48 results on '"Křížek T"'
Search Results
2. Polymer nanotherapeutics with the controlled release of acetylsalicylic acid and its derivatives inhibiting cyclooxygenase isoforms and reducing the production of pro-inflammatory mediators.
- Author
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Frejková M, Běhalová K, Rubanová D, De Sanctis JB, Kubala L, Chytil P, Šimonová A, Křížek T, Randárová E, Gunár K, and Etrych T
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Drug Liberation, Inflammation Mediators metabolism, Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors pharmacology, Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors administration & dosage, Cyclooxygenase Inhibitors chemistry, Drug Carriers chemistry, Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases metabolism, Acrylamides chemistry, Acrylamides pharmacology, Acrylamides administration & dosage, Anti-Inflammatory Agents pharmacology, Anti-Inflammatory Agents administration & dosage, Anti-Inflammatory Agents chemistry, Aspirin administration & dosage, Aspirin pharmacology, Aspirin chemistry, Delayed-Action Preparations, Nanoparticles chemistry, Polymers chemistry, Polymers administration & dosage
- Abstract
The effective treatment of inflammatory diseases, particularly their chronic forms, is a key task of modern medicine. Herein, we report the synthesis and evaluation of biocompatible polymer conjugates based on N-2-(hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide copolymers enabling the controlled release of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA)-based anti-inflammatory drugs under specific stimuli. All polymer nanotherapeutics were proposed as water-soluble drug delivery systems with a hydrodynamic size below 10 nm ensuring suitability for the parenteral application and preventing opsonization by the reticuloendothelial system. The nanotherapeutics bearing an ester-bound ASA exhibited long-term release of the ASA/salicylic acid mixture, while the nanotherapeutics carrying salicylic acid hydrazide (SAH) ensured the selective release of SAH in the acidic inflammatory environment thanks to the pH-sensitive hydrazone bond between the polymer carrier and SAH. The ASA- and SAH-containing nanotherapeutics inhibited both cyclooxygenase isoforms and/or the production of pro-inflammatory mediators. Thanks to their favorable design, they can preferentially accumulate in the inflamed tissue, resulting in reduced side effects and lower dosage, and thus more effective and safer treatment., 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 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Naphthylated LEGO-lipophosphonoxin antibiotics used as a fluorescent tool for the observation of target membrane perturbations preceding its disruption.
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Dolejšová T, Lišková P, Sahatsapan N, Mojr V, Pohl R, Brzobohatá H, Dugić M, Křížek T, Cwiklik L, Mikušová G, Rejman D, and Fišer R
- Subjects
- Cell Membrane metabolism, Cell Membrane chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Fluorescent Dyes chemistry
- Abstract
Linker-Evolved-Group-Optimized-Lipophosphonoxins (LEGO-LPPO) are small synthetic modular peptidomimetics with promising antimicrobial activity. The LEGO-LPPO mechanism of antibacterial action has been determined to be the depolarization and disruption of bacterial membranes. Their modular nature is advantageous for fine tuning their biological properties. In order to optimize the structure of LEGO-LPPO even further, it is important to understand the interaction of LEGO-LPPO with bacterial membranes at the molecular level. In this work, we present the synthesis of five LEGO-LPPO (designated as 1 _naph2-4-G to 5 _naph2-4-G) molecules bearing fluorescent naphtylethyl moieties and their usage in the study of LEGO-LPPO behaviour in the membrane. Our goal was to characterize fluorescently labelled LEGO-LPPO under conditions that do not completely disrupt the membrane, mostly in the form of membrane-bound monomers. We observed the intramolecular interactions of hydrophobic modules of 1 _naph2-4-G in the buffer by detecting dynamic naphthyl excimers and their disappearance after 1 _naph2-4-G bind into the membranes. In the membrane, the molecule 1 _naph2-4-G slightly affects the membrane fluidity of DOPG membranes above the phase transition. The naphthyl fluorophore itself has fast and almost unrestricted rotation around ethylene linking groups ( r
inf = 0.010), which indicates a considerable chaotropic effect of the hydrophobic modules of 1 _naph2-4-G at the given depth of the membrane. 1 _naph2-4-G proved to be a useful model for observing the interaction of LEGO-LPPO antibiotics with the phospholipid bilayer enabling us to decipher its effects on membrane state and dynamics; its binding and penetration into the membrane, its structure and the particular depth that it occupies., (Creative Commons Attribution license.)- Published
- 2024
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4. Evaluation of adherence to abiraterone therapy in prostate cancer patients based on a population pharmacokinetic model.
- Author
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Merdita S, Šíma M, Dvořák J, Matějů M, Richter I, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Královičová J, Bosák J, Petruželka L, and Slanař O
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Aged, Middle Aged, Monte Carlo Method, Therapeutic Equivalency, Adult, Fasting, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacokinetics, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Food-Drug Interactions, Medication Adherence statistics & numerical data, Prostatic Neoplasms drug therapy, Models, Biological, Androstenes pharmacokinetics, Androstenes administration & dosage, Androstenes therapeutic use
- Abstract
Aims: Abiraterone treatment requires regular drug intake under fasting conditions due to pronounced food effect, which may impact patient adherence. The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate adherence to abiraterone treatment in patients with prostate cancer. To achieve this aim, an abiraterone population pharmacokinetic model was developed and patients' adherence has been estimated by comparison of measured levels of abiraterone with population model-based simulations., Methods: A total of 1469 abiraterone plasma levels from 83 healthy volunteers collected in a bioequivalence study were analysed using a nonlinear mixed-effects model. Monte Carlo simulation was used to describe the theoretical distribution of abiraterone pharmacokinetic profiles at a dose of 1000 mg once daily. Adherence of 36 prostate cancer patients treated with abiraterone was then evaluated by comparing the real abiraterone concentration measured in each patient during follow-up visit with the theoretical distribution of profiles based on simulations. Patients whose abiraterone levels were ˂5th or ˃95th percentile of the distribution of simulated profiles were considered to be non-adherent., Results: Based on this evaluation, 13 patients (36%) have been classified as non-adherent. We observed significant association (P = .0361) between richness of the breakfast and rate of non-adherence. Adherent patients reported significantly better overall condition in self-assessments (P = .0384). A trend towards a higher occurrence of adverse effects in non-adherent patients was observed., Conclusions: We developed an abiraterone population pharmacokinetic model and proposed an advanced approach to medical adherence evaluation. Due to the need for administration under fasting conditions, abiraterone therapy is associated with a relatively high rate of non-adherence., (© 2024 The Author(s). British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Pharmacological Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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5. Development of immediate-release formulation with reliable absorption of rivaroxaban in various meal regimes.
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Bosák J, Šíma M, Krejčí T, Obadalová I, Šmardová J, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Beránek J, Hauser T, and Slanař O
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Administration, Oral, Middle Aged, Factor Xa Inhibitors pharmacokinetics, Factor Xa Inhibitors administration & dosage, Young Adult, Drug Compounding methods, Meals, Rivaroxaban pharmacokinetics, Rivaroxaban administration & dosage, Cross-Over Studies, Biological Availability, Food-Drug Interactions, Fasting
- Abstract
The bioavailability of rivaroxaban at the higher doses (15 and 20 mg) is considerably reduced when the drug is administered on an empty stomach. This can lead to inadequate anticoagulant effect, and therefore, it is recommended to use the higher doses at fed state. However, proper posology may represent a barrier for some patients. Therefore, the aim of this study was to evaluate innovative rivaroxaban-containing formulations designed to eliminate the food effect to ensure reliable absorption and thus to improve patient adherence with the treatment. Three prototypes (Cocrystal, HPMCP and Kollidon) with rivaroxaban were developed and their bioavailability and food effect in comparison to the reference product was tested in open label, randomized, single oral dose, crossover studies, where test products were administered under fasting and fed conditions and the reference product was administered under fed conditions. Comparable bioavailability for all tested prototypes both under fed and fasting conditions was demonstrated as the 90% confidence intervals of the geometric mean ratios for area under the concentration-time curve remained within the standard acceptance range of 80.00%-125.00%. An innovative immediate release form of rivaroxaban with no food effect on drug bioavailability has been developed, which may represent an important step toward increasing adherence, improving treatment outcome and reducing health care costs., (© 2024 The Authors. Clinical and Translational Science published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.)
- Published
- 2024
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6. Ivacaftor pharmacokinetics and lymphatic transport after enteral administration in rats.
- Author
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Pozniak J, Ryšánek P, Smrčka D, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Šmardová J, Nováková A, Das D, Bobek D, Arora M, Hofmann J, Doušová T, Šíma M, and Slanař O
- Abstract
Background: Ivacaftor is a modern drug used in the treatment of cystic fibrosis. It is highly lipophilic and exhibits a strong positive food effect. These characteristics can be potentially connected to a pronounced lymphatic transport after oral administration. Methods: A series of studies was conducted to describe the basic pharmacokinetic parameters of ivacaftor in jugular vein cannulated rats when dosed in two distinct formulations: an aqueous suspension and an oil solution. Additionally, an anesthetized mesenteric lymph duct cannulated rat model was studied to precisely assess the extent of lymphatic transport. Results: Mean ± SD ivacaftor oral bioavailability was 18.4 ± 3.2% and 16.2 ± 7.8%, respectively, when administered as an aqueous suspension and an oil solution. The relative contribution of the lymphatic transport to the overall bioavailability was 5.91 ± 1.61% and 4.35 ± 1.84%, respectively. Conclusion: Lymphatic transport plays only a minor role in the process of ivacaftor intestinal absorption, and other factors are, therefore, responsible for its pronounced positive food effect., Competing Interests: Author DS and JH were employed by Zentiva, K. S. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Pozniak, Ryšánek, Smrčka, Kozlík, Křížek, Šmardová, Nováková, Das, Bobek, Arora, Hofmann, Doušová, Šíma and Slanař.)
- Published
- 2024
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7. Application of Oil-in-Water Cannabidiol Emulsion for the Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis.
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Jelínek P, Roušarová J, Ryšánek P, Ježková M, Havlůjová T, Pozniak J, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Kučera T, Šíma M, Slanař O, and Šoóš M
- Subjects
- Animals, Rats, Administration, Oral, Cross-Over Studies, Emulsions, Pain drug therapy, Quality of Life, Water, Arthritis, Rheumatoid drug therapy, Cannabidiol pharmacology, Cannabidiol chemistry
- Abstract
Introduction: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic autoimmune disease with unknown cause. It mainly affects joints and, without proper treatment, negatively impacts their movement, causes painful deformities, and reduces the patients' quality of life. Current treatment options consist of various types of disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs), however 20-30% of patients are partially resistant to them. Therefore, development of new drugs is necessary. Possible option are compounds exhibiting their action via endocannabinoid system, which plays an important role in pain and inflammation modulation. One such compound - cannabidiol (CBD) has already been shown to attenuate synovitis in animal model of RA in in vivo studies. However, it has low bioavailability due to its low water solubility and lipophilicity. This issue can be addressed by preparation of a lipid containing formulation targeting lymphatic system, another route of absorption in the body. Materials and Methods: CBD-containing emulsion was prepared by high-shear homogenization and its droplet size distribution was analysed by optical microscopy. The relative oral bioavailability compared to oil solution as well as total availability of CBD were assessed in a cross-over study in rats and absorption of CBD via lymphatic system was observed. The effect of CBD on the animal model of RA was determined. Results: Compared to oil solution, the emulsion exhibited higher absolute oral bioavailability. Significant lymphatic transport of CBD was observed in all formulations and the concentrations in lymph were calculated. The therapeutic effect of CBD on RA was confirmed as an improvement in clinical symptoms as well as morphological signs of disease activity were observed during the study. Conclusion: In this work, we prepared a simple stable emulsion formulation, determined the pharmacokinetic parameters of CBD and calculated its absolute bioavailability in rats. Moreover, we successfully tested the pharmaceutical application of such a formulation and demonstrated the positive effect of CBD in an animal model of RA.
- Published
- 2024
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8. Antifungal triazoles affect key non-target metabolic pathways in Solanum lycopersicum L. plants.
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Hýsková V, Jakl M, Jaklová Dytrtová J, Ćavar Zeljković S, Vrobel O, Bělonožníková K, Kavan D, Křížek T, Šimonová A, Vašková M, Kovač I, Račko Žufić A, and Ryšlavá H
- Subjects
- Antioxidants metabolism, Metabolic Networks and Pathways, Triazoles toxicity, Antifungal Agents, Solanum lycopersicum
- Abstract
Several 1,2,4-triazoles are widely used as systemic fungicides in agriculture because they inhibit fungal 14ɑ-demethylase. However, they can also act on many non-target plant enzymes, thereby affecting phytohormonal balance, free amino acid content, and adaptation to stress. In this study, tomato plants (Solanum lycopersicum L. var. 'Cherrola') were exposed to penconazole, tebuconazole, or their combination, either by foliar spraying or soil drenching, every week, as an ecotoxicological model. All triazole-exposed plants showed a higher content (1.7-8.8 ×) of total free amino acids than the control, especially free glutamine and asparagine were increased most likely in relation to the increase in active cytokinin metabolites 15 days after the first application. Conversely, the Trp content decreased in comparison with control (0.2-0.7 ×), suggesting depletion by auxin biosynthesis. Both triazole application methods slightly affected the antioxidant system (antioxidant enzyme activity, antioxidant capacity, and phenolic content) in tomato leaves. These results indicated that the tomato plants adapted to triazoles over time. Therefore, increasing the abscisic and chlorogenic acid content in triazole-exposed plants may promote resistance to abiotic stress., 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 © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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9. Analysis of the Ibotenic Acid, Muscimol, and Ergosterol Content of an Amanita Muscaria Hydroalcoholic Extract with an Evaluation of Its Cytotoxic Effect against a Panel of Lung Cell Lines In Vitro.
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Dushkov A, Vosáhlová Z, Tzintzarov A, Kalíková K, Křížek T, and Ugrinova I
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- Humans, Ibotenic Acid analysis, Muscimol pharmacology, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Cell Line, Solvents, Lung chemistry, Plant Extracts pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents, Neoplasms
- Abstract
The fungus Amanita muscaria is universally recognizable for its iconic appearance; it is also widely regarded as poisonous, inedible, and even deadly. In spite of that, there have been documented cases of use of A. muscaria -containing preparations against various diseases, including cancer, to no apparent ill effect. The search for compounds that can be used to treat cancer among various plants and fungi has been intensifying in recent years. In light of this, we describe an HPLC HILIC analytical method for the evaluation of the content of the anticancer compound ergosterol (ERG) and the neuroactive alkaloids ibotenic acid (IBO) and muscimol (MUS) that contribute significantly to the unpleasant physiological syndrome associated with A. muscaria consumption. A 'homemade' A. muscaria tincture made using 80-proof rye vodka as the solvent, an A. muscaria extract made with a standardized water-ethanol solution as the solvent, and fractions obtained from the second extract via liquid-liquid extraction with nonpolar solvents were analyzed. The study also presents the results of capillary zone electrophoresis with contactless conductivity detection and UHPLC-MS/MS analyses of the IBO and MUS content of the two native A. muscaria extracts and an evaluation of the standardized extract's cytotoxic effect against a small panel of lung cell cultures in vitro. Our results show that the standardized extract has a significant cytotoxic effect and does not contain the compounds of interest in any significant quantity.
- Published
- 2023
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10. Triazoles as a Potential Threat to the Nutritional Quality of Tomato Fruits.
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Hýsková V, Jakl M, Jaklová Dytrtová J, Ćavar Zeljković S, Vrobel O, Bělonožníková K, Kavan D, Křížek T, Šimonová A, Vašková M, Kovač I, Račko Žufić A, and Ryšlavá H
- Abstract
Triazole fungicides can threaten plants as abiotic stressors but can also positively affect plant defense by inducing priming. Thus, plant yield is also both protected and endangered by triazoles that may influence several metabolic pathways during maturation processes, such as the biosynthesis of saccharides or secondary metabolites. Here, Solanum lycopersicum L. plants were exposed to foliar and soil applications of penconazole, tebuconazole, or their combination, and their resulting effect on tomato fruits was followed. The exposure to the equimolar mixture of both triazoles influenced the representation of free proteinogenic amino acids, especially Gln, Glu, Gly, Ile, Lys, Ser and Pro, saccharide content, and led to a significant increase in the contents of total phenolics and flavonoids as well as positive stimulation of the non-enzymatic antioxidant system. Among the identified secondary metabolites, the most abundant was naringenin, followed by chlorogenic acid in tomato peel. In turn, all triazole-treated groups showed a significantly lower content of rosmarinic acid in comparison with the control. Foliar application of penconazole affected the fruit more than other single triazole applications, showing a significant decrease in antioxidant capacity, the total content of secondary metabolites, and the activities of total membrane-bound peroxidases and ascorbate peroxidase.
- Published
- 2023
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11. Using surface plasmon resonance, capillary electrophoresis and diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy to study drug release kinetics.
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Libánská A, Špringer T, Peštová L, Kotalík K, Konefał R, Šimonová A, Křížek T, Homola J, Randárová E, and Etrych T
- Abstract
Nanomedicines, including polymer nanocarriers with controlled drug release, are considered next-generation therapeutics with advanced therapeutic properties and reduced side effects. To develop safe and efficient nanomedicines, it is crucial to precisely determine the drug release kinetics. Herein, we present application of analytical methods, i.e., surface plasmon resonance biosensor technology (SPR), capillary electrophoresis, and
1 H diffusion-ordered nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, which were innovatively applied for drug release determination. The methods were optimised to quantify the pH-triggered release of three structurally different drugs from a polymer carrier. The suitability of these methods for drug release characterisation was evaluated and compared using several parameters including applicability for diverse samples, the biological relevance of the experimental setup, method complexity, and the analysis outcome. The SPR method was the most universal method for the evaluation of diverse drug molecule release allowing continuous observation in the flow-through setting and requiring a small amount of sample., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)- Published
- 2023
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12. Casein as protein and hydrolysate: Biostimulant or nitrogen source for Nicotiana tabacum plants grown in vitro?
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Bělonožníková K, Černý M, Hýsková V, Synková H, Valcke R, Hodek O, Křížek T, Kavan D, Vaňková R, Dobrev P, Haisel D, and Ryšlavá H
- Subjects
- Humans, Caseins metabolism, Proteomics, Amino Acids metabolism, Plants metabolism, Peptide Hydrolases metabolism, Nicotiana metabolism, Nitrogen metabolism
- Abstract
In contrast to inorganic nitrogen (N) assimilation, the role of organic N forms, such as proteins and peptides, as sources of N and their impact on plant metabolism remains unclear. Simultaneously, organic biostimulants are used as priming agents to improve plant defense response. Here, we analysed the metabolic response of tobacco plants grown in vitro with casein hydrolysate or protein. As the sole source of N, casein hydrolysate enabled tobacco growth, while protein casein was used only to a limited extent. Free amino acids were detected in the roots of tobacco plants grown with protein casein but not in the plants grown with no source of N. Combining hydrolysate with inorganic N had beneficial effects on growth, root N uptake and protein content. The metabolism of casein-supplemented plants shifted to aromatic (Trp), branched-chain (Ile, Leu, Val) and basic (Arg, His, Lys) amino acids, suggesting their preferential uptake and/or alterations in their metabolic pathways. Complementarily, proteomic analysis of tobacco roots identified peptidase C1A and peptidase S10 families as potential key players in casein degradation and response to N starvation. Moreover, amidases were significantly upregulated, most likely for their role in ammonia release and impact on auxin synthesis. In phytohormonal analysis, both forms of casein influenced phenylacetic acid and cytokinin contents, suggesting a root system response to scarce N availability. In turn, metabolomics highlighted the stimulation of some plant defense mechanisms under such growth conditions, that is, the high concentrations of secondary metabolites (e.g., ferulic acid) and heat shock proteins., (© 2023 The Authors. Physiologia Plantarum published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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13. Serum and lymph pharmacokinetics of nilotinib delivered by yeast glucan particles per os.
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Šalamúnová P, Krejčí T, Ryšánek P, Saloň I, Kroupová J, Hubatová-Vacková A, Petřík J, Grus T, Lukáč P, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Dammer O, Beránek J, Šíma M, Slanař O, and Štěpánek F
- Subjects
- Rats, Animals, Pyrimidines, Administration, Oral, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Glucans
- Abstract
Nilotinib is a selective tyrosine-kinase inhibitor approved for the treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia. It is poorly soluble in aqueous media and has a low oral bioavailability. Nilotinib encapsulation into yeast glucan particles (GPs) was investigated in this work as a means of increasing bioavailability. The amorphization of nilotinib in GPs resulted in an increased dissolution rate, which was confirmed by in vitro experiments using biorelevant dissolution media. Simultaneously, GPs containing nilotinib were effectively taken up by macrophages, which was quantified in vitro on cell cultures. The overall oral bioavailability in a rat model was approximately 39 % for nilotinib delivered in a reference formulation (Tasigna) and was almost doubled when delivered in GPs. The contribution of glucan particles to the lymphatic transport of nilotinib was quantified. When delivered by GPs, cumulative nilotinib absorption via the lymphatic system increased by a factor of 10.8 compared to the reference, but still represented arelative bioavailability of only 1.12 %. The cumulative uptake of GPs in the lymph was found to be 0.54 mg after a single dose of 50 mg. Yeast glucan particles can therefore serve as a drug delivery vehicle with a dual function: dissolution rate enhancement by amorphization, and, to asmaller extent, lymphatic delivery due to macrophage uptake., 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 © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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14. On-capillary fluorescent labeling of saccharides for capillary electrophoresis.
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Čokrtová K, Mareš V, and Křížek T
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- Coloring Agents, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods, Disaccharides, Glucose, Acids
- Abstract
The feasibility of on-capillary derivatization of saccharides by aromatic amine-based fluorescent labeling agents was tested. To avoid the problematic evolution of gaseous hydrogen cyanide, the Schiff base reduction by sodium cyanoborohydride, as the second step of the standard reductive amination protocol, was omitted. Glucose was used as a model analyte and 7-amino-1,3-naphthalenedisulfonic acid as the labeling agent. Our experiments showed that the direct reaction of the saccharide with the labeling agent in 2.5-M acetic acid yields a labeled product that is sufficiently stable to be separated from the labeling agent in 20-mM phosphate buffer, pH 3.5, and detected using UV detection. The glucose and label zones were introduced separately into the capillary and mixed using a negative voltage. Mixing voltage, its duration, the concentration of acetic acid in the reaction zone, and the waiting time between mixing and separation were optimized. To show the applicability of the procedure to a broader range of analytes, a mixture of different types of saccharides, that is, xylose (pentose), fucose (hexose), glucose (hexose), N-acetylglucosamine (N-acetylaminosaccharide), and lactose (disaccharide), was subjected to derivatization and analysis under the optimal conditions. The linearity and repeatability of the process were evaluated as critical parameters for its analytical applications. Six-point calibration dependences in the 1-50 mM range showed excellent determination coefficients of 0.9992 or higher for all five saccharides tested. The repeatability of the labeled saccharide peak areas was between 2.2% and 4.3%., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2023
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15. Human ultrarare genetic disorders of sulfur metabolism demonstrate redundancies in H 2 S homeostasis.
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Kožich V, Schwahn BC, Sokolová J, Křížková M, Ditroi T, Krijt J, Khalil Y, Křížek T, Vaculíková-Fantlová T, Stibůrková B, Mills P, Clayton P, Barvíková K, Blessing H, Sykut-Cegielska J, Dionisi-Vici C, Gasperini S, García-Cazorla Á, Haack TB, Honzík T, Ješina P, Kuster A, Laugwitz L, Martinelli D, Porta F, Santer R, Schwarz G, and Nagy P
- Subjects
- Humans, Cysteine, Sulfides metabolism, Homeostasis, Sulfur, Homocysteine, Hydrogen Sulfide metabolism
- Abstract
Regulation of H
2 S homeostasis in humans is poorly understood. Therefore, we assessed the importance of individual enzymes in synthesis and catabolism of H2 S by studying patients with respective genetic defects. We analyzed sulfur compounds (including bioavailable sulfide) in 37 untreated or insufficiently treated patients with seven ultrarare enzyme deficiencies and compared them to 63 controls. Surprisingly, we observed that patients with severe deficiency in cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) or cystathionine γ-lyase (CSE) - the enzymes primarily responsible for H2 S synthesis - exhibited increased and normal levels of bioavailable sulfide, respectively. However, an approximately 21-fold increase of urinary homolanthionine in CBS deficiency strongly suggests that lacking CBS activity is compensated for by an increase in CSE-dependent H2 S synthesis from accumulating homocysteine, which suggests a control of H2 S homeostasis in vivo. In deficiency of sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase - the first enzyme in mitochondrial H2 S oxidation - we found normal H2 S concentrations in a symptomatic patient and his asymptomatic sibling, and elevated levels in an asymptomatic sibling, challenging the requirement for this enzyme in catabolizing H2 S under physiological conditions. Patients with ethylmalonic encephalopathy and sulfite oxidase/molybdenum cofactor deficiencies exhibited massive accumulation of thiosulfate and sulfite with formation of large amounts of S-sulfocysteine and S-sulfohomocysteine, increased renal losses of sulfur compounds and concomitant strong reduction in plasma total cysteine. Our results demonstrate the value of a comprehensive assessment of sulfur compounds in severe disorders of homocysteine/cysteine metabolism and provide evidence for redundancy and compensatory mechanisms in the maintenance of H2 S homeostasis., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest GS declares that he serves as CEO of Colbourne Pharmaceuticals consulting Origin Biosciences in the developments of treatments for MoCD type A, BS is investigator in clinical trials to develop a treatment for MoCD-A sponsored by Origin Biosciences Inc. The other authors do not declare any competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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16. Pharmaceutical Product Characterization and Manufacturability of Surfactant-Enriched Oil Marbles with Abiraterone Acetate.
- Author
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Petřík J, Rychecký O, Krejčí T, Becherová L, Trunov D, Prachár M, Navrátil O, Žvátora P, Krejčík L, Dammer O, Beránek J, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Šoóš M, Heřt J, Bissola S, Berto S, and Štěpánek F
- Subjects
- Abiraterone Acetate, Calcium Carbonate, Chemistry, Pharmaceutical methods, Drug Stability, Lactose, Lipids chemistry, Solubility, Surface-Active Agents chemistry, Water, Biological Products, Excipients chemistry
- Abstract
The present study investigates the physicochemical properties and stability of a novel lipid-based formulation-surfactant-enriched oil marbles containing abiraterone acetate. While the biopharmaceutical performance of this formulation has been reported recently, this study aims to fill the gap between a promising in vivo performance and industrial applicability. A series of techniques were employed to assess the solid-state characteristics of oil marble cores along with their physicochemical properties upon stability testing. The chemical stability of abiraterone acetate in the formulation was also investigated. The core of the formulation was found to be stable both physically and chemically over 12 months of storage. The in vitro performance of stressed samples was evaluated using a dissolution experiment. The formulation has successfully self-emulsified upon incubation in bio-relevant media, resulting in a fast and complete API release. An important issue connected with the excipient used as a covering material of oil marbles has been identified. The seemingly insignificant water sorption caused agglomeration of the oil marbles and consequently compromised the dissolution rate in some of the stressed samples. Replacing HPMC with lactose as a covering material resulted in more favorable properties upon storage. Overall, it has been shown that oil marbles are an industrially applicable concept of the solidified lipid-based formulation., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists.)
- Published
- 2022
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17. Monosaccharide profiling of glycoproteins by capillary electrophoresis with contactless conductivity detection.
- Author
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Tomnikova A, Kozlík P, and Křížek T
- Subjects
- Acetylgalactosamine, Acetylglucosamine, Cetrimonium, Chromatography, Liquid, Electrolytes chemistry, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods, Fetuins, Fucose, Galactose, Glucose, Glycoproteins chemistry, Mannose, Phosphates, Sodium Hydroxide, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Xylose, Monosaccharides analysis, N-Acetylneuraminic Acid
- Abstract
Saccharides form one of the major constituents of biological macromolecules in living organisms. Many biological processes including protein folding, stability, immune response and receptor activation are regulated by glycosylation. In this work, we optimized a capillary electrophoresis method with capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection for the separation of eight monosaccharides commonly found in glycoproteins, namely D-glucose, D-galactose, D-mannose, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, N-acetyl-D-galactosamine, D-fucose, N-acetylneuraminic acid, and D-xylose. A highly alkaline solution of 50 mM sodium hydroxide, 22.5 mM disodium phosphate, and 0.2 mM CTAB (pH 12.4) was used as a background electrolyte in a 10 µm id capillary. To achieve baseline separation of all analytes, a counter-directional pressure of -270 kPa was applied during the separation. The limits of detection of our method were below 7 µg/ml (i.e., 1.5 pg or 1 mg/g protein) and the limits of quantification were below 22 µg/ml (i.e., 5 pg or 3 mg/g protein). As a proof of concept of our methodology, we performed an analysis of monosaccharides released from fetuin glycoprotein by acid hydrolysis. The results show that, when combined with an appropriate pre-concentration technique, the developed method can be used as a monosaccharide profiling tool in glycoproteomics and complement the routinely used LC-MS/MS analysis., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
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- 2022
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18. Liquid crystals purity assay using nonaqueous capillary electrokinetic chromatography.
- Author
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Čokrtová K and Křížek T
- Subjects
- Acetonitriles chemistry, Cetrimonium, Electrolytes, Water chemistry, Chromatography, Micellar Electrokinetic Capillary methods, Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid, Liquid Crystals
- Abstract
A method for purity control of newly synthesized lactic acid-based liquid crystals has been developed. The electrokinetic chromatography proved to be suitable for the separation of these electroneutral substances from their impurities. The separations were performed in an acidic acetonitrile-based background electrolyte (BGE) with a pseudostationary phase formed by a cationic surfactant. During the optimization step, appropriate concentrations of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, acetic acid, and water were seeked. In the optimized method, separations were carried out in acetonitrile with 1-mol/L acetic acid, 80-mmol/L cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, and 6% (v/v) water. Interesting positive effects of a small water content in the BGE on electroosmotic flow and resolution of liquid crystal substances from their impurities were observed and discussed. Samples of five liquid crystal substances, both pure and containing impurities from synthesis, were analyzed. The identification of analytes was based on a comparison of relative migration times related to the migration time of mesityl oxide. For all five samples, impurities were separated from the liquid crystals and the method thus showed its viability. To the best of our knowledge, this method is used for the first time for the purity control of newly synthesized liquid crystals. This method can be used to confirm or complement the results obtained by commonly used high-performance liquid chromatography and supercritical fluid chromatography methods. Furthermore, the electrokinetic chromatography method requires very small amounts of sample, solvents, and buffer constituents. Overall, its operational costs are significantly lower., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2022
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19. LEGO-Lipophosphonoxins: A Novel Approach in Designing Membrane Targeting Antimicrobials.
- Author
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Do Pham DD, Mojr V, Helusová M, Mikušová G, Pohl R, Dávidová E, Šanderová H, Vítovská D, Bogdanová K, Večeřová R, Sedláková MH, Fišer R, Sudzinová P, Pospíšil J, Benada O, Křížek T, Galandáková A, Kolář M, Krásný L, and Rejman D
- Subjects
- Albumins, Cell Membrane, Gram-Negative Bacteria, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Structure-Activity Relationship, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Gram-Positive Bacteria
- Abstract
The alarming rise of bacterial antibiotic resistance requires the development of new compounds. Such compounds, lipophosphonoxins (LPPOs), were previously reported to be active against numerous bacterial species, but serum albumins abolished their activity. Here we describe the synthesis and evaluation of novel antibacterial compounds termed LEGO-LPPOs, loosely based on LPPOs, consisting of a central linker module with two attached connector modules on either side. The connector modules are then decorated with polar and hydrophobic modules. We performed an extensive structure-activity relationship study by varying the length of the linker and hydrophobic modules. The best compounds were active against both Gram-negative and Gram-positive species including multiresistant strains and persisters. LEGO-LPPOs act by first depleting the membrane potential and then creating pores in the cytoplasmic membrane. Importantly, their efficacy is not affected by the presence of serum albumins. Low cytotoxicity and low propensity for resistance development demonstrate their potential for therapeutic use.
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- 2022
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20. Seed Protection of Solanum lycopersicum with Pythium oligandrum against Alternaria brassicicola and Verticillium albo-atrum .
- Author
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Bělonožníková K, Hýsková V, Vašková M, Křížek T, Čokrtová K, Vaněk T, Halířová L, Chudý M, Žufić A, and Ryšlavá H
- Abstract
Pythium oligandrum , strain M1, is a soil oomycete successfully used as a biological control agent (BCA), protecting plants against fungal, yeast, and oomycete pathogens through mycoparasitism and elicitor-dependent plant priming. The not yet described Pythium strains, X42 and 00X48, have shown potential as BCAs given the high activity of their secreted proteases, endoglycosidases, and tryptamine. Here, Solanum lycopersicum L. cv. Micro-Tom seeds were coated with Pythium strains, and seedlings were exposed to fungal pathogens, either Alternaria brassicicola or Verticillium albo-atrum . The effects of both infection and seed-coating on plant metabolism were assessed by determining the activity and isoforms of antioxidant enzymes and endoglycosidases and the content of tryptamine, amino acids, and heat shock proteins. Dual culture competition testing and microscopy analysis confirmed mycoparasitism in all three Pythium strains. In turn, seed treatment significantly increased the total free amino acid content, changing their abundance in both non-infected and infected plants. In response to pathogens, plant Hsp70 and Hsp90 isoform levels also varied among Pythium strains, most likely as a strategy for priming the plant against infection. Overall, our results show in vitro mycoparasitism between Pythium strains and fungal pathogens and in planta involvement of heat shock proteins in priming.
- Published
- 2022
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21. Explaining dissolution properties of rivaroxaban cocrystals.
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Hriňová E, Skořepová E, Čerňa I, Královičová J, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Roušarová J, Ryšánek P, Šíma M, Slanař O, and Šoóš M
- Subjects
- Crystallization, Oxalic Acid, Solubility, X-Ray Diffraction, Rivaroxaban, Water chemistry
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to improve rivaroxaban water-solubility by cocrystal preparation and to understand this process. The screening with water-soluble coformers was performed via both mechanochemical and solution-mediated techniques. Two cocrystals of rivaroxaban with malonic acid and oxalic acid were prepared, and the structure of the cocrystal with oxalic acid was solved. Both cocrystals exhibit improved dissolution properties. The mechanism of the supersaturation maintenance was studied by in-situ Raman spectroscopy. The transformation into rivaroxaban dihydrate was identified as the critical step in the improved dissolution properties of both cocrystals. Moreover, the transformation kinetics and solubilization effects of the coformers were identified as responsible for the differences in the dissolution behavior of the cocrystals. In-vivo experiments proved that the use of cocrystal instead of form I of free API helped to increase the bioavailability ofrivaroxaban., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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22. Pharmacokinetic Variability in Pre-Clinical Studies: Sample Study with Abiraterone in Rats and Implications for Short-Term Comparative Pharmacokinetic Study Designs.
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Královičová J, Bartůněk A, Hofmann J, Křížek T, Kozlík P, Roušarová J, Ryšánek P, Šíma M, and Slanař O
- Abstract
One of the major concerns for all in vivo experiments is intra- and inter-subject variability, which can be a great source of inaccuracy. The aim of this study is, therefore, to estimate the ability of parallel vs. cross-over design studies in order to describe the relative pharmacokinetic performance of the studied drug formulations. We analyzed the data from a drug development program that examined the performance of innovative abiraterone acetate formulations against the identical reference product in three stages. In stages 1-3, groups A-F were dosed with the reference product once in a parallel manner. Stage 4 was performed to evaluate the intra-individual variability (IIV) by repeated administration of the reference product to the same animals. Although the geometric mean (90% CI) values of abiraterone AUC
last in groups A-F were similar to the IIV group (24.36 (23.79-41.00) vs. 26.29 (20.56-47.00) mg/mL·min·g), the results generated in the isolated parallel groups provided imprecise estimates of the true AUClast values ranging from 9.62 to 44.62 mg/mL·min·g due to chance. Notably, in 4 out of 15 possible pair comparisons between the parallel groups, the confidence intervals did not include 100%, which is the true ratio for all comparisons tested after identical formulation administration to all groups. A cross-over design can significantly improve the methodology in short-term comparative pre-clinical pharmacokinetic studies, and can provide more precise and accurate results in comparison to more traditional pre-clinical study designs.- Published
- 2022
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23. Alternative method for canagliflozin oxidation analysis using an electrochemical flow cell - Comparative study.
- Author
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Vymyslický F, Křížek T, Kozlík P, Kubíčková A, Heřt J, and Bartosińska E
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Mass Spectrometry, Oxidation-Reduction, Canagliflozin, Electrochemical Techniques
- Abstract
This paper highlights the potential of electrochemical flow cells for oxidative-stress testing of active pharmaceutical ingredients using canagliflozin as a model substance. Based on design of experiments, we developed our method through a reduced combinatorial design, optimizing the following independent variables: cell size, electrolyte flow rate, electrolyte concentration, and electrolyte pH. Using ammonium phosphate buffer with methanol in a 50/50 vol ratio as a working electrolyte, we electrochemically oxidized samples and analyzed them by high-performance liquid chromatography, considering the following dependent variables: peak area of each impurity, peak area of canagliflozin, and the percentage of the corresponding peak areas. Our results showed that the most significant independent variables were electrolyte pH and flow rate. By data optimization, we determined the most suitable conditions for electrochemical oxidation of canagliflozin, namely 50 µm cell size, 300 mM electrolyte concentration, 0.1 mL/h electrolyte flow rate, and electrolyte pH = 4. The repeatability of the method, expressed as the relative standard deviation of the canagliflozin peak area, measured in ten separately oxidized samples, was 1.64%. For comparison purposes, we performed a degradation experiment using hydrogen peroxide, identifying five identical impurities in both cases, as confirmed by mass spectrometry. The degradation products formed when using the chemical method after 1, 3, and 7 days totaled 0.09%, 0.75%, and 3.75%, respectively, and the degradation products formed when using the electrochemical method after 3 h totaled 3.11%. Oxidation with hydrogen peroxide required 7 days, whereas electrochemical oxidation was completed in 3 h. Overall, the electrochemical method significantly saves time and reduces the consumption of active ingredients and solvents thanks to the miniaturized size of the electrochemical cell, thereby minimizing the costs of forced degradation studies., 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 © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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24. Validity of cycloheximide chylomicron flow blocking method for the evaluation of lymphatic transport of drugs.
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Ryšánek P, Grus T, Lukáč P, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Pozniak J, Roušarová J, Královičová J, Kutinová Canová N, Boleslavská T, Bosák J, Štěpánek F, Šíma M, and Slanař O
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Biological Availability, Biological Transport, Cycloheximide pharmacology, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Rats, Reproducibility of Results, Chylomicrons metabolism, Intestinal Absorption
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: Lymphatic transport of drugs after oral administration is an important mechanism for absorption of highly lipophilic compounds. Direct measurement in lymph duct cannulated animals is the gold standard method, but non-invasive cycloheximide chylomicron flow blocking method has gained popularity recently. However, concerns about its reliability have been raised. The aim of this work was to investigate the validity of cycloheximide chylomicron flow blocking method for the evaluation of lymphatic transport using model compounds with high to very high lipophilicity, that is, abiraterone and cinacalcet., Experimental Approach: Series of pharmacokinetic studies were conducted with abiraterone acetate and cinacalcet hydrochloride after enteral/intravenous administration to intact, lymph duct cannulated and/or cycloheximide pre-treated rats., Key Results: Mean total absolute oral bioavailability of abiraterone and cinacalcet was 7.0% and 28.7%, respectively. There was a large and significant overestimation of the lymphatic transport extent by the cycloheximide method. Mean relative lymphatic bioavailability of abiraterone and cinacalcet in cycloheximide method was 28-fold and 3-fold higher than in cannulation method, respectively., Conclusion and Implications: Cycloheximide chylomicron flow blocking method did not provide reliable results on lymphatic absorption and substantially overestimated lymphatic transport for both molecules, that is, abiraterone and cinacalcet. This non-invasive method should not be used for the assessment of lymphatic transport and previously obtained data should be critically revised., (© 2021 The British Pharmacological Society.)
- Published
- 2021
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25. Comparison of static and dynamic mode in the electrochemical oxidation of fesoterodine with the use of experimental design approach.
- Author
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Bartosińska E, Kozlík P, Kubíčková A, Heřt J, Fischer J, and Křížek T
- Subjects
- Benzhydryl Compounds, Electrochemical Techniques, Electrodes, Oxidation-Reduction, Electrolysis, Research Design
- Abstract
Electrochemical conversion of fesoterodine to one of its oxidation products was evaluated with the application of the wall-jet flow cell. A traditional, "static" mode of electrolysis was compared with the "dynamic" mode of cell performance. For statistical assessment of the data, experiments were planned and performed with the application of design of experiments approach, namely Taguchi L18 design. After screening phase, the experimental settings were broadened or adjusted according to the results and optimization was performed. All of the samples were electrolysed with the use of chronoamperometric method in a three electrode system. The electrolysed samples were analysed using UHPLC-PDA-QDA method. The chromatographic run was performed in gradient elution with the application of C8 column. The response was expressed as % area of the main peak found with the PDA detection method whereas QDA detector was used in positive SIM mode for structural confirmation. All data obtained for both screening and optimization were treated together and linear models were adjusted. The use of large-surface glassy carbon electrode along with pH~7 were found to be the most significant factors influencing electrochemical oxidation of fesoterodine in both modes. The major differences were identified in terms of voltage applied to the electrodes which yielded the highest amounts of oxidation product. Evolution of electrochemical methods may serve as complementary technique in stress degradation studies in pharmaceutical industry., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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26. Mobilization of electroosmotic flow markers in capillary zone electrophoresis.
- Author
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Martínková E, Křížek T, Kubíčková A, and Coufal P
- Subjects
- Electrolytes, Electroosmosis, Electrophoresis, Capillary
- Abstract
UV-absorbing neutral substances are commonly used as markers of mean electroosmotic flow in capillary electrophoresis for their zero electrophoretic mobility in an electric field. However, some of these markers can interact with background electrolyte components and migrate at a different velocity than the electroosmotic flow. Thus, we tested 11 markers primarily varying in their degree of methylation and type of central atom in combination with five background electrolyte cations differing in their ionic radii and surface charge density, measuring the relative electrophoretic mobility using thiourea as a reference marker. Our results from this set of experiments showed some general trends in the mobilization of the markers based on the effects of marker structure and type of background electrolyte cation on the relative electrophoretic mobility. As an example, the effects of an inadequate choice of marker on analyte identification were illustrated in the electrophoretic separation of glucosinolates. Therefore, our findings may help electrophoretists appropriately select electroosmotic flow markers for various electrophoretic systems., (© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2021
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27. Changes in Rosuvastatin Pharmacokinetics During Postnatal Ontogenesis in Rats.
- Author
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Roušarová J, Šíma M, Kozlík P, Křížek T, and Slanař O
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn, Area Under Curve, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Metabolic Clearance Rate, Rats, Sexual Maturation, Rosuvastatin Calcium pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Statin therapy should be considered in children with familial hypercholesterolemia and sustained high LDL-C levels. There are no data on rosuvastatin exposure in patients <6 years and efficacy/safety can only be derived from case reports. Our aim was to examine developmental changes in pharmacokinetics of rosuvastatin in rats in vivo as a basis for clinical development of formulations for patients < 6 years., Methods: Rosuvastatin pharmacokinetics was examined in rats aged 1, 4, 7, 10, 14, 21, 28, 35 and 42 days (from birth to sexual maturity). After intraperitoneal dose of 5 mg/kg, blood samples to determine serum rosuvastatin levels were taken at 0.5, 3 and 5 hours. Pharmacokinetic parameters (Vd, CL, AUClast, AUC0-∞) were calculated using pharmacokinecic simulations., Results: Both rosuvastatin CL and Vd started to increase systematically between 2 - 3 weeks of age, which was reflected by decreased total drug exposure. The AUC was up to 13 times higher in the age groups ≤14 days compared with the value at 42 days., Conclusions: Based on interspecies scaling, a dose reduction could be a feasible way, how to develop appropriate dosing schedule and formulations for children aged 2 - 6 years. However, confirmation in clinical development studies will be needed.
- Published
- 2021
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28. Bioavailability Enhancement and Food Effect Elimination of Abiraterone Acetate by Encapsulation in Surfactant-Enriched Oil Marbles.
- Author
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Boleslavská T, Rychecký O, Krov M, Žvátora P, Dammer O, Beránek J, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Hořínková J, Ryšánek P, Roušarová J, Canová NK, Šíma M, Slanař O, and Štěpánek F
- Subjects
- Abiraterone Acetate administration & dosage, Abiraterone Acetate chemistry, Administration, Oral, Animals, Area Under Curve, Biological Availability, Drug Liberation, Fasting physiology, Food-Drug Interactions, Male, Models, Animal, Oils chemistry, Postprandial Period physiology, Rats, Surface-Active Agents chemistry, Abiraterone Acetate pharmacokinetics, Drug Compounding methods, Pharmaceutical Vehicles chemistry
- Abstract
Abiraterone acetate has limited bioavailability in the fasted state and exhibits a strong positive food effect. We present a novel formulation concept based on the so-called oil marbles (OMs) and show by in vitro and in vivo experiments that the food effect can be suppressed. OMs are spherical particles with a core-shell structure, formed by coating oil-based droplets that contain the dissolved drug by a layer of powder that prevents the cores from sticking and coalescence. OMs prepared in this work contained abiraterone acetate in the amorphous form and showed enhanced dissolution properties during in vitro experiments when compared with originally marketed formulation of abiraterone acetate (Zytiga
® ). Based on in vitro comparison of OMs containing different oil/surfactant combinations, the most promising formulation was chosen for in vivo studies. To ensure relevance, it was verified that the food effect previously reported for Zytiga® in humans was translated into the rat animal model. The bioavailability of abiraterone acetate formulated in OMs in the fasted state was then found to be enhanced by a factor of 2.7 in terms of AUC and by a factor of 4.0 in terms of Cmax . Crucially, the food effect reported in the literature for other abiraterone acetate formulations was successfully eliminated and OMs showed comparable extent of bioavailability in a fed-fasted study. Oil marbles therefore seem to be a promising formulation concept not only for abiraterone acetate but potentially also for other poorly soluble drugs that reveal a positive food effect.- Published
- 2020
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29. Novel Insights into the Effect of Pythium Strains on Rapeseed Metabolism.
- Author
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Bělonožníková K, Vaverová K, Vaněk T, Kolařík M, Hýsková V, Vaňková R, Dobrev P, Křížek T, Hodek O, Čokrtová K, Štípek A, and Ryšlavá H
- Abstract
Pythium oligandrum is a unique biological control agent. This soil oomycete not only acts as a mycoparasite, but also interacts with plant roots and stimulates plant defense response via specific elicitors. In addition, P. oligandrum can synthetize auxin precursors and stimulate plant growth. We analyzed the secretomes and biochemical properties of eleven Pythium isolates to find a novel and effective strain with advantageous features for plants. Our results showed that even closely related P. oligandrum isolates significantly differ in the content of compounds secreted into the medium, and that all strains secrete proteins, amino acids, tryptamine, phenolics, and hydrolytic enzymes capable of degrading cell walls (endo-β-1,3-glucanase, chitinase, and cellulase), exoglycosidases (especially β-glucosidase), proteases, and phosphatases. The most different strain was identified as a not yet described Pythium species. The changes in metabolism of Brassica napus plants grown from seeds coated with the tested Pythium spp. were characterized. Enhanced levels of jasmonates, ethylene precursor, and salicylic acid may indicate better resistance to a wide variety of pathogens. Glucosinolates, as defense compounds against insects and herbivores, were enhanced in young plants. Altogether, P. oligandrum strains varied in their life strategies, and either they could perform equally as plant growth promoters and mycoparasites or they had developed one of these strategies better.
- Published
- 2020
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30. Preclinical evaluation of new formulation concepts for abiraterone acetate bioavailability enhancement based on the inhibition of pH-induced precipitation.
- Author
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Boleslavská T, Světlík S, Žvátora P, Bosák J, Dammer O, Beránek J, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Kutinová Canová N, Šíma M, Slanař O, and Štěpánek F
- Subjects
- Abiraterone Acetate chemistry, Animals, Biological Availability, Drug Evaluation, Preclinical, Drug Liberation physiology, Excipients chemistry, Fasting metabolism, Food-Drug Interactions physiology, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Male, Polymers chemistry, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Therapeutic Equivalency, Abiraterone Acetate metabolism
- Abstract
Abiraterone acetate is a potent drug used for the treatment of metastatic castration resistant prostate cancer. However, currently marketed product containing crystalline abiraterone acetate exhibits strong positive food effect which results in strict dosing regimen. In the present work, a rational approach towards design of novel abiraterone acetate formulations that would allow increased bioavailability on a fasting stomach and thus decreased food effect is presented. Precipitation experiments in biorelevant media were designed to assess pH induced precipitation of the drug and a pool of polymeric excipients was then screened for their potential to inhibit precipitation. The best performing polymeric excipients were subsequently used as carriers for the preparation of amorphous solid dispersions. Two main approaches were followed in order to formulate the drug. The first approach relies on the suppression of precipitation from a supersaturated solution whereas the second one is based on the hypothesis that when the release of the drug is tuned, optimal uptake of the drug can be reached. Optimized formulation prototypes were tested in a rat animal model in an incomplete block, randomized bioequivalence study to assess their relative bioavailability under fasting conditions. We show that both formulation approaches lead to increased bioavailability of abiraterone acetate on a fasting stomach with bioavailability in rats being enhanced up to 250% compared to the original drug product containing crystalline drug., 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 © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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31. Post-mortem Redistribution of Alprazolam in Rats.
- Author
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Hořínková J, Kozlík P, Křížek T, Michaličková D, Šíma M, and Slanař O
- Subjects
- Animals, Postmortem Changes, Rats, Alprazolam pharmacokinetics, Hypnotics and Sedatives pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
The post-mortem toxicological findings may be misinterpreted, if the drug undergoes substantial post-mortem redistribution. As alprazolam is one of the most frequently evaluated drug for legal/forensic reasons in drug-related fatalities, we studied possible changes in alprazolam distribution after death in a rat model. Rats were sacrificed 30 minutes after alprazolam administration. Blood and tissue samples from 8 animals per sampling time were collected at 0, 2, 6, and 24 h after death. The experimental samples were assayed for alprazolam using validated UHPLC-PDA method. Median blood alprazolam concentrations increased approximately 2 times compared with ante-mortem levels due to the redistribution during early post-mortem phase and then slowly decreased with a half-life of 60.7 h. The highest alprazolam tissue concentrations were found in fat and liver and the lowest levels were observed in lungs and brain. The median amount of alprazolam deposited in the lungs was relatively stable over the 24-h post-mortem period, while in heart, liver and kidney the deposited proportion of administered dose increased by 43-48% in comparison with ante-mortem values indicating continuous accumulation of alprazolam into these tissues. These results provide evidence needed for the interpretation of toxicological results in alprazolam-related fatalities and demonstrate modest alprazolam post-mortem redistribution.
- Published
- 2020
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32. Can Arginine Inhibit Insulin Aggregation? A Combined Protein Crystallography, Capillary Electrophoresis, and Molecular Simulation Study.
- Author
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Březina K, Duboué-Dijon E, Palivec V, Jiráček J, Křížek T, Viola CM, Ganderton TR, Brzozowski AM, and Jungwirth P
- Subjects
- Arginine chemistry, Crystallography, X-Ray, Electrophoresis, Capillary, Humans, Insulin chemistry, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Osmolar Concentration, Protein Binding, Protein Multimerization, Arginine metabolism, Insulin metabolism
- Abstract
The oligomeric state of the storage form of human insulin in the pancreas, which may be affected by several endogenous components of β-cell storage granules such as arginine, is not known. Here, the effect of arginine on insulin oligomerization is investigated independently by protein crystallography, molecular dynamics simulations, and capillary electrophoresis. The combined results point to a strong effect of ionic strength on insulin assembly. Molecular simulations and electrophoretic measurements at low/mM salt concentrations show no significant effect of arginine on insulin aggregation. In contrast, crystallographic data at high/molar ionic strength indicate inhibition of insulin hexamerization by arginine due to its binding at the site relevant for intermolecular contacts, which was also observed in MD simulations. Our results thus bracket the in vivo situation in pancreatic β-cell storage granules, where the ionic strength is estimated to be in the hundreds of millimolar to submolar range. The present findings add to a molecular understanding of in vivo insulin oligomerization and storage, with additional implications for insulin stability in arginine-rich injections.
- Published
- 2018
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33. Protonation of polyaniline-coated silica stationary phase affects the retention behavior of neutral hydrophobic solutes in reversed-phase capillary liquid chromatography.
- Author
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Taraba L, Křížek T, Kozlík P, Hodek O, and Coufal P
- Abstract
Because of its high conductivity when acid doped, polyaniline is known as a synthetic metal and is used in a wide range of applications, such as supercapacitors, biosensors, electrochromic devices, or solar and fuel cells. Emeraldine is the partly oxidized, stable form of polyaniline, consisting of alternating diaminobenzenoid and iminoquinoid segments. When acidified, the nitrogen atoms of emeraldine become protonated. Due to electrostatic repulsion between positive charges, the polarity and morphology of emeraldine chains presumably change; however, the protonation effects on emeraldine have not yet been clarified. Thus, we investigated these changes by reversed-phase capillary liquid chromatography using a linear solvation energy relationship approach to assess differences in dominant retention interactions under a significantly varied mobile phase pH. We observed that hydrophobicity dominates the intermolecular interactions under both acidic and alkaline eluent conditions, albeit to different extents. Therefore, by tuning the mobile phase pH, we can even modulate the retention of neutral hydrophobic solutes, such as aromatic hydrocarbons, because the pH-dependent charge and structure of polymer chains of the emeraldine-coated silica stationary phase show a mixed-mode separation mechanism., (© 2018 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2018
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34. Online screening of α-amylase inhibitors by capillary electrophoresis.
- Author
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Hodek O, Křížek T, Coufal P, and Ryšlavá H
- Subjects
- Enzyme Stability, Humans, Online Systems, Pancreas enzymology, Time Factors, Electrophoresis, Capillary economics, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods, Enzyme Inhibitors analysis, alpha-Amylases antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Pancreatic α-amylase plays an important role in dietary starch hydrolysis in the small intestine and participates in enhanced glucose concentration after meals. It seems to be a problem for diabetic patients, who suffer from longer postprandial hyperglycemia after meal consumption than healthy people. There are commercially available drugs that inhibit α-amylase and thus reduce the postprandial hyperglycemia effect. However, these drugs may cause severe side effects. Conversely, some naturally occurring flavonoids were suggested to have an α-amylase-inhibiting effect without any side effects. There had been no rapid, undemanding method in terms of sample and reagent preparation that would enable screening of many potential inhibitors. Therefore, we developed an online capillary electrophoresis method to monitor α-amylase activity in the presence of an inhibitor. Each reaction constituent was introduced separately, directly into a capillary where the reagents were mixed by diffusion, which resulted in a 5-min analysis including conditioning of the capillary. We applied the method to test the inhibitory effect of flavonoid standards and their mixture and we investigated the inhibitory effect of ethanolic extract from Betula pendula bark. The developed method presents a faster and less expensive alternative to previously described offline methods. Graphical abstract Online CE screening of α-amylase inhibitors.
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
35. Binding of Divalent Cations to Insulin: Capillary Electrophoresis and Molecular Simulations.
- Author
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Duboué-Dijon E, Delcroix P, Martinez-Seara H, Hladílková J, Coufal P, Křížek T, and Jungwirth P
- Subjects
- Calcium chemistry, Cations, Divalent metabolism, Electrophoresis, Capillary, Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Insulin metabolism, Magnesium chemistry, Protein Binding, Water chemistry, Zinc chemistry, Cations, Divalent chemistry, Insulin chemistry, Molecular Dynamics Simulation
- Abstract
In the present study, we characterize the binding of divalent cations to insulin in aqueous salt solutions by means of capillary electrophoresis and molecular dynamics simulations. The results show a strong pH dependence. At low pH, at which all the carboxylate groups are protonated and the protein has an overall positive charge, all the cations exhibit only weak and rather unspecific interactions with insulin. In contrast, at close to neutral pH, when all the carboxylate groups are deprotonated and negatively charged, the charge-neutralizing effect of magnesium, calcium, and zinc, in particular, on the electrophoretic mobility of insulin is significant. This is also reflected in the results of molecular dynamics simulations showing accumulation of cations at the protein surface, which becomes smaller in magnitude upon effective inclusion of electronic polarization via charge rescaling.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Synthesis and supramolecular properties of regioisomers of mononaphthylallyl derivatives of γ-cyclodextrin.
- Author
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Bláhová M, Filippov SK, Kováčik L, Horský J, Hybelbauerová S, Syrová Z, Křížek T, and Jindřich J
- Abstract
Monosubstituted derivatives of γ-cyclodextrin (γ-CD) are suitable building blocks for supramolecular polymers, and can also serve as precursors for the synthesis of other regioselectively monosubstituted γ-CD derivatives. We prepared a set of monosubstituted 2
I - O -, 3I - O -, and 6I - O -(3-(naphthalen-2-yl)prop-2-en-1-yl) derivatives of γ-CD using two different methods. A key step of the first synthetic procedure is a cross-metathesis between previously described regioisomers of mono- O -allyl derivatives of γ-CD and 2-vinylnaphthalene which gives yields of about 16-25% (2-5% starting from γ-CD). To increase the overall yields, we have developed another method, based on a direct alkylation of γ-CD with 3-(naphthalen-2-yl)allyl chloride as the alkylating reagent. Highly regioselective reaction conditions, which differ for each regioisomer in a used base, gave the monosubstituted isomers in yields between 12-19%. Supramolecular properties of these derivatives were studied by DLS, ITC, NMR, and Cryo-TEM.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Quantification of paracetamol and 5-oxoproline in serum by capillary electrophoresis: Implication for clinical toxicology.
- Author
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Hložek T, Křížek T, Tůma P, Bursová M, Coufal P, and Čabala R
- Subjects
- Acetaminophen, Acidosis, Analgesics, Non-Narcotic, Humans, Pyrrolidonecarboxylic Acid, Electrophoresis, Capillary
- Abstract
High anion gap metabolic acidosis frequently complicates acute paracetamol overdose and is generally attributed to lactic acidosis or compromised hepatic function. However, metabolic acidosis can also be caused by organic acid 5-oxoproline (pyroglutamic acid). Paracetamol's toxic intermediate, N-acetyl-p-benzoquinoneimine irreversibly binds to glutathione and its depletion leads to subsequent disruption of the gamma glutamyl cycle and an excessive 5-oxoproline generation. This is undoubtedly an underdiagnosed condition because measurement of serum 5-oxoproline level is not readily available. A simple, cost effective, and fast capillary electrophoresis method with diode array detection (DAD) for simultaneous measurement of both paracetamol (acetaminophen) and 5-oxoproline in serum was developed and validated. This method is highly suitable for clinical toxicology laboratory diagnostic, allowing rapid quantification of acidosis inducing organic acid 5-oxoproline present in cases of paracetamol overdose. The calibration dependence of the method was proved to be linear in the range of 1.3-250μgmL
-1 , with adequate accuracy (96.4-107.8%) and precision (12.3%). LOQ equaled 1.3μgmL-1 for paracetamol and 4.9μgmL-1 for 5-oxoproline., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Lipophosphonoxins II: Design, Synthesis, and Properties of Novel Broad Spectrum Antibacterial Agents.
- Author
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Seydlová G, Pohl R, Zborníková E, Ehn M, Šimák O, Panova N, Kolář M, Bogdanová K, Večeřová R, Fišer R, Šanderová H, Vítovská D, Sudzinová P, Pospíšil J, Benada O, Křížek T, Sedlák D, Bartůněk P, Krásný L, and Rejman D
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemical synthesis, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Apoptosis drug effects, Cell Line, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Membrane metabolism, Cell Survival drug effects, Drug Design, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial, Gram-Negative Bacteria drug effects, Gram-Positive Bacteria drug effects, Humans, Lipid Bilayers chemistry, Male, Mice, Inbred ICR, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Phospholipids chemistry, Pyrazoles chemical synthesis, Pyrazoles chemistry, Pyrazoles pharmacology, Rabbits, Skin Irritancy Tests, Stereoisomerism, Structure-Activity Relationship, Uridine Monophosphate chemical synthesis, Uridine Monophosphate chemistry, Uridine Monophosphate pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Uridine Monophosphate analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
The increase in the number of bacterial strains resistant to known antibiotics is alarming. In this study we report the synthesis of novel compounds termed Lipophosphonoxins II (LPPO II). We show that LPPO II display excellent activities against Gram-positive and -negative bacteria, including pathogens and multiresistant strains. We describe their mechanism of action-plasmatic membrane pore-forming activity selective for bacteria. Importantly, LPPO II neither damage nor cross the eukaryotic plasmatic membrane at their bactericidal concentrations. Further, we demonstrate LPPO II have low propensity for resistance development, likely due to their rapid membrane-targeting mode of action. Finally, we reveal that LPPO II are not toxic to either eukaryotic cells or model animals when administered orally or topically. Collectively, these results suggest that LPPO II are highly promising compounds for development into pharmaceuticals.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Design of experiments for amino acid extraction from tobacco leaves and their subsequent determination by capillary zone electrophoresis.
- Author
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Hodek O, Křížek T, Coufal P, and Ryšlavá H
- Subjects
- Models, Theoretical, Amino Acids isolation & purification, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods, Plant Leaves chemistry, Nicotiana chemistry
- Abstract
In this study, we optimized a method for the determination of free amino acids in Nicotiana tabacum leaves. Capillary electrophoresis with contactless conductivity detector was used for the separation of 20 proteinogenic amino acids in acidic background electrolyte. Subsequently, the conditions of extraction with HCl were optimized for the highest extraction yield of the amino acids because sample treatment of plant materials brings some specific challenges. Central composite face-centered design with fractional factorial design was used in order to evaluate the significance of selected factors (HCl volume, HCl concentration, sonication, shaking) on the extraction process. In addition, the composite design helped us to find the optimal values for each factor using the response surface method. The limits of detection and limits of quantification for the 20 proteinogenic amino acids were found to be in the order of 10
-5 and 10-4 mol l-1 , respectively. Addition of acetonitrile to the sample was tested as a method commonly used to decrease limits of detection. Ambiguous results of this experiment pointed out some features of plant extract samples, which often required specific approaches. Suitability of the method for metabolomic studies was tested by analysis of a real sample, in which all amino acids, except for L-methionine and L-cysteine, were successfully detected. The optimized extraction process together with the capillary electrophoresis method can be used for the determination of proteinogenic amino acids in plant materials. The resulting inexpensive, simple, and robust method is well suited for various metabolomic studies in plants. As such, the method represents a valuable tool for research and practical application in the fields of biology, biochemistry, and agriculture.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Characterization of polyaniline-coated stationary phases by using the linear solvation energy relationship in the hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography mode using capillary liquid chromatography.
- Author
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Taraba L, Křížek T, Hodek O, Kalíková K, and Coufal P
- Abstract
A polyaniline coating was used to modify the surface of bare silica gel and octadecyl silica stationary phases to characterize the properties of altered materials. It was assumed that the mixed-mode retention was established on the basis of the polyaniline chemical structure and its combination with the original sorbents. Polyaniline was deposited onto the original surfaces during the chemical polymerization of aniline hydrochloride. The prepared materials were slurry packed into capillary columns and systematic chromatographic characterization was performed using the linear solvation energy relationship, also employing descriptors that allow inclusion of ionic interactions in the proposed retention mechanism. The retention times of 80 solutes with various chemical structures were measured in the hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography mode. The obtained results demonstrated the significant contribution of the polyaniline coating to the retention mechanism under the given conditions; the assumed mixed-mode retention was confirmed. The dominant retention interaction for both modified stationary phases was based on the protonation of nitrogen atoms in the polyaniline structure, leading to suitable retention and selectivity for the hydrophilic analytes, especially anionic and zwitterionic species. Thus, especially, the polyaniline-coated bare silica gel sorbent seems to be promising for potential applications related to the separation of polar compounds., (© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Sample pretreatment for the capillary electrophoretic determination of organic acids in chromium(III) plating baths.
- Author
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Taraba L, Křížek T, Kubíčková A, and Coufal P
- Abstract
This work deals with the development and optimization of the sample pretreatment and consequent electrophoretic analysis of two modern plating baths containing chromium(III) and either citric acid or oxalic acid. Some model mixtures containing known amounts of components of industrial baths have been prepared to simulate simplified bath matrices. Prior to analysis, a sample pretreatment consisting of the addition of some agents that could release acid from the stable chromium complex was tested. Determination of organic anions was accomplished by indirect UV detection. The best results were achieved by precipitation of chromium(III) hydroxide. The content of oxalate and citrate in real samples was calculated as 96.5% (SD 2.3%) and 97.3% (SD 0.8%), respectively, of the declared amount. Very good robustness of the method and satisfactory repeatability of migration time and peak area were obtained. This simple inexpensive method is suitable for routine determination of citric and oxalic acid in chromium(III)-based plating baths., (© 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Purification and enzymatic characterization of tobacco leaf β-N-acetylhexosaminidase.
- Author
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Ryšlavá H, Valenta R, Hýsková V, Křížek T, Liberda J, and Coufal P
- Subjects
- Acetylgalactosamine analogs & derivatives, Acetylgalactosamine metabolism, Acetylglucosamine analogs & derivatives, Acetylglucosamine metabolism, Acetylglucosamine pharmacology, Disaccharides metabolism, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Hydrolysis, Kinetics, Molecular Weight, Plant Leaves enzymology, Substrate Specificity, beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases antagonists & inhibitors, beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases isolation & purification, Nicotiana enzymology, beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases chemistry, beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases metabolism
- Abstract
The kinetic properties of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase purified from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) leaves have been investigated. In addition to chromogenic pNP derivates, N,N'-diacetylchitobiose and N,N',N″-triacetylchitotriose were also used as substrates of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase. The highest reaction rate and the affinity for the substrate were observed for pNP-GlcNAc; however, an excess of this substrate inhibits the reaction. The reaction rate with pNP-GalNAc as the substrate was found to be about 85% of that obtained with pNP-GlcNAc. The hydrolysis of acetylated chitooligomers by β-N-acetylhexosaminidase followed by separation and quantification using capillary electrophoresis was slower compared to pNP-GlcNAc. The pH optimum of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase for individual substrates was found at 4.3-5.0 and the temperature optimum was 50-55 °C. Gel permeation chromatography and red native electrophoresis determined the relative molecular weight as 280 000 and the isoelectric point as 5.3. The inhibition of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase by monosaccharides GlcN, GalN, GlcNAc, GalNAc in combination with substrates pNP-GlcNAc and pNP-GalNAc was studied and the type of inhibition and the inhibition constants were determined., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. and Société française de biochimie et biologie Moléculaire (SFBBM). All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Electrophoretic mobilities of neutral analytes and electroosmotic flow markers in aqueous solutions of Hofmeister salts.
- Author
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Křížek T, Kubíčková A, Hladílková J, Coufal P, Heyda J, and Jungwirth P
- Subjects
- Acetamides chemistry, Cesium chemistry, Dimethyl Sulfoxide chemistry, Electroosmosis, Lithium chemistry, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Osmolar Concentration, Salts, Solutions, Thiourea chemistry, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods
- Abstract
Small neutral organic compounds have traditionally the role of EOF markers in electrophoresis, as they are expected to have zero electrophoretic mobility in external electric fields. The BGE contains, however, ions that have unequal affinities to the neutral molecules, which in turn results in their mobilization. In this study we focused on two EOF markers-thiourea and DMSO, as well as on N-methyl acetamide (NMA) as a model of the peptide bond. By means of CE and all atom molecular dynamics simulations we explored mobilization of these neutral compounds in large set of Hofmeister salts. Employing a statistical mechanics approach, we were able to reproduce by simulations the experimental electrophoretic mobility coefficients. We also established the role of the chemical composition of marker and the BGE on the measured electrophoretic mobility coefficient. For NMA, we interpreted the results in terms of the relative affinities of cations versus anions to the peptide bond., (© 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Offline and online capillary electrophoresis enzyme assays of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase.
- Author
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Křížek T, Doubnerová V, Ryšlavá H, Coufal P, and Bosáková Z
- Subjects
- Aspergillus oryzae chemistry, Automation, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Hydrolysis, Kinetics, Aspergillus oryzae enzymology, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods, Enzyme Assays methods, Fungal Proteins chemistry, beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidases chemistry
- Abstract
Enzyme assays of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase from Aspergillus oryzae using capillary electrophoresis in the offline and online setup have been developed. The pH value and concentration of the borate-based background electrolyte were optimized in order to achieve baseline separation of N,N',N″-triacetylchitotriose, N,N'-diacetylchitobiose, and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine. The optimized method using 25 mM tetraborate buffer, pH 10.0, was evaluated in terms of repeatability, limits of detection, quantification, and linearity. The method was successfully applied to the offline enzyme assay of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase, which was demonstrated by monitoring the hydrolysis of N,N',N″-triacetylchitotriose. The presented method was also utilized to study the pH dependence of enzyme activity. An online assay with N,N'-diacetylchitobiose as a substrate was developed using the Transverse Diffusion of Laminar Flow Profiles model to optimize the injection sequence and in-capillary mixing of substrate and enzyme plugs. The experimental results were in good agreement with predictions of the model. The online assay was successfully used to observe the inhibition effect of N,N'-dimethylformamide on the activity of β-N-acetylhexosaminidase with nanoliter volumes of reagents used per run and a high degree of automation. After adjustment of background electrolyte pH, an online assay with N,N',N″-triacetylchitotriose as a substrate was also performed.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Microscale separation methods for enzyme kinetics assays.
- Author
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Křížek T and Kubíčková A
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Kinetics, Miniaturization methods, Capillary Electrochromatography methods, Chromatography, Micellar Electrokinetic Capillary methods, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods, Enzyme Assays methods, Isoelectric Focusing methods, Isotachophoresis methods
- Abstract
Miniaturization continues to be one of the leading trends in analytical chemistry and one that brings advantages that can be particularly beneficial in biochemical research. Use of a miniaturized scale enables efficient analysis in a short time and requires very small amounts of samples, solvents, and reagents. This can result in a remarkable decrease in costs of enzyme kinetics studies, especially when expensive or rare enzymes and/or substrates are involved. Free zone electrophoresis is without a doubt the most common microscale separation technique for capillary and on-chip enzyme assays. Progress and applications in this field are reviewed frequently whereas other modes of separation, although successfully applied, receive only marginal interest in such publications. This review summarizes applications of less common modes of separation in capillary or chip formats, namely micellar electrokinetic chromatography, liquid chromatography, gel electrophoresis, isoelectric focusing, and isotachophoresis. Because these techniques are based on separation mechanisms different from those of free zone electrophoresis, they can be, and have been, successfully used in cases where zone electrophoresis fails. Advantages and drawbacks of these alternative separation techniques are discussed, as also are the difficulties encountered most often and solutions proposed by different research groups.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Overcharging in biological systems: reversal of electrophoretic mobility of aqueous polyaspartate by multivalent cations.
- Author
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Kubíčková A, Křížek T, Coufal P, Vazdar M, Wernersson E, Heyda J, and Jungwirth P
- Subjects
- Cations chemistry, Electrolytes chemistry, Electrophoresis, Capillary, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Solutions, Static Electricity, Water chemistry, Models, Chemical, Peptides chemistry
- Abstract
Charge reversal as an extreme case of charge compensation is directly observed by capillary electrophoresis for a negatively charged peptide in aqueous solutions of trivalent cations. Atomistic and coarse-grained simulations provide molecular interpretation of this effect showing that it is largely of electrostatic origin with a minor contribution of chemical specificity of the salt ions.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Counterion condensation in short cationic peptides: limiting mobilities beyond the Onsager-Fuoss theory.
- Author
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Wernersson E, Heyda J, Kubíčková A, Křížek T, Coufal P, and Jungwirth P
- Subjects
- Arginine chemistry, Cations chemistry, Computer Simulation, Electrolytes, Lysine chemistry, Molecular Dynamics Simulation, Sodium Chloride, Sulfates, Electrophoresis, Capillary methods, Oligopeptides chemistry
- Abstract
We investigated the effect of the background electrolyte (BGE) anions on the electrophoretic mobilities of the cationic amino acids arginine and lysine and the polycationic peptides tetraarginine, tetralysine, nonaarginine, and nonalysine. BGEs composed of sodium chloride, sodium propane-1,3-disulfonate, and sodium sulfate were used. For the amino acids, determination of the limiting mobility by extrapolation, using the Onsager-Fuoss (OF) theory expression, yielded consistent estimates. For the peptides, however, the estimates of the limiting mobilities were found to spuriously depend on the BGE salt. This paradox was resolved using molecular modeling. Simulations, on all-atom as well as coarse-grained levels, show that significant counterion condensation, an effect not accounted for in OF theory, occurs for the tetra- and nonapeptides, even for low BGE concentrations. Including this effect in the quantitative estimation of the BGE effect on mobility removed the discrepancy between the estimated limiting mobilities in different salts. The counterion condensation was found to be mainly due to electrostatic interactions, with specific ion effects playing a secondary role. Therefore, the conclusions are likely to be generalizable to other analytes with a similar density of charged groups and OF theory is expected to fail in a predictable way for such analytes., (© 2012 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Monolithic columns based on a poly(styrene-divinylbenzene-methacrylic acid) copolymer for capillary liquid chromatography of small organic molecules.
- Author
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Svobodová A, Křížek T, Sirc J, Sálek P, Tesařová E, Coufal P, and Stulík K
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Liquid methods, Methacrylates chemistry, Polymers chemistry, Styrene chemistry
- Abstract
A very simple and readily performed method is described for the preparation of poly(styrene-divinylbenzene-methacrylic acid) monolithic columns for capillary liquid chromatography. The effect of the methacrylic acid content on the morphological and chromatographic properties has been investigated. Methacrylic acid is shown to be essential for isocratic separations of small organic analytes by capillary liquid chromatography. Column efficiencies of about 28,000 theoretical plates/m have been obtained for all the test compounds. The batch-to-batch and run-to-run repeatability of the retention times is better than 1.5%., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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