Abstract
After the parenteral administration of the 3H-labeled prostaglandin E2-analogue (PGE2-analogue) to three healthy women, a number of metabolites were observed in the plasma, some of them still potentially pharmacologically active. The metabolite pattern in human plasma was very similar to the one observed in the urine of female guinea pigs, which received a total dose of 0.21 mg [3H]sulprostone by repeated sc administration over a period of 5 days. In vitro perfusion of an isolated guinea pig liver with 50 mg of [3H]sulprostone, dissolved in Tyrode's solution, yielded another source for the isolation of those metabolites, which were also present in human plasma. Both urine and perfusion medium were submitted to repeated HPLC-separations and the recovery during the purification procedure was calculated for each metabolite on the basis of recovered radioactivity after each step of purification. Chromatographically pure metabolites were submitted to GC/MS analysis, 1H-NMR and IR spectroscopy for structural elucidation. Besides the unchanged parent compound, four metabolites of sulprostone could be identified in human plasma by co-chromatography with the isolated compounds. One of two major metabolites was the PGA2-analogue of the parent drug, the other was a cyclization product of the beta-side chain of sulprostone with the cyclopentenone ring, preceded by delta 13 reduction. The two minor metabolites were the free acids of sulprostone and the PGA2-analogue.
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