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Vol. 28, Issue 8, 887-894, August 2000
Tokushima Research Institute, Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co.,
Ltd., Tokushima, Japan
The metabolism of 1-(3,4-dichlorobenzyl)-5-octylbiguanide
(OPB-2045), a new potent biguanide antiseptic, was investigated using
rat and dog liver preparations to elucidate the mechanism of OPB-2045
metabolite formation, in which the octyl side chain is reduced to four,
five, or six carbon atoms. Chemical structures of metabolites were
characterized by 1H NMR, fast atom bombardment/mass
spectrometry, and liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization-tandem
mass spectrometry. Three main metabolites were observed during
incubation of OPB-2045 with rat liver S9: 2-octanol (M-1),
3-octanol (M-2), and 4-octanol (M-3). In the incubation of OPB-2045
with dog liver S9, eight metabolites were observed, seven of which
being M-1, M-2, M-3, 2-octanone (M-4),
threo-2,3-octandiol (M-5),
erythro-2,3-octandiol (M-6), and 1,2-octandiol (M-7).
M-5 and M-6 were further biotransformed to a ketol derivative and C-C
bond cleavage metabolite (hexanoic acid derivative), an in vivo end
product, in the incubation with dog liver microsomes. The reactions
required NADPH as a cofactor and were significantly inhibited by the
various inhibitors of cytochrome P450 (i.e., CO,
n-octylamine, SKF 525-A, metyrapone, and
-naphthoflavone). The results indicate that the degraded products of
OPB-2045 are produced by C-C bond cleavage after monohydroxylation,
dihydroxylation, and ketol formation at the site of the octyl side
chain with possible involvement of cytochrome P450 systems. This
aliphatic C-C bond cleavage by sequential oxidative reactions may play
an important role in the metabolism of other drugs or endogenous
compounds that possess aliphatic chains.
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