Garlic is a well-known example of natural self-defence system consisting of an inactive substrate (alliin) and enzyme (alliinase) which, when combined, produce highly antimicrobial allicin. Increase of alliinase stability and its activity are of paramount importance in various applications relying on its use for in-situ synthesis of allicin or its analogues, e.g., pulmonary drug delivery, treatment of superficial injuries, or urease inhibitors in fertilizers. Here, we discuss the effect of temperature, pH, buffers, salts, and additives, i.e. antioxidants, chelating agents, reducing agents and cosolvents, on the stability and the activity of alliinase extracted from garlic. The effects of the storage temperature and relative humidity on the stability of lyophilized alliinase was demonstrated. A combination of the short half-life, high reactivity and non-specificity to particular proteins are reasons most bacteria cannot deal with allicin's mode of action and develop effective defence mechanism, which could be the key to sustainable drug design addressing serious problems with escalating emergence of multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacterial strains.
- MeSH
- antibakteriální látky farmakologie MeSH
- Bacteria účinky léků ultrastruktura MeSH
- biokatalýza účinky léků MeSH
- časové faktory MeSH
- česnek enzymologie MeSH
- chemické jevy * MeSH
- disulfidy chemie metabolismus MeSH
- kinetika MeSH
- koncentrace vodíkových iontů MeSH
- kyseliny sulfinové chemie metabolismus MeSH
- lyasy štěpící vazby C-S metabolismus MeSH
- lyofilizace MeSH
- mikrobiální testy citlivosti MeSH
- mikrobiální viabilita účinky léků MeSH
- pufry MeSH
- stabilita enzymů účinky léků MeSH
- stereoizomerie MeSH
- teplota MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
The enantiomeric pairs of cis and trans stereoisomers of cyclic β-aminohydroxamic acids and their related cis and trans cyclic β-amino acids containing two chiral centers were directly separated on four structurally related chiral stationary phases derived from quinine and quinidine modified with (R,R)- and (S,S)-aminocyclohexanesulfonic acids. Applying these zwitterionic ion-exchangers as chiral selectors, the effects of the composition of the bulk solvent, the acid and base additives, the structures of the analytes, and temperature on the enantioresolution were investigated. To study the effects of temperature and obtain thermodynamic parameters, experiments were carried out at constant mobile phase compositions in the temperature range 5-50°C. The differences in the changes in standard enthalpy Δ(ΔH°), entropy Δ(ΔS°), and free energy Δ(ΔG°) were calculated from the linear van't Hoff plots derived from the ln α versus 1/T curves in the studied temperature range. Results thus obtained indicated enthalpy-driven separations in all cases. The sequence of elution of the enantiomers was determined and found to be reversed when ZWIX(-)™ was changed to ZWIX(+)™ or ZWIX(-A) to ZWIX(+A).
The enantiomers of trans-paroxetine (the selectand) were separated on four chiral stationary phases incorporating either quinine [ZWIX(+), ZWIX(+A)] or quinidine [ZWIX(-), ZWIX(-A)] and (R,R)-aminocyclohexanesulfonic acid [in ZWIX(-), and ZWIX(+A)] or (S,S)-aminocyclohexanesulfonic acid [in ZWIX(+), and ZWIX(-A)] chiral selectors. The zwitterion nature of the phases is due to the presence of either (R,R)- or (S,S)-aminocyclohexanesulfonic acid in the selector structure bearing the quinuclidine moiety. ZWIX(+) and ZWIX(-) phases are available on the market with the commercial names CHIRALPAK ZWIX(+) and CHIRALPAK ZWIX(-), respectively. With the aim of rationalizing the enantiomer elution order with the above chiral stationary phases, a molecular dynamic protocol was applied and two energetic parameters were initially measured: selectand conformational energy and selectand interaction energy. In the search for other descriptors allowing a better fitting with the experimental evidences, in the present work we consider an energetic parameter, defined as the selector conformational energy, which resulted to be relevant in the explanation of the experimental elution order in most of the cases. Very importantly, the computational data produced by the present study strongly support the outstanding role of the conformational energy of the chiral selector as it interacts with the analytes.
In the enantiomeric separation of highly polar compounds, a traditionally challenging task for high-performance liquid chromatography, ion-exchange chiral stationary phases have found the main field of application. In this contribution, we present a series of novel anion-exchange-type chiral stationary phases for enantiomer separation of protected amino phosphonates and N-protected amino acids. Two of the prepared selectors possessed a double and triple bond within a single molecule. Thus, they were immobilized onto silica support employing either a thiol-ene (radical) or an azide-yne (copper(I)-catalyzed) click reaction. We evaluated the selectivity and the effect of immobilization proceeding either by the double bond of the Cinchona alkaloid or a triple bond of the carbamoyl moiety on the chromatographic performance of the chiral stationary phases using analytes with protecting groups of different size, flexibility, and π-acidity. The previously observed preference toward protecting groups possessing π-acidic units, which is a typical feature of Cinchona-based chiral stationary phases, was preserved. In addition, increasing the bulkiness of the selectors' carbamoyl units leads to significantly reduced retention times, while very high selectivity toward the tested analytes is retained.