PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - N G Whitaker AU - T D Lindstrom TI - Disposition and biotransformation of quinpirole, a new D-2 dopamine agonist antihypertensive agent, in mice, rats, dogs, and monkeys. DP - 1987 Jan 01 TA - Drug Metabolism and Disposition PG - 107--113 VI - 15 IP - 1 4099 - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/15/1/107.short 4100 - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/15/1/107.full SO - Drug Metab Dispos1987 Jan 01; 15 AB - The disposition and metabolism of quinpirole were studied in rats, mice, dogs, and monkeys. A single 2 mg/kg dose of 14C-quinpirole was administered orally to rats, mice, and monkeys. Dogs were given a single 0.2 mg/kg iv dose of 14C-quinpirole. Of the dose administered, 75-96% was recovered in the urine within 72 hr, with the majority being excreted during the first 24 hr. Peak plasma concentrations of radioactivity and quinpirole were coincident and were observed within 0.25 hr in rodents and at 2 hr in monkeys. Unchanged quinpirole accounted for 0.9%, 36%, and 69% respectively. Biotransformation of quinpirole was compared by quantitating the urinary metabolites by HPLC. The percentage of the radioactivity in urine representing unchanged drug was determined for each species: monkey (3%), dog (13%), mouse (40%), and rat (57%). The majority of 14C-quinpirole was shown to be biotransformed in rats, mice, and monkeys through common metabolic pathways but to various extents. Most metabolites resulted from structural alterations (N-dealkylation, lactam formation, omega and omega-1 hydroxylation) that centered around the piperidine ring portion of the molecule. These metabolites were less important in dogs. The major metabolic pathway in dogs involved hydroxylation of a methylene carbon adjacent to the pyrazole nucleus of quinpirole followed by O-glucuronidation. Evidence of metabolism of the pyrazole moiety was found in the isolation of an N-glucuronide conjugate of quinpirole from monkey urine.