PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - William J. Ehlhardt AU - Joseph M. Woodland AU - Todd M. Baughman AU - Mark Vandenbranden AU - Steven A. Wrighton AU - J. Stan Kroin AU - Bryan H. Norman AU - Steven R. Maple TI - Liquid Chromatography/Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and Liquid Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry Identification of Novel Metabolites of the Multidrug Resistance Modulator LY335979 in Rat Bile and Human Liver Microsomal Incubations DP - 1998 Jan 01 TA - Drug Metabolism and Disposition PG - 42--51 VI - 26 IP - 1 4099 - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/26/1/42.short 4100 - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/26/1/42.full SO - Drug Metab Dispos1998 Jan 01; 26 AB - Compound LY335979 is a P-glycoprotein inhibitor currently entering phase I clinical trials for potential reversal of multidrug resistance to cancer chemotherapy. In early exploratory studies, LY335979 was found to be rapidly transformed in incubations with liver microsomes from rats, dogs, monkeys, and humans. Although the parent compound was completely metabolized, no prominent metabolite peaks were observed. One peak did appear early in the time course, but it did not increase over time. In another preliminary experiment, rats were treated iv with [3H]LY335979 (prepared for pharmacology studies), and urine and bile fractions were collected. Analysis of the urine by reverse-phase HPLC with UV and radioactivity detection revealed that almost all of the material eluted with the solvent front. More than half the radioactivity in bile was accounted for by two peaks eluting earlier than the parent compound (the rest eluted at the solvent front). With both bile and the incubations with microsomes, initial attempts to isolate metabolites were not successful. There was also evidence in both systems of products derived from cleavage of LY335979 (by both further metabolism and degradation). LC/NMR was thus used to analyze materials directly in their respective matrices. AnN-oxide metabolite (LY389551) formed by oxidation of the quinoline nitrogen was identified in the microsomal incubations; in bile, three glucuronide metabolites were identified, all of which were conjugates of products formed by oxidation of the quinoline ring of LY335979. There have been few reports in the literature of LC/NMR analysis of bile, which is a more complex matrix than either urine or microsomal suspensions. However, the HPLC techniques developed in this work for the HPLC/UV and LC/MS analyses of LY335979 metabolites in the microsomal matrix and in bile proved readily adaptable for LC/NMR. Using a 500-MHz instrument, basic 1H NMR spectra could be obtained in 2–3 hr with approximately 100 ng of material in the LC/NMR microprobe. With approximately 1.5 μg of material injected onto the column,1H-1H correlation spectroscopy spectra could be acquired overnight. Along with LC/MS data, the LC/NMR technique facilitated direct identification of a number of metabolites of LY335979 at a point at which their identification by traditional methods would not have been pursued. The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics