Gas chromatographic assay for the new antitumor agent pyrazine-2-diazohydroxide (diazohydroxide) and its stability in buffer, blood and plasma.
T J Wilke, K L Kooistra, D J Moore, G Powis
Index: J. Chromatogr. A. 383(1) , 77-83, (1986)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
Diazohydroxide is a new antitumor agent being considered for clinical trial. A sensitive and specific assay for diazohydroxide in physiological media, plasma and blood has been developed based on conversion of diazohydroxide to 2-chloropyrazine in the presence of strong hydrochloric acid. The 2-chloropyrazine is extracted into the ethyl acetate and separated by capillary gas chromatography with nitrogen-phosphorus detection. Using 0.2 ml plasma the assay was linear up to 100 micrograms/ml diazohydroxide and had a lower limit of detectability for diazohydroxide of 50 ng/ml. The coefficient of variation of the assay at 1 micrograms/ml was 6.7%. Breakdown of diazohydroxide was rapid under mild acid conditions but slower under alkaline conditions,. The half-life of diazohydroxide in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 6.0, at room temperature was 5 min and at pH 8.0, 480 min. Breakdown of diazohydroxide in plasma was biphasic. In fresh mouse plasma diazohydroxide had a terminal half-life at 37 degrees C of 72 min while in fresh human plasma the terminal half-life was 23 min and in fresh blood 21 min. Diazohydroxide accumulated in red blood cells at 37 degrees C to a concentration 68% above the concentration in plasma. Diazohydroxide was 49% bound to human plasma proteins at room temperature.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2009-04-17
[J. Org. Chem. 74(8) , 3221-4, (2009)]