Issue 40, 2023, Issue in Progress

Immobilised-enzyme microreactors for the identification and synthesis of conjugated drug metabolites

Abstract

The study of naturally circulating drug metabolites has been a focus of interest, since these metabolites may have different therapeutic and toxicological effects compared to the parent drug. The synthesis of metabolites outside of the human body is vital in order to conduct studies into the pharmacological activities of drugs and bioactive compounds. Current synthesis methods require significant purification and separation efforts or do not provide sufficient quantities for use in pharmacology experiments. Thus, there is a need for simple methods yielding high conversions whilst bypassing the requirement for a separation. Here we have developed and optimised flow chemistry methods in glass microfluidic reactors utilising surface-immobilised enzymes for sulfonation (SULT1a1) and glucuronidation (UGT1a1). Conversion occurs in flow, the precursor and co-factor are pumped through the device, react with the immobilised enzymes and the product is then simply collected at the outlet with no separation from a complex biological matrix required. Conversion only occurred when both the correct co-factor and enzyme were present within the microfluidic system. Yields of 0.97 ± 0.26 μg were obtained from the conversion of resorufin into resorufin sulfate over 2 h with the SULT1a1 enzyme and 0.47 μg of resorufin glucuronide over 4 h for UGT1a1. This was demonstrated to be significantly more than static test tube reactions at 0.22 μg (SULT1a1) and 0.19 μg (UGT1a1) over 4 h. With scaling out and parallelising, useable quantities of hundreds of micrograms for use in pharmacology studies can be synthesised simply.

Graphical abstract: Immobilised-enzyme microreactors for the identification and synthesis of conjugated drug metabolites

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 Jun 2023
Accepted
08 Sep 2023
First published
18 Sep 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2023,13, 27696-27704

Immobilised-enzyme microreactors for the identification and synthesis of conjugated drug metabolites

B. Doyle, L. A. Madden, N. Pamme and H. S. Jones, RSC Adv., 2023, 13, 27696 DOI: 10.1039/D3RA03742H

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence. You can use material from this article in other publications without requesting further permissions from the RSC, provided that the correct acknowledgement is given.

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