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Merck

The activities of drug inactive ingredients on biological targets.

Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020-07-25)
Joshua Pottel, Duncan Armstrong, Ling Zou, Alexander Fekete, Xi-Ping Huang, Hayarpi Torosyan, Dallas Bednarczyk, Steven Whitebread, Barun Bhhatarai, Guiqing Liang, Hong Jin, S Nassir Ghaemi, Samuel Slocum, Katalin V Lukacs, John J Irwin, Ellen L Berg, Kathleen M Giacomini, Bryan L Roth, Brian K Shoichet, Laszlo Urban
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Excipients, considered "inactive ingredients," are a major component of formulated drugs and play key roles in their pharmacokinetics. Despite their pervasiveness, whether they are active on any targets has not been systematically explored. We computed the likelihood that approved excipients would bind to molecular targets. Testing in vitro revealed 25 excipient activities, ranging from low-nanomolar to high-micromolar concentration. Another 109 activities were identified by testing against clinical safety targets. In cellular models, five excipients had fingerprints predictive of system-level toxicity. Exposures of seven excipients were investigated, and in certain populations, two of these may reach levels of in vitro target potency, including brain and gut exposure of thimerosal and its major metabolite, which had dopamine D3 receptor dissociation constant Kd values of 320 and 210 nM, respectively. Although most excipients deserve their status as inert, many approved excipients may directly modulate physiologically relevant targets.

MATERIALIEN
Produktnummer
Marke
Produktbeschreibung

Sigma-Aldrich
5,5′-Dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoesäure), ReagentPlus®, 99%
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Diclofenac Natriumsalz
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Acetylthiocholiniodid, ≥98% (TLC), powder or crystals
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Monoaminoxidase A human, recombinant, expressed in baculovirus infected BTI insect cells
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Acetylcholinesterase human, recombinant, expressed in HEK 293 cells, lyophilized powder, ≥1,000 units/mg protein (Lowry)