Abstract
The recent pandemic has highlighted the impact of diseases on global health and the economy. The rapid discovery of new hit molecules remains a tough challenge. Pharmaceutical impurity profiling can be linked to drug discovery through the identification of new hits from compounds identified during the analytical profiling. The present study demonstrates this linkage through the extension of the impurity (forced degradation) profiling of eltrombopag (ELT) olamine, a thrombopoietin (TPO) receptor agonist. The drug was exposed to standard degradation and the degradation products were primarily resolved and identified by UPLC-ESI-MS. This led to the identification of five forced degradation products (FDP). Thirty-three other known related substances (RS) of ELT, identified in the literature, were also considered. Molecular similarity checks were performed using Tanimoto/Jaccard's similarity searches. A set of structurally and topologically similar molecules, including ELT and 15 RS, was established and subjected to in-silico toxicity-, absorption-, distribution-, metabolism-, and elimination (ADME) predictions. The RS, predicted with similar or lower toxicity than ELT and a comparable ADME profile, were subjected to molecular docking to trace changes in TPO receptor affinity. The results indicated that five RS had a high Jaccard’s similarity with ELT and higher or comparable docking scores. These compounds, along with few other impurities were predicted to have lower toxicity, better or comparable absorption, distribution, metabolism, and also a better excretion profile than ELT. This justifies their entry as potential novel TPO receptor agonists in drug discovery.
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