Title : Mouse Pharmacokinetics and In Vitro Metabolism of SH-11037 and SH-11008, Synthetic Homoisoflavonoids for Retinal Neovascularization - Kim_2022_Pharmaceutics_14_ |
Author(s) : Kim EY , Lee B , Kwon S , Corson TW , Seo SY , Lee K |
Ref : Pharmaceutics , 14 : , 2022 |
Abstract :
Cremastranone is a member of the homoisoflavanone family with anti-angiogenic activity in the eyes. SH-11037, a potent and selective synthetic homoisoflavonoid derived from cremastranone, was studied here for pharmacokinetics and metabolism characterization with a special focus on esterase-mediated hydrolysis. SH-11037 was shown to be converted rapidly and nearly completely to SH-11008 following an intravenous dose in mice. SH-11008 showed a high systemic clearance well exceeding the hepatic blood flow in mice. Neither SH-11037 nor SH-11008 were detected in plasma following oral administration of SH-11037 and SH-11008 in mice. Carboxylesterase was shown to be responsible for the rapid and quantitative hydrolysis of SH-11037 to SH-11008 in mouse plasma; the hydrolytic bioconversion was much slower in dog and human plasma, with butyrylcholinesterase and paraoxonase 1 likely being responsible. In vitro metabolism studies with liver S9 fractions suggested that SH-11008 was likely to have a high hepatic metabolic clearance with a predicted hepatic extraction ratio close to 1 in both mouse and human. In conclusion, SH-11037 and SH-11008 both appear to possess pharmacokinetic profiles suboptimal as a systemic agent. SH-11008 is suggested to possess a low potential for systemic toxicity suitable as a topical ocular therapeutic agent. |
PubMedSearch : Kim_2022_Pharmaceutics_14_ |
PubMedID: 36365089 |
Kim EY, Lee B, Kwon S, Corson TW, Seo SY, Lee K (2022)
Mouse Pharmacokinetics and In Vitro Metabolism of SH-11037 and SH-11008, Synthetic Homoisoflavonoids for Retinal Neovascularization
Pharmaceutics
14 :
Kim EY, Lee B, Kwon S, Corson TW, Seo SY, Lee K (2022)
Pharmaceutics
14 :