1. Impact of the degree of substitution on the enantioseparation of anionic β-cyclodextrin in liquid‒liquid extraction and countercurrent chromatography: Insights from molecular docking simulations.
- Author
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Sun W, Qiu H, Lin S, and Tong S
- Subjects
- Stereoisomerism, Duloxetine Hydrochloride chemistry, Anions chemistry, beta-Cyclodextrins chemistry, Molecular Docking Simulation, Countercurrent Distribution methods, Liquid-Liquid Extraction methods
- Abstract
Five types of sulfobutylether-β-cyclodextrin (SBE-β-CD) and carboxymethyl-β-cyclodextrin (CM-β-CD) with different degrees of substitution were synthesized, and six and five racemates were respectively chosen to study the influence of the degree of substitution on the enantioseparation factor. The synthesized SBE-β-CD and CM-β-CD were characterized using
1 H NMR spectroscopy and mass spectrometry. The results indicated that the influence of the degree of substitution on enantioseparation for distinct racemates exhibited significant variability. Increasing the degree of substitution of CM-β-CD led to an increasing enantioseparation factor, while SBE-β-CD with a specific degree of substitution provided the optimum enantioseparation factor for some racemates. The optimum enantioseparation factors of N-methyl duloxetine and duloxetine were obtained when a relatively low degree of substitution (DS = 3.5) was selected. And the optimum enantioseparation factor was obtained with a relatively high degree of substitution (DS = 7.5). SBE-β-CD with a low substitution degree of 3.5 was chosen to optimize the countercurrent chromatographic enantioseparation of N-methyl-duloxetine, which resulted in a significant improvement in peak resolution from 0.51 to 0.83. Molecular docking was used to construct three SBE-β-CDs with different degrees and distributions of substitution, and a good agreement was found between the docking results and the experimental results., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2024
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