| Literature DB >> 29461507 |
Friedrich-Alexander Ludwig1, Steffen Fischer2, René Smits3, Winnie Deuther-Conrad4, Alexander Hoepping5, Solveig Tiepolt6, Marianne Patt7, Osama Sabri8, Peter Brust9,10.
Abstract
Both (+)-[18F]flubatine and its enantiomer (-)-[18F]flubatine are radioligands for the neuroimaging of α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) by positron emission tomography (PET). In a clinical study in patients with early Alzheimer's disease, (+)-[18F]flubatine ((+)-[18F]1) was examined regarding its metabolic fate, in particular by identification of degradation products detected in plasma and urine. The investigations included an in vivo study of (+)-flubatine ((+)-1) in pigs and structural elucidation of formed metabolites by LC-MS/MS. Incubations of (+)-1 and (+)-[18F]1 with human liver microsomes were performed to generate in vitro metabolites, as well as radiometabolites, which enabled an assignment of their structures by comparison of LC-MS/MS and radio-HPLC data. Plasma and urine samples taken after administration of (+)-[18F]1 in humans were examined by radio-HPLC and, on the basis of results obtained in vitro and in vivo, formed radiometabolites were identified.Entities:
Keywords: NCFHEB; [18F]FLBT; [18F]flubatine; glucuronides; liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS); liver microsomes; nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs); positron emission tomography (PET); radiometabolites
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29461507 PMCID: PMC6017759 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23020464
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Chemical structures of (+)-flubatine ((+)-1), (+)-[18F]flubatine ((+)-[18F]1) and metabolites M1-M6, known from literature [4]. For M1, M2, and M6 the numbers in brackets refer to synthesized references (rac-2a, rac-2b, rac-3) used in this publication. References rac-2a and rac-2b have been described previously in [4].
Figure 2Synthesis of rac-8-hydroxy-flubatine (rac-3). Conditions: (a) HOOAc, 1 M NaHCO3, room temperature, six days, 9%.
Figure 3LC-MS/MS chromatograms of plasma and urine before and after injection of (+)-1 into pigs; (a,b) detected (+)-1 (MRM m/z 207.1/110.0), (c,d) detected monohydroxylated metabolites (MRM m/z 223.1/110.0), (e,f) detected monohydroxylated and glucuronidated metabolites (MRM m/z 399.2/223.1). Signals in (c,d) at 5.9 min and (e) at 1.9 min are supposed to result from ion-channel cross talks [26].
Metabolites found in pig plasma and urine after injection of (+)-1.
| Metabolite | tR (min) a | MRM Transition | EPI Fragmentation b (% Intensity in Brackets) | Identification | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma | Urine | ||||
| 1.62 | 1.60 | 223.1/110.0 | 81.9 (100), 205.0 (71), 223.0 (32), 163.1 (26), 162.1 (23), 110.0 (17), 136.0 (15), 131.0 (15), 103.9 (14), 188.1 (9) | Hydroxylation | |
| 1.89 | 1.87 | 223.1/110.0 | 223.1 (100), 136.0 (40), 110.0 (39), 162.1 (37), 180.1 | ||
| 2.26 | 2.32 | 223.1/110.0 | 223.1 (100), 150.0 (63), 164.1 (44), 110.0 (42), 188.1 (41), 82.0 (39), 135.1 (31), 206.1 (18), 176.1 (16), 120.1 (14), 162.1 (12), 124.0 (12), 205.1 (12), 134.0 (12), 136.1 (12), 163.1 (10) | ||
| 2.31 | 2.40 | 223.1/110.0 | 81.9 (100), 205.1 (60), 188.0 (39), 177.1 (31), 223.1 (23), 110.0 (22), 176.1 (9), 160.0 (7) | ||
| 2.89 | 223.1/110.0 | no EPI spectrum due to low intensity | |||
| 3.96 | 223.1/110.0 | no EPI spectrum due to low intensity | |||
| 5.87 | 5.86 | 399.2/223.1 | 205.2 (100), 223.2 (44), 136.1 (34), 203.2 (26), 110.0 (13), 162.1 (11), 177.2 (9), 83.0 (9), 207.2 (8), 189.1 (6), 109.1 (6), 190.2 (6) | Hydroxylation + glucuronidation | |
a Retention time (time/min); b parameters for data acquisition described in Section 4.7.; c not detected in urine.
Figure 4LC-MS/MS chromatograms after HLM incubation in presence of NADPH and UDPGA (37 °C, 120 min), (a) (+)-1, (b) (−)-1, (c) rac-3 (without NADPH); Monitored MRM transitions: m/z 207.1/110.0 for (+)-1 and (−)-1, m/z 223.1/110.0 for monohydroxylated metabolites (including rac-3), m/z 399.2/205.1, 399.1/223.1 for monohydroxylated and glucuronidated metabolites.
Glucuronide conjugates formed by incubation with HLM.
| Metabolite a | tR (min) b | Substrate | MRM Transitions | EPI Fragmentation c (% Intensity in Brackets) | Identification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.18 | (−)- | 399.2/223.1 399.2/205.1 | 205.1241 (100), 223.1 (60), 136.0 (37), 203.1 (20), 110.0 (18), 177.1 (16), 83.0 (11), 207.1 (11), 162.0 (11), 82.0 (10), 116.0 (8), 163.1 (8), 190.1 (7), 124.0 (7) | Hydroxylation + Glucuronidation d | |
| 3.60 | (+)- | 399.2/223.1 399.2/205.1 | 223.1 (100), 205.1 (21), 124.1 (6), 110.2 (6), 136.0 (6), 84.9 (4), 113.0 (4) | ||
| 3.22 | (−)- | 399.2/223.1 399.2/205.1 | 223.1 (100), 205.1 (27), 136.1 (16), 84.9 (9), 110.0 (8), 150.0 (6), 203.2 (6), 82.9 (6), 67.9 (4), 190.1 (4), 113.0 (3) |
a data for M7a, formed from (+)-1 or rac-3, correspond to those stated in Table 1; b Retention time (time/min); c parameters for data acquisition described in Section 4.7.; d for rac-3 glucuronidation only.
Figure 5Proposed structures and fragmentation pathways shown for glucuronide conjugates M7a and M8a, drawn as N-O-glucuronide (A) and N+(O−)-glucuronide (B); similarly, for enantiomers M7b and M8b.
Figure 6Comparison of metabolic profiles of (+)-[18F]1 (in vivo vs. in vitro) and identification of radiometabolites. Representative radio-HPLC chromatograms of samples obtained from human subjects: (a) plasma, 15 min, (b) plasma, 30 min, (c) urine, 95 min after injection, as well as (d) after HLM incubation (NADPH, UDPGA, TRIS, pH 8.4, 37 °C, 120 min). Scaling was adjusted for each chromatogram.