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  • Membrane-water partitioning, membrane permeability, and baseline toxicity of the parasiticides ivermectin, albendazole, and morantel.

Membrane-water partitioning, membrane permeability, and baseline toxicity of the parasiticides ivermectin, albendazole, and morantel.

Environmental toxicology and chemistry (2008-03-13)
Beate I Escher, Cindy Berger, Nadine Bramaz, Jung-Hwan Kwon, Manuela Richter, Oksana Tsinman, Alex Avdeef
ABSTRACT

A comparative hazard assessment of the antiparasitics ivermectin, albendazole, and morantel was performed, with a particular focus on bioavailability and uptake into biological membranes. The experimentally determined liposome-water distribution ratio at pH 7 (D(lipw) (pH 7)) of the positively charged morantel was 100 L/kg lipid. The D(lipw) (pH 7) of albendazole was 3,000 L/kg lipid. The membrane permeability determined with the parallel artificial membrane permeability assay was consistent with predictions from a quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) for morantel but 14-fold lower than predicted for albendazole, which can be rationalized because neutral albendazole is, in fact, zwitterionic and the large dipole moment hinders permeation through hydrophobic membranes. An unusually large molecule, ivermectin was suspected to show decreased bioaccumulation because of its bulkiness, but experimental determination of solubility showed that it was 40-fold less soluble than expected from a QSAR between solubility and the octanol-water partition coefficient. In contrast, its membrane permeability appeared to be typical for a compound of the given hydrophobicity, but it was not possible to determine the membrane-water partition coefficient because of its low solubility and high affinity to the dialysis membrane of the experimental device. The D(lipw) (pH 7) for ivermectin of 2,700 L/kg lipid was calculated with a QSAR model. Morantel and albendazole were baseline toxicants in the bioluminescence inhibition test with Vibrio fischeri and a test for inhibition of photosynthesis in green algae. Only ivermectin exhibited a specific effect toward algae, but the excess toxicity was not very pronounced and might be biased by the uncertainty of the estimated hydrophobicity descriptor. Overall, we did not find any unexpected effect on nontarget endpoints.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
Morantel tartrate hydrate, VETRANAL®, analytical standard