug toxicity
    • Kinetics

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