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  • A qualitative method for prediction of amine oxidation in methanol and water.

A qualitative method for prediction of amine oxidation in methanol and water.

Journal of pharmaceutical sciences (2015-02-26)
Carina Bäcktorp, Eivor Örnskov, Emma Evertsson, Johan Remmelgas, Anders Broo
ABSTRACT

We have developed a predictive method, based on quantum chemical calculations, that qualitatively predicts N-oxidation by hydrogen peroxides in drug structures. The method uses linear correlations of two complementary approaches to estimate the activation barrier without calculating it explicitly. This method can therefore be automated as it avoids demanding transition state calculations. As such, it may be used by chemists without experience in molecular modeling and provide additional understanding to experimental findings. The predictive method gives relative rates for N,N-dimethylbenzylamine and N-methylmorpholine in good agreement with experiments. In water, the experimental rate constants show that N,N-dimethylbenzylamine is oxidized three times faster than N-methylmorpholine and in methanol it is two times faster. The method suggests it to be two and five times faster, respectively. The method was also used to correlate experimental with predicted activation barriers, linear free-energy relationships, for a test set of tertiary amines. A correlation coefficient R(2) = 0.74 was obtained, where internal diagnostics in the method itself allowed identification of outliers. The method was applied to four drugs: caffeine, azelastine, buspirone, and clomipramine, all possessing several nitrogens. Both overall susceptibility and selectivity of oxidation were predicted, and verified by experiments.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
Methanol, Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material
Supelco
Residual Solvent - Acetonitrile, Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material
Azelastine hydrochloride, European Pharmacopoeia (EP) Reference Standard
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, Absolute - Acetone free
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, ACS reagent, ≥99.8%
Sigma-Aldrich
Hydrogen peroxide solution, 50 wt. % in H2O, stabilized
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Hydrogen peroxide solution, contains ~200 ppm acetanilide as stabilizer, 3 wt. % in H2O
Sigma-Aldrich
Hydrogen peroxide solution, contains inhibitor, 35 wt. % in H2O
Sigma-Aldrich
Methanol, ACS reagent, ≥99.8%
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Methanol, puriss., meets analytical specification of Ph Eur, ≥99.7% (GC)
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Methanol, BioReagent, ≥99.93%
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Hydrogen peroxide solution, purum p.a., ≥35% (RT)
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Methanol, ACS reagent, ≥99.8%
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Hydrogen peroxide solution, contains inhibitor, 30 wt. % in H2O, meets USP testing specifications
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Hydrogen peroxide solution, contains inhibitor, 30 wt. % in H2O, ACS reagent
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Methanol, puriss. p.a., ACS reagent, reag. ISO, reag. Ph. Eur., ≥99.8% (GC)
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Methanol, ACS spectrophotometric grade, ≥99.9%
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Hydrogen Peroxide Solution, 30% (w/w), puriss. p.a., reag. ISO, reag. Ph. Eur.
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Methanol, Laboratory Reagent, ≥99.6%
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Methanol, suitable for HPLC, gradient grade, suitable as ACS-grade LC reagent, ≥99.9%
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Methanol, suitable for HPLC, ≥99.9%
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Methanol, HPLC Plus, ≥99.9%
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Methanol, suitable for HPLC, gradient grade, ≥99.9%
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Acetonitrile solution, contains 0.1 % (v/v) formic acid, suitable for HPLC
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Hydrogen peroxide solution, tested according to Ph. Eur.
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Hydrogen peroxide solution, 34.5-36.5%
Supelco
Methanol, analytical standard
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Hydrogen peroxide solution, ≥30%, for trace analysis
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Methanol, anhydrous, 99.8%
Millipore
Hydrogen peroxide solution, 3%, suitable for microbiology