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Cardiac glycosides Flavonoids Anna Drew with grateful acknowledgement for inspirational teaching received at The School of Pharmacy, University of London Cardiac glycosides • Plant glycosides with specific action on heart • Historical use: – to assasinate people, arrow poisons • Historical sources: – South American toad skins, African plant extracts • Modern use: – to treat congestive heart failure (dropsy) – aglycone structure important for activity Sources • Scrophulariaceae • Digitalis purpurea leaves (foxglove) • Digitalis lanata leaves – white flowers • Apocyanaceae • Strophanthus vine seeds – Africa • Liliceae • Urginea bulbs (squill) – Europe, India • Convallaria leaves (lily of the valley) – also produces a volatile oil perfume Active compounds • steroid nucleus • AB cis-junction • CD cis-junction – not planar • C14 = 3y -OH • C3 = 2y –OH – sugars attached • C17 = lactone ring – classified into 2 groups Cardenolides more common opens in alkali Bufanolides Strophanidiol Scillarenin Strophanthus (squill) • sugars: – 1-4 β-linked at C3 in various combinations – glucose, rhamnose, deoxy-sugars • eg digitoxose, digitalose Extraction • large molecular weight molecules with sugars -> polar – soluble in water and alcohol • expensive – long process, solvents Digitalis • Scrophulariaceae family – foxglove - biennial flowering plants • cases of poisoning rare • natural emetic if eaten in excess – Digitalis purpurea leaf – purple, British • • • • -> Digitalis Tablets B.P. -> Tincture of Digitalis B.P. commercially grown Holland, E. Europe NB no extraction for these products – Digitalis lanata leaf – white, Mediterranean • used for manufacture of pure glycosides • ie digoxin, lanatoside C • commericially produced Holland, Equador, USA Chemistry of D.lanata • compounds belong to cardenolide series – 5 membered lactone ring – approx 96 compounds • [1930-1950 Stroll worked on structures] * 1y 2y R1 R2 Names H H digitoxigenin A A digitoxin H OH gitoxigenin B B gitoxin OH H digoxigenin C C digoxin OH OH diginatigenin D D diginatin H formylester gitaloxigenin E E gitaloxin * Acetyl group confers crystalline properties - makes compounds more easily isolated [i] Digitoxose • • • sugar found on primary glycosides of D.lanata glucose on the end of a chain of O-linked digitoxose sugars at C3 during harvesting and drying enzymes can remove acetyl groups and the end glucose – hence drying method needs to be followed or glycosides degrade further – after collection dried as rapidly as possible at 60oC, stored in airtight containers protected from light (contain no more than 6% moisture) • expect about 10 compounds from D.lanata – important ones: • • • • Digoxin “Lanoxin” – Wellcome – 0.25 μg white tablet Digitoxin “Digitalin” 0.25 μg small pink tablet Lanatoside “Cedilanid” 0.10 μg – less well absorbed but used for rapid digitalisation Others not marketed, used experimentally Some cardioactive glycosides from D.lanata: Ref: Trease & Evans Chemistry of D.purpurea • Steroid cardenolides – contains 30 glycosides, 6 main ones – only has 3 aglycones Aglycones 1y 2y digitoxigenin A digitoxin gitoxigenin B gitoxin gitaloxigenin E gitaloxin • Purpurea 1y glycosides – do NOT have acetylated digitoxose third sugar • but these are found in smaller quantities – called ABE series [ii] Digitalose • found in both species • only strospeside important as emergency injection for heart attacks – quickest acting cardiac glycoside Assay of Digitalis B.P. • required to contain not less than 0.3% total cardenolides calculated as digitoxin • important to guarantee reproducibility of products (drug dosage) • • • • • narrow therapeutic index can cause cardiac arrest slowly excreted, bound to serum proteins long term therapy for patients patients tend to be older, weak • Digitalis B.P. tablets – crushed dried leaves -> green tablet – contain 30 glycosides each with different onset, action and excretion profiles – in different amounts • influenced by growing conditions • (temp, water, sun, drying process) – assay for each glycoside as accurately as possible – dilute effects by adding grass • Two ways: [1] Biological assay • British method - inaccurate but safer • Tincture of extract of leaves or tablets • diluted with saline so alcohol <6%v/v • guinea pigs (6 test, 6 control) x 3 =36 – expensive but can average results • measure volume injected into vein of leg/foot before heart stops beating • monitor heart rate via ECG – or open chest wall and watch inserted needle with flag on move – Better to watch ECG – have to differentiate from death from too large an injected volume • trained staff required, can calculate potency • assay acceptable within 80-120% error margin (not that accurate) • Disadvantages – inaccurate, expensive – injecting material IV (avoiding absorption, excretion) – end point is death – toxicity test not therapeutic assessment • Advantages – assessing some biological activity – safety mechanism [2] Chemical assay • Problem: 30 different glycosides – can measure them accurately but may not correlate with therapeutic activity of drug • • • • • Make a tincture (with alcohol) decolourise with lead subacetate extract glycosides by partition with CHCl3 evaporate to give residue (containing cardiac glycosides) hydrolyse with HCl to remove sugars leaving aglycone – residue contains gitoxigenin and digitoxigenin (AB series) – gitaloxigenin -> gitoxigenin when acid hydrolysed • Colourimetric assay to separately determine material amounts (i) total aglycone • purple colour with dinitrobenzoic acid and alkali (ii) digitoxigenin only • green colour with FeCl3 + acetic acid – can substract answers to work out • Digitoxigenin (A series) content • Gitoxigenin (B series) content • Advantages: – precise method (reproducible 2%, standard error 5%) – unqualified staff, quicker • Disadvantages: – doesn’t correlate with biological activity – only estimating approx 60% therapeutic material • BOTH methods used in industry Flavonoids • mainly O-linked glycosides • occur in plants, lichens, moss • those in free state and glycosides largest naturally occurring group of phenols • aromatic, based on γ-pyrone moiety • can get several forms of flavonoids depending on nuclei flavone isoflavone flavonol • often yellow (flavus Latin – yellow) • known for a long time • interest in them for – anti-inflammatory (and analgesic) properties – anti-allergic effects – antithrombotic, vasoprotective properties • decrease capillary fragility • phlebitis – changes in vessel walls in extremities -> plasma leakage -> oedema – mainly due to high oestrogen, sometimes in males – tumour inhibition promotion – protective for gastric mucosa • sugars: – glucose, rhamnose, arabinose, xylose – 2-3 attached to phenolic groups in middle of structures Examples (a) Rutin (Vitamin P) – from Fagopyrum esculentum (buckwheat) = rhamnoglucoside of quercetin (b) Hesperidin (‘citrin’) – from citrus industry = hesperetin (methyl eriodictyol), rhamnose, glucose Isolation • easy • water and alcohol soluble • give brightly coloured solutions • crystallise easily • may give colour reactions eg – MgCl2 -> violet -> orange – alkali KOH -> orange • easy to detect Coumarins – aromatics based on α-pyrone – widely distributed in plants • • • • Leguminosae Rubiaceae Umbelliferae Solanaceae – first medicinal compounds from clover • certain types toxic to animals in summer • anticoagulant activity found • dicoumarols produced clinically