Abstract

The constant development in the area of medicinal substances on the market and their subsequent progress in the field of drug analysis has become one of the reasons for the search for alternative, cheaper, and faster methods to determine the metabolism pathways of new molecular entities (NMEs). The simulation of transformation processes using photocatalysis is considered to be one of the promising methods. Although its effectiveness has been proven, the research has so far focused especially on titanium dioxide, while a more accurate comparison of the suitability of different photocatalysts in terms of their use in drug metabolism studies has not been performed. For this purpose, a set of twelve metal oxides was prepared and their photocatalytic efficiency in the direction of drug metabolism mimicking was checked on a model mixture of twenty medicinal substances differing both in chemical structure and pharmacological properties. Incubation with human liver microsomes (HLMs) was used as the reference method. The metabolic profiles obtained with the use of LC-MS analysis were compared using multidimensional chemometric techniques; and the graphic presentation of the results in the form of PCA plot and cluster dendrogram enabled their detailed interpretation and discussion. All tested photocatalysts confirmed their effectiveness. However, the exact outcome of the study indicate advantage of the WO3-assisted photocatalysis over other metal oxides.

Highlights

  • Heterogeneous photocatalysis is a type of photochemical reaction accelerated by the presence of the catalyst particle in a different phase from the reactants

  • Despite the fact that the photocatalysis process is successfully used in the simulation of the drug metabolism, a broader comparison assuming the use of a number of available metal oxides has not yet been performed on a set containing multiple pharmaceutical substances

  • The aim of the study was to compare the performance of a set of twelve metal oxides in the context of their use in the simulation of drug metabolism

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Summary

Introduction

Heterogeneous photocatalysis is a type of photochemical reaction accelerated by the presence of the catalyst particle in a different phase from the reactants. It is assumed that the water-splitting experiment with the use of titanium dioxide made by Fujishima and Honda in 1972 was a breakthrough in the context of this technique development [2,3]. This extraordinary finding made it possible to obtain hydrogen by eco-friendly and cost-effective method and became a promising announcement of its further use. Titanium dioxide has medical application while being known as an effective microbiological sterilizing agent [12,13,14,15] It has recently become the subject of research on the use in new cancer treatment strategies [16]

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