Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous Solutions

A series of model phenol carbonate ester prodrugs encompassing derivatives with fatty acid-like structures were synthesized and their stability as a function of pH (range 0.4 – 12.5) at 37°C in aqueous buffer solutions investigated. The hydrolysis rates in aqueous solutions differed widely,...

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Main Authors: Claus Larsen, Jesper Ostergaard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2007-10-01
Series:Molecules
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/12/10/2396/
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spelling doaj-7d332cf892344ef3a0951887fcc017532020-11-24T20:49:11ZengMDPI AGMolecules1420-30492007-10-0112102396241210.3390/12102396Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous SolutionsClaus LarsenJesper OstergaardA series of model phenol carbonate ester prodrugs encompassing derivatives with fatty acid-like structures were synthesized and their stability as a function of pH (range 0.4 – 12.5) at 37°C in aqueous buffer solutions investigated. The hydrolysis rates in aqueous solutions differed widely, depending on the selected pro-moieties (alkyl and aryl substituents). The observed reactivity differences could be rationalized by the inductive and steric properties of the substituent groups when taking into account that the mechanism of hydrolysis may change when the type of pro-moiety is altered, e.g. n-alkyl vs. t-butyl. Hydrolysis of the phenolic carbonate ester 2-(phenoxycarbonyloxy)-acetic acid was increased due to intramolecular catalysis, as compared to the derivatives synthesized from É-hydroxy carboxylic acids with longer alkyl chains. The carbonate esters appear to be less reactive towards specific acid and base catalyzed hydrolysis than phenyl acetate. The results underline that it is unrealistic to expect that phenolic carbonate ester prodrugs can be utilized in ready to use aqueous formulations. The stability of the carbonate ester derivatives with fatty acid-like structures, expected to interact with the plasma protein human serum albumin, proved sufficient for further in vitro and in vivo evaluation of the potential of utilizing HSA binding in combination with the prodrug approach for optimization of drug pharmacokinetics.http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/12/10/2396/Bioreversible derivativescarbonate esterhydrolysis kineticsprodrugreactivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claus Larsen
Jesper Ostergaard
spellingShingle Claus Larsen
Jesper Ostergaard
Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous Solutions
Molecules
Bioreversible derivatives
carbonate ester
hydrolysis kinetics
prodrug
reactivity
author_facet Claus Larsen
Jesper Ostergaard
author_sort Claus Larsen
title Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous Solutions
title_short Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous Solutions
title_full Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous Solutions
title_fullStr Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous Solutions
title_full_unstemmed Bioreversible Derivatives of Phenol. 2. Reactivity of Carbonate Esters with Fatty Acid-like Structures Towards Hydrolysis in Aqueous Solutions
title_sort bioreversible derivatives of phenol. 2. reactivity of carbonate esters with fatty acid-like structures towards hydrolysis in aqueous solutions
publisher MDPI AG
series Molecules
issn 1420-3049
publishDate 2007-10-01
description A series of model phenol carbonate ester prodrugs encompassing derivatives with fatty acid-like structures were synthesized and their stability as a function of pH (range 0.4 – 12.5) at 37°C in aqueous buffer solutions investigated. The hydrolysis rates in aqueous solutions differed widely, depending on the selected pro-moieties (alkyl and aryl substituents). The observed reactivity differences could be rationalized by the inductive and steric properties of the substituent groups when taking into account that the mechanism of hydrolysis may change when the type of pro-moiety is altered, e.g. n-alkyl vs. t-butyl. Hydrolysis of the phenolic carbonate ester 2-(phenoxycarbonyloxy)-acetic acid was increased due to intramolecular catalysis, as compared to the derivatives synthesized from É-hydroxy carboxylic acids with longer alkyl chains. The carbonate esters appear to be less reactive towards specific acid and base catalyzed hydrolysis than phenyl acetate. The results underline that it is unrealistic to expect that phenolic carbonate ester prodrugs can be utilized in ready to use aqueous formulations. The stability of the carbonate ester derivatives with fatty acid-like structures, expected to interact with the plasma protein human serum albumin, proved sufficient for further in vitro and in vivo evaluation of the potential of utilizing HSA binding in combination with the prodrug approach for optimization of drug pharmacokinetics.
topic Bioreversible derivatives
carbonate ester
hydrolysis kinetics
prodrug
reactivity
url http://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/12/10/2396/
work_keys_str_mv AT clauslarsen bioreversiblederivativesofphenol2reactivityofcarbonateesterswithfattyacidlikestructurestowardshydrolysisinaqueoussolutions
AT jesperostergaard bioreversiblederivativesofphenol2reactivityofcarbonateesterswithfattyacidlikestructurestowardshydrolysisinaqueoussolutions
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