Khalifa S I, Baker J K, Rogers R D, el-Feraly F S, Hufford C D
Department of Pharmacognosy, School of Pharmacy, University of Mississippi, University 38677.
Pharm Res. 1994 Jul;11(7):990-4. doi: 10.1023/a:1018979202933.
Microbial metabolism studies of the semisynthetic antimalarial anhydrodihydroartemisinin (1), have shown that it is metabolized by a number of microorganisms. Large scale fermentation with Streptomyces lavendulae L-105 and Rhizopogon species (ATCC 36060) have resulted in the isolation of four microbial metabolites. These metabolites have been identified as a 14-carbon rearranged product (2), 9 beta-hydroxyanhydrodihydroartemisinin (3), 11-epi-deoxydihydroartemisinin (4), and 3 alpha-hydroxydeoxyanhydrodihydroartemisinin (5). Microbial metabolites were completely characterized by spectral methods, including 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR spectroscopy. The structure and stereochemistry of metabolite 2 were unequivocally established by X-ray crystallographic analysis. Thermospray mass spectroscopy/high-performance liquid chromatographic analyses of plasma from rats used in mammalian metabolism studies of 1 have shown microbial metabolite 3 to be the major mammalian metabolite. In vitro antimalarial testing has shown metabolite 3 to possess antimalarial activity.