NMR Reveals an Undeclared Constituent in Custom Synthetic Peptides
Autor: | Mary P. Choules, JB McAlpine, Charlotte Simmler, Matthias Niemitz, Anton Bzhelyansky, Jonathan Bisson, Guido F. Pauli, Gabriel I. Giancaspro |
---|---|
Přispěvatelé: | Groupe d’Etudes des Substances Végétales à Activité Biologique (GESVAB ), Thallion Pharmaceuticals Inc. |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Adulterant
Quality Control 010405 organic chemistry Chemistry Clinical Biochemistry Pharmaceutical Science 010402 general chemistry 01 natural sciences Magnetic Resonance Imaging Article 0104 chemical sciences Analytical Chemistry Custom peptide synthesis Pharmaceutical Preparations [CHIM.ANAL]Chemical Sciences/Analytical chemistry Drug Discovery Biochemical engineering Drug Contamination Peptides Spectroscopy ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS |
Zdroj: | J Pharm Biomed Anal Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis, Elsevier, 2020, 178, pp.112915. ⟨10.1016/j.jpba.2019.112915⟩ Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis, 2020, 178, pp.112915. ⟨10.1016/j.jpba.2019.112915⟩ |
ISSN: | 0731-7085 1873-264X |
Popis: | Whereas generic, LC-based pharmaceutical control quality procedures depend largely on the detection mode and can be particularly ‘blind’ to certain impurities, NMR is a more versatile and, thus, often more judicious detector. While adulteration presents ever-evolving challenges for the analysis of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and finished products sold in the worldwide (online) marketplace, research chemicals are usually trusted rather than being considered flawed or even adulterated. This report shows how NMR analysis uncovered the unanticipated presence of substantial amounts of mannitol (20 and 43% w/w) as undeclared constituent in two custom synthetic peptides, DR and DRVYI, that were sourced commercially. Quantitative 1H NMR (qHNMR) readily detected the contaminant, even on a 60 MHz benchtop instrument, and quantified the highly polar and UV-transparent adulterant. Quantum-mechanical 1H iterative Full Spin Analysis (HiFSA) not only achieved unambiguous identification of both the mannitol and the peptides, but also confirmed the quantitative results. The cases show that experimental verification supersedes trust in both pharmaceutical and research QC. They also highlight the promising utility of both established high-field and recently re-evolving low-field benchtop qHNMR. The unanticipated findings remind manufacturers and researchers alike about the advantages of including/performing NMR and qNMR with routine CofA documentation and/or verification of research grade chemicals. Especially when done jointly, this can greatly improve confidence in research and help streamline the pharmaceutical QC toolbox. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |