Evaluation Studies
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Preparative enantioseparation of loxoprofen precursor by recycling countercurrent chromatography with hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin as a chiral selector.

Recycling countercurrent chromatography was successfully applied to the resolution of 2-(4-bromomethylphenyl)propionic acid, a key synthetic intermediate for synthesis of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug loxoprofen, using hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin as chiral selector. The two-phase solvent system composed of n-hexane/n-butyl acetate/0.1 mol/L citrate buffer solution with pH 2.4 (8:2:10, v/v/v) was selected. Influence factors for the enantioseparation were optimized, including type of substituted β-cyclodextrin, concentration of hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin, separation temperature, and pH of aqueous phase. Under optimized separation conditions, 50 mg of 2-(4-bromomethylphenyl)propionic acid was enantioseparated using preparative recycling countercurrent chromatography. Technical details for recycling elution mode were discussed. The purities of both the S and R enantiomers were over 99.0% as determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. The enantiomeric excess of the S and R enantiomers reached 98.0%. The recovery of the enantiomers from eluted fractions was 40.8-65.6%, yielding 16.4 mg of the S enantiomer and 10.2 mg of the R enantiomer. At the same time, we attempted to enantioseparate the anti-inflammatory drug loxoprofen by countercurrent chromatography and high-performance liquid chromatography using a chiral mobile phase additive. However, no successful enantioseparation was achieved so far.

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