Preparative Microfluidic Electrosynthesis of Drug
Metabolites
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Abstract
In vivo, a drug molecule undergoes
its first chemical transformation
within the liver via CYP450-catalyzed oxidation. The chemical outcome
of the first pass hepatic oxidation is key information to any drug
development process. Electrochemistry can be used to simulate CYP450
oxidation, yet it is often confined to the analytical scale, hampering
product isolation and full characterization. In an effort to replicate
hepatic oxidations, while retaining high throughput at the preparative
scale, microfluidic technology and electrochemistry are combined in
this study by using a microfluidic electrochemical cell. Several commercial
drugs were subjected to continuous-flow electrolysis. They were chosen
for their various chemical reactivity: their metabolites in vivo are
generated via aromatic hydroxylation, alkyl oxidation, glutathione
conjugation, or sulfoxidation. It is demonstrated that such metabolites
can be synthesized by flow electrolysis at the 10 to 100 mg scale,
and the purified products are fully characterized