## Abstract The coupling of packed capillary liquid chromatography with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry has yielded an instrument capable of generating molecular weight information from very complex natural protein mixtures. The use of the packed capillary liquid chromatography columns of
Application of Packed Capillary Liquid Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry with Electrospray Ionization to the Study of the Human Biotransformation of the Anti-emetic Drug Dolasetron
β Scribed by Ackermann, Bradley L.; Gillespie, Todd A.; Regg, Brian T.; Austin, Kimberly F.; Coutant, John E.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 808 KB
- Volume
- 31
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1076-5174
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β¦ Synopsis
Packed capillary liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) using electrospray ionization (ESI) was used to study the human biotransformation of the anti-emetic drug dolasetron. Urine from subjects given a single 100 mg intravenous dose, containing 14C-labeled dolasetron (50 pCi), was desalted and concentrated for LC/MS with minimal loss of radioactivity (97% recovery). Aliquots of the desalted material were injected directly onto a C, packed capillary column (25 cm E 0.32 mm i.d.) and eluted with an acetonitrile-water gradient, buffered with 1% acetic acid, at a flow rate of 2 p1 min-'. Five metabolites were detected by LC ESI-MS which, yielded molecular mass information but no fragmentation. The identity of each metabolite was confirmed in a subsequent analysis using product ion scans in conjunction with collisionally induced dissociation. Precursor ion scanning was also employed and did not reveal any new biotransformation products. In addition to defining the major routes of biotransformation, the data obtained were compared with a 14C radioprofile prepared in a separate experiment. Qualitative agreement in the two chromatographic profiles enabled the major clusters of radioactivity to be assigned to specific metabolites of dolasetron. An important observation in this comparison was that the signal obtained by ESI did not provide an accurate assessment of the quantity of each metabolite. This was especially true for acidic conjugates (i.e. glucuronides, sulfates), which in the case of dolasetron can exist as zwitterions (no net charge). The results demonstrate the power of packed capillary L C ESI-MS for use in drug biotransformation studies and suggest that caution should be exercised when interpreting relative metabolite abundances from ESI data in the absence of actual reference standards.
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