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Chiral Separation of Uncharged Pomalidomide Enantiomers Using Carboxymethyl‐β‐Cyclodextrin: A Validated Capillary Electrophoretic Method
Author(s) -
Szabó ZoltánIstván,
Szőcs Levente,
Muntean DanielaLucia,
NoszáL Béla,
Tóth Gergő
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
chirality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.43
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1520-636X
pISSN - 0899-0042
DOI - 10.1002/chir.22563
Subject(s) - chemistry , capillary electrophoresis , enantiomer , cyclodextrin , repeatability , chromatography , detection limit , electrolyte , resolution (logic) , capillary action , electrophoresis , analytical chemistry (journal) , stereochemistry , electrode , artificial intelligence , computer science , materials science , composite material
Abstract The racemic mixture of pomalidomide (POM), a second‐generation immunomodulatory uncharged drug, was separated into enantiomers by capillary zone electrophoresis for the first time. Seven different chargeable cyclodextrin (CD) derivatives were screened as complexing agents and chiral selectors, investigating the stability of the POM‐CD inclusion complexes and their enantiodiscriminating capacities. Based on preliminary experiments, carboxymethyl‐β‐CD (CM‐β‐CD) was found to be the most effective chiral selector. Factors influencing enantioseparation were systematically optimized, using an orthogonal experimental design. Optimal parameters (background electrolyte [BGE]: 50 mM Tris‐acetate buffer, pH 6.5, containing 15 mM CM‐β‐CD; capillary temperature: 20°C; voltage applied +15 kV) allowed baseline separation of POM enantiomers with a resolution as high as 4.87. The developed method was validated, in terms of sensitivity (limit of detection and limit of quantification), linearity, accuracy, repeatability, and intermediate precision. Chirality 28:199–203, 2016 . © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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