Polymorphs of the antiviral drug ganciclovir.

Acta Crystallogr C Struct Chem

Chemistry Deparment, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1101 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706, USA.

Published: December 2017

Ganciclovir (GCV; systematic name: 2-amino-9-{[(1,3-dihydroxypropan-2-yl)oxy]methyl}-6,9-dihydro-1H-purin-6-one), CHNO, an antiviral drug for treating cytomegalovirus infections, has two known polymorphs (Forms I and II), but only the structure of the metastable Form II has been reported [Kawamura & Hirayama (2009). X-ray Struct. Anal. Online, 25, 51-52]. We describe a successful preparation of GCV Form I and its crystal structure. GCV is an achiral molecule in the sense that its individual conformers, which are generally chiral objects, undergo fast interconversion in the liquid state and cannot be isolated. In the crystalline state, GCV exists as two inversion-related conformers in Form I and as a single chiral conformer in Form II. This situation is similar to that observed for glycine, also an achiral molecule, whose α-polymorph contains two inversion-related conformers, while the γ-polymorph contains a single conformer that is chiral. The hydrogen bonds are exclusively intermolecular in Form I, but both inter- and intramolecular in Form II, which accounts for the different molecular conformations in the two polymorphs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S2053229617016059DOI Listing

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