Metabolism of captopril carboxyl ester derivatives for percutaneous absorption

Author:

Gullick Darren R1,Ingram Matthew J2,Pugh W John3,Cox Paul A1,Gard Paul2,Smart John D3,Moss Gary P4

Affiliation:

1. School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK

2. School of Pharmacy and Biomolecular Sciences, University of Brighton, Lewes Road, Brighton, UK

3. Welsh School of Pharmacy, Cardiff University, Redwood Building, Cardiff, Wales, UK

4. School of Pharmacy, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, Herts, UK

Abstract

Abstract Objectives To determine the metabolism of captopril n-carboxyl derivatives and how this may impact on their use as transdermal prodrugs. The pharmacological activity of the ester derivatives was also characterised in order to compare the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitory potency of the derivatives compared with the parent drug, captopril. Methods The metabolism rates of the ester derivatives were determined in vitro (using porcine liver esterase and porcine ear skin) and in silico (using molecular modelling to investigate the potential to predict metabolism). Key findings Relatively slow pseudo first-order metabolism of the prodrugs was observed, with the ethyl ester displaying the highest rate of metabolism. A strong relationship was established between in-vitro methods, while in-silico methods support the use of in-vitro methods and highlight the potential of in-silico techniques to predict metabolism. All the prodrugs behaved as angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, with the methyl ester displaying optimum inhibition. Conclusions In-vitro porcine liver esterase metabolism rates inform in-vitro skin rates well, and in-silico interaction energies relate well to both. Thus, in-silico methods may be developed that include interaction energies to predict metabolism rates.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacology

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