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Citation
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HERO ID
8432413
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Kinetics of phosphoramide mustard hydrolysis in aqueous solution
Author(s)
Watson, E; Dea, P; Chan, KK; ,
Year
1985
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
ISSN:
0022-3549
EISSN:
1520-6017
Volume
74
Issue
12
Page Numbers
1283-1292
Language
English
PMID
4087195
DOI
10.1002/jps.2600741208
Abstract
Hydrolysis of phosphoramide mustard was investigated using HPLC, 31P NMR, and GC-MS with specific deuterium labels. The hydrolysis of phosphoramide mustard in sodium phosphate buffers was found to follow apparent first-order kinetics. The rate of hydrolysis was temperature and pH dependent, being slower under acidic conditions. The hydrolysis was not catalyzed by hydroxyl ion, and its pH dependence appeared to be the result of a change in the mechanism of hydrolysis at different pH values. At a pH value approximately above the pKa of the phosphoramide mustard nitrogen, the major hydrolytic pathway of phosphoramide mustard was via the formation of the aziridinium ion, followed by nucleophilic attack. At pH values below its pKa, cleavage of the P-N bond predominated. At pH 7.4, the formation of an aziridinium ion was followed by a rapid hydrolysis to yield the monohydroxy and, subsequently, the dihydroxy products. The hydrolysis at this pH was adequately described by consecutive first-order kinetics. Seven species in the hydrolytic mixture have been identified as intact phosphoramide mustard, N-(2-chloroethyl)-N-(2-hydroxyethyl)phosphorodiamidic acid, N,N-bis-(2-hydroxyethyl)phosphorodiamidic acid, phosphoramidic acid, phosphoric acid, N,N-bis-(2-chloroethyl)amine, and N-(2-chloroethyl)-N-(2-hydroxyethyl)amine by GC-MS with the aid of deuterium labels. Phosphoramide mustard was found to be stabilized by chloride ion. The stabilization was linearly related to the chloride ion concentration, and the mechanism was found to be via the formation of phosphoramide mustard from the aziridinium and chloride ions. Phosphoramide mustard was significantly more stable in human plasma and in 5% human serum albumin as compared to aqueous buffers, an observation that may be important in vivo.
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