Evaluation of oral pharmacokinetics, in vitro metabolism, blood partitioning and plasma protein binding of novel antidiabetic agent, S009-0629 in rats

Valicherla, Guru Raghavendra ; Italiya, Kishan Shamjibhai ; Gupta, Chandra Prakash ; Mishra, Shachi ; Riyazuddin, Mohammed ; Syed, Anees Ahmed ; Singh, Sandeep Kumar ; Shahi, Sudhir ; Taneja, Gaurav ; Wahajuddin, Mohammad ; Goel, Atul ; Gayen, Jiaur Rahaman (2018) Evaluation of oral pharmacokinetics, in vitro metabolism, blood partitioning and plasma protein binding of novel antidiabetic agent, S009-0629 in rats Drug Development Research, 79 (4). pp. 173-183. ISSN 0272-4391

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1002/ddr.21433

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ddr.21433

Abstract

S009‐0629 [methyl‐8‐(methylthio)‐2‐phenyl‐6‐p‐tolyl‐4,5‐dihydro‐2H‐benzo[e]indazole‐9‐carboxylate] is a novel antidiabetic agent with PTP1B inhibitory activity. In this study, we have investigated the in vitro metabolic stability, plasma protein binding, blood partitioning, and oral pharmacokinetic study of S009‐0629 in rats. The plasma protein binding, blood partitioning, and metabolic stability were determined by HPLC method. The oral pharmacokinetic study was analyzed by liquid chromatography coupled mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS) method. The plasma protein binding of S009‐0629 using modified charcoal adsorption method at 5 and 10 µg/mL was 80.58 ± 1.04% and 81.95 ± 1.15%, respectively. The KRBC/PL of S009‐0629 was independent of concentration and time. The in‐vitro half‐life of S009‐0629 at 5 and 10 µM using rat liver microsomes was determined as 273 ± 24.46 and 281.67 ± 26.53 min, respectively. After oral administration, S009‐0629 exhibited Cmax 55.51 ± 1.18 ng/mL was observed at 18 hr (tmax). S009‐0629 was found to have the large apparent volume of distribution (1,894.93 ± 363.67 L/kg). Oral in‐vivo t1/2 of S009‐0629 was found to be 41.23 ± 5.96 hr. A rapid and highly sensitive LC‐MS/MS method was validated for S009‐0629 in rat plasma. S009‐0629 has high plasma protein binding and low hepatic extraction. S009‐0629 has no affinity with human P‐gp and BCRP in ATPase assay. After oral dosing, S009‐0629 has slow absorption and elimination in rats.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Keywords:Blood Partitioning; Oral Pharmacokinetics; Protein Binding; PTP1b Inhibitor; S009‐0629.
ID Code:117976
Deposited On:07 May 2021 10:06
Last Modified:07 May 2021 10:06

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