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Glucuronic acid conjugates of bilirubin-IXα in normal bile compared with post-obstructive bile. Transformation of the 1-O-acylglucuronide into 2-, 3-, and 4-O-acylglucuronides

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TLDR
Details of procedures for the formation of chemical derivatives for g.l.c. and mass spectrometry have been deposited as Supplementary Publication SUP 50081 and the relevance of the present results with regard to previous reports on disaccharidic conjugates is discussed.
Abstract
Structures have been determined for bilirubin-IXα conjugates in freshly collected bile of normal rats, dogs and man and in post-obstructive bile of man and rats. The originally secreted conjugate has been characterized as azopigment (I), i.e. a 1-O-acyl-β-d-glucopyranuronic acid glycoside. Conversion of the acetylated methyl ester of azopigment (I) into methyl 2,3,4-tri-O-acetyl-1-bromo-1-deoxy-β-d-glucopyranuronate (V) indicates the pyranose ring structure for the carbohydrate and a C-1 attachment for the bilirubin-IXα acyl group. Alternative procedures for deconjugation of azopigment (I) and its derivatives are also described. In post-obstructive bile, the 1-O-acylglucuronide is converted into 2-, 3- and 4-O-acylglucuronides via sequential intramolecular migrations of the bilirubin acyl group. The following approach was utilized. (1) The tetrapyrrole conjugates were cleaved to dipyrrolic aniline and ethyl anthranilate azopigments, and the azopigments were separated as the acids or methyl esters. (2) The isomeric methyl esters were characterized by mass spectral analysis of the acetates and silyl ethers. (3) The free glycosidic function was demonstrated by 1-oxime and 1-methoxime derivative formation. (4) The position of the dipyrrolic O-acyl group was determined for the methyl esters by protecting the free hydroxyl groups of the glucuronic acid moieties as the acetals formed with ethyl vinyl ether and by further conversion of the carbohydrates into partially methylated alditol acetates. These were analysed by using g.l.c.–mass spectrometry. The relevance of the present results with regard to previous reports on disaccharidic conjugates is discussed. Details of procedures for the formation of chemical derivatives for g.l.c. and mass spectrometry have been deposited as Supplementary Publication SUP 50081 (15 pages) at the British Library Lending Division, Boston Spa, West Yorkshire LS23 7BQ, U.K., from whom copies can be obtained on the terms indicated in Biochem. J. (1978), 169, 5.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Properties of acyl glucuronides: implications for studies of the pharmacokinetics and metabolism of acidic drugs.

TL;DR: In this article, the properties of acyclic glucuronides were investigated for studies of the pharmacokinetics and metabolic properties of acidic drugs, and the implications of these properties for the study of drugs were discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acyl glucuronide reactivity in perspective: biological consequences.

TL;DR: Though acyl glucuronide-derived covalent modification of endogenous macromolecules is well-defined, the work ahead needs to provide detailed links between such modification and its possible biological consequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of bilirubin and bilirubin mono- and di-conjugates. Determination of their relative amounts in biological samples.

TL;DR: With this new method, virtually all bilinoids in normal rat bile have been found to be conjugated, with diconjugates predominating.
BookDOI

Conjugation-deconjugation reactions in drug metabolism and toxicity.

TL;DR: Advances in molecular biology describing important enzyme systems involved in drug conjugation and deconjugation reactions and recent work indicating the importance of drug and xenobiotic conjugates as transport forms of biologically active compounds are reviewed comprehensively.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Separation by thin-layer chromatography and structure elucidation of bilirubin conjugates isolated from dog bile.

TL;DR: Bilirubin isomer determination on native bile and isolated bile pigments, and dipyrrole-exchange assays with [14C8]bilirubs indicated that the conjugates pre-exist in bile, and that no significant dipyr Role exchange occurs during isolation of the pigments.
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