First metabolic profile of XLR-11, a novel synthetic cannabinoid, obtained by using human hepatocytes and high-resolution mass spectrometry

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: First metabolic profile of XLR-11, a novel synthetic cannabinoid, obtained by using human hepatocytes and high-resolution mass spectrometry
المؤلفون: Hua-fen Liu, Karl B. Scheidweiler, Shaokun Pang, Mingshe Zhu, Adarsh Gandhi, Marilyn A. Huestis, Ariane Wohlfarth
المصدر: Clinical chemistry. 59(11)
سنة النشر: 2013
مصطلحات موضوعية: Chromatography, Chemistry, medicine.drug_class, Cannabinoids, medicine.medical_treatment, Metabolite, Biochemistry (medical), Clinical Biochemistry, Glucuronidation, Metabolism, In Vitro Techniques, Mass spectrometry, Mass Spectrometry, Article, Designer Drugs, Designer drug, Hydroxylation, chemistry.chemical_compound, Biochemistry, Synthetic cannabinoids, medicine, Hepatocytes, Humans, Cannabinoid, medicine.drug
الوصف: BACKGROUND Since the mid-2000s synthetic cannabinoids have been abused as recreational drugs, prompting scheduling of these substances in many countries. To circumvent legislation, manufacturers constantly market new compounds; [1-(5-fluoropentyl)indol-3-yl]-(2,2,3,3-tetramethylcyclopropyl)methanone (XLR-11), the fluorinated UR-144 analog, is one of the most recent and widely abused drugs, and its use is now linked with acute kidney injury. Our goal was to investigate XLR-11 metabolism for identification of major urinary targets in analytical methods and to clarify the origin of metabolites when one or more parent synthetic cannabinoids can be the source. METHODS We incubated 10 μmol/L XLR-11 with pooled human hepatocytes and sampled after 1 and 3 h. Samples were analyzed by high-resolution mass spectrometry with a TOF scan followed by information-dependent acquisition triggered product ion scans with dynamic BACKGROUND subtraction and mass defect filters. Scans were thoroughly data mined with different data processing algorithms (Metabolite Pilot 1.5). RESULTS XLR-11 underwent phase I and II metabolism, producing more than 25 metabolites resulting from hydroxylation, carboxylation, hemiketal and hemiacetal formation, internal dehydration, and further glucuronidation of some oxidative metabolites. No sulfate or glutathione conjugation was observed. XLR-11 also was defluorinated, forming UR-144 metabolites. On the basis of mass spectrometry peak areas, we determined that the major metabolites were 2′-carboxy-XLR-11, UR-144 pentanoic acid, 5-hydroxy-UR-144, hydroxy-XLR-11 glucuronides, and 2′-carboxy-UR-144 pentanoic acid. Minor metabolites were combinations of the biotransformations mentioned above, often glucuronidated. CONCLUSIONS These are the first data defining major urinary targets of XLR-11 metabolism that could document XLR-11 intake in forensic and clinical investigations.
تدمد: 1530-8561
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::c685587d8a8e2a0cdf8ffc562fe46416
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24014837
Rights: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....c685587d8a8e2a0cdf8ffc562fe46416
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE