Formation/fate of reactive metabolites from general anesthetics and a comparison of toxic and non-toxic analogues: a DFT study.

Drug Metab Lett

Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Department of Pharmacoinformatics, National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research, (NIPER), Sector-67, S. A. S. Nagar - 160 062, Punjab, India.

Published: October 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Chloroform and Halothane are anesthetics known to cause liver damage due to their reactive metabolites, although the specific molecular reactions leading to these metabolites haven't been thoroughly studied yet.
  • Quantum chemical methods revealed that the reaction of chloroform with HOOH to form phosgene is highly exothermic and has a low activation barrier, suggesting the reaction is likely to occur easily.
  • Comparison of bond dissociation and radical stabilization energies between chloroform, halothane, and safer anesthetics indicates that these energy metrics can help identify toxic versus non-toxic anesthetics.

Article Abstract

Chloroform and Halothane are well known hepatotoxic anesthetics for which toxicity is attributed to their reactive metabolites. The molecular level details of reactions leading to the formation of reactive metabolites from chloroform and halothane have not been explored. Potential energy surface (PES) for the formation of phosgene (a toxic intermediate) from Chloroform has been studied using quantum chemical methods. The HOOH mediated reaction of chloroform to give phosgene has been found to be exothermic by 81.24 kcal/mol with a barrier of ~ 3 kcal/mol through the water catalyzed transition sate. The quantum chemical studies on the reactivity profile of phosgene indicated that urea derivatives need to be considered on the mechanism leading to toxicity. Similarly, metabolic pathways of Halothane oxidation have been studied. The C-H bond dissociation energies (BDE) and radical stabilization energies (RSE) for Chloroform and Halothane (< 95 kcal/mol and > 10 kcal/mol) were found to be significantly different for these toxic anesthetics in comparison to their safer analogues (> 100 kcal/mol and < 5 kcal/mol) respectively; thus these parameters can be employed to distinguish toxic and non-toxic general anesthetics. Enthalpy for the Cpd I, a widely used model for CYP450 enzymes, mediated reactions also agreed well with these results.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1872312811206040001DOI Listing

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