An O-(saccharinylmethyl) prodrug was synthesized to improve the poor oral potency of the phenolic drug 17 beta-estradiol. This O-(imidomethyl) type of prodrug was designed to undergo chemical hydrolysis and to be a poor substrate for enzymatic hydrolysis. At 37 degrees C, it was found to exhibit half-lives of about 13 min in 50% methanol:pH 7.0 (v/v) phosphate buffer, about 3 min in rat plasma, about 15 min in human plasma, and about 50 min in 20% rat liver homogenate. Introduction of the enzyme poison tetraethyl pyrophosphate or the protein denaturant sodium fluoride into rat plasma had no significant effect on the half-life. Thus, the observed increased rate of hydrolysis in biological media is not due to enzymatic catalysis but to a nonspecific solventlike effect. The fact that the rate of hydrolysis in the methanol:buffer exhibited a first-order dependence on the hydroxide ion concentration and that the rate of hydrolysis increased with increasing methanol concentrations up to 70% supported an SN2 mechanism of hydrolysis for the prodrug. These results suggest that an O-(imidomethyl) type prodrug is insensitive to enzymatic catalysis of hydrolysis yet may hydrolyze quickly enough to release 17 beta-estradiol faster than 17 beta-estradiol is conjugated and excreted.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jps.2600831022DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rate hydrolysis
12
oral potency
8
potency phenolic
8
phenolic drug
8
o-imidomethyl type
8
type prodrug
8
rat plasma
8
plasma min
8
enzymatic catalysis
8
hydrolysis
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!