Open Chemistry (Jun 2019)

Chiral and Achiral Enantiomeric Separation of (±)-Alprenolol

  • Guerrero M.M. López,
  • Díaz A. Navas,
  • Sánchez F. García,
  • Corrall H.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/chem-2019-0049
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 429 – 437

Abstract

Read online

The chiral separation of enantiomers is crucial for pharmacovigilance within drug discovery. Although a large number of prescribed medications are marketed as pure enantiomers, this is not always the case and many are in fact racemic mixtures. Drug scandals, such as that of Thalidomide in 1961, provide a clear example of the social and economic repercussions that can be caused by negligence of these chiral compounds. Two high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) methods are presented to determine, separate and quantitate a commonly prescribed chiral beta blocker, (-)-Alprenolol. The first method utilises a chiral column to physically separate the two enantiomers of Alprenolol in 25 minutes, before quantitating with two detectors. Fluorimetry gave the better limit of detection of 0.16-0.41ng and a correlation coefficient of 0.999. The second method used an achiral column coupled with polarimetry to quantitate (-)-Alprenolol without the need for physical separation in 10 minutes. The limit of detection achieved was 27-37μg and demonstrated a correlation coefficient of -0.999.

Keywords