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Vol. 30, Issue 12, 1337-1343, December 2002
)-Chloroephedrine, a
Possible Impurity in Methamphetamine
Department of Pharmaceutics (B.R., M.A.S.) and Department of
Medicinal Chemistry (K.M.C., G.E.K., W.H.S.), School of Pharmacy,
Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
(+)- and (
)-Chloroephedrine, and their respective
aziridines, cis- and
trans-1,2-dimethyl-3-phenylaziridine, have been reported present in clandestinely synthesized methamphetamine. Since
methamphetamine and structurally related compounds are potential
substrates for human liver CYP2D6, the possible interaction of the
chloroephedrines with human liver CYP2D6 was evaluated. Computational
methods (using Flexidock and HINT in SYBYL) were used to determine the
feasibility of (+)- or (
)-chloroephedrine and cis- or
trans-1,2-dimethyl-3-phenylaziridine binding in the
active site of a three dimensional CYP2D6 molecular model.
Although modeling indicates both (+)- and (
)-chloroephedrine would
bind comparably to methamphetamine, the binding energies of
cis- or
trans-1,2-dimethyl-3-phenylaziridine products indicate a
preference for trans-1,2-dimethyl-3-phenylaziridine, the
product formed from (
)-chloroephedrine. The effects of (+)- and
(
)-chloroephedrine on the metabolism of dextromethorphan in human
liver microsomes were then experimentally evaluated.
(+)-Chloroephedrine (50 µM) had no effect on human CYP2D6.
(
)-Chloroephedrine appeared to be selective for human CYP2D6 versus
CYP1A2 and CYP3A4/5. The inhibition of CYP2D6 was time-dependent, not
dependent on metabolic activation, and irreversible. It appeared to
bind at the active site of CYP2D6 with an apparent
Ki of 226 µM, with a
kint of 0.039 min
1, and a
t1/2 of 23 min. Due to the irreversible
nature of this inhibition, this impurity in clandestinely synthesized
methamphetamine may be important and warrant further study.