| Literature DB >> 32326326 |
Madalena M M Pinto1,2, Carla Fernandes1,2, Maria E Tiritan1,2,3.
Abstract
Enantiomeric separation is a key step in the development of a new chiral drug. Preparative liquid chromatography (LC) continues to be the technique of choice either during the drug discovery process, to achieve a few milligrams, or to a scale-up during the clinical trial, needing kilograms of material. However, in the last few years, instrumental and technical developments allowed an exponential increase of preparative enantioseparation using other techniques. Besides LC, supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) and counter-current chromatography (CCC) have aroused interest for preparative chiral separation. This overview will highlight the importance to scale-up chiral separations in Medicinal Chemistry, especially in the early stages of the pipeline of drugs discovery and development. Few examples within different methodologies will be selected, emphasizing the trends in chiral preparative separation. The advantages and drawbacks will be critically discussed.Entities:
Keywords: chiral separations; chirality; counter-current chromatography; drug development; drug discovery; liquid chromatography; membranes; preparative scale; supercritical fluid chromatography
Year: 2020 PMID: 32326326 PMCID: PMC7221958 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25081931
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Different ways to obtain enantiomerically pure compounds.
Figure 2Timeline of the most important landmarks of enantioseparation.
Figure 3Liquid chromatography enantioseparation chromatogram of pentedrone (A) and methylone (B). Chromatographic conditions: Chiralpak® AS-H column, mobile phase Hex/2-PrOH (97:3, v/v) for A and Hex/2-PrOH (85:15, v/v) for B, flow rate 2 mL/min, UV detection 254 nm (reprint permission from [61]).
Figure 4Preparative chromatograms of SKF 93,505 in: (A) Liquid chromatography under polar organic mode on Chiralcel OJ column; and in (B) Supercritical Fluid Chromatography on Chiralpak AS column. Chromatographic conditions in (A): Mobile phase, 100% MeOH; flow rate, 20 mL/min. Chromatographic conditions in (B): Mobile phase, CO2/MeOH (55:45, v/v); flow rate, 60 g/min; back pressure: 17.0MPa. Column dimensions (250 × 20 mm, i.d., 10 μm); sample concentration, 15 mg/mL; each injection volume, 2 mL (reprint permission from [74]).