1 research outputs found
Prediction of Hydrolysis Pathways and Kinetics for Antibiotics under Environmental pH Conditions: A Quantum Chemical Study on Cephradine
Understanding
hydrolysis pathways and kinetics of many antibiotics
that have multiple hydrolyzable functional groups is important for
their fate assessment. However, experimental determination of hydrolysis
encounters difficulties due to time and cost restraint. We employed
the density functional theory and transition state theory to predict
the hydrolysis pathways and kinetics of cephradine, a model of cephalosporin
with two hydrolyzable groups, two ionization states, two isomers and
two nucleophilic attack directions. Results showed that the hydrolysis
of cephradine at pH = 8.0 proceeds via opening of the β-lactam
ring followed by intramolecular amidation. The predicted rate constants
at different pH conditions are of the same order of magnitude as the
experimental values, and the predicted products are confirmed by experiment.
This study identified a catalytic role of the carboxyl group in the
hydrolysis, and implies that the carboxyl group also plays a catalytic
role in the hydrolysis of other cephalosporin and penicillin antibiotics.
This is a first attempt to quantum chemically predict hydrolysis of
an antibiotic with complex pathways, and indicates that to predict
hydrolysis products under the environmental pH conditions, the variation
of the rate constants for different pathways with pH should be evaluated