Use of a Macrocyclic Antibiotic, Rifamycin B, and Indirect Detection for the Resolution of Racemic Amino Alcohols by CE
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 66 (10) , 1690-1695
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac00082a015
Abstract
Ansamycins are a very specific class of macrocyclic antibiotics of which the rifamycins are among the better known members. Rifamycins bind to and inhibit DNA polymerase. Rifamycin B (the most easily obtained ansamycin) is negatively charged and is shown to associate with and enantioselectively resolve several chiral amino alcohols including terbutaline, isoproterenol, bamethan, metaproterenol, synephrine, metanephrine, salbutamol, epinephrine, norphenylephrine, ephedrine, psi-ephedrine, octopamine, norepinephrine, normetanephrine, metoprolol, alprenolol, atenolol, and oxprenolol. A description of the structure and properties of rifamycins, in general, and rifamycin B, in particular, is given. The complexation and chiral recognition of the aforementioned racemic compounds by rifamycin B is afforded by multiple interactions of which charge-charge, hydrogen-bonding, and hydrophobic inclusion interactions most likely dominate in hydroorganic solvents. The effect of various experimental factors on enantiomeric resolution is discussed in terms of optimizing the CE separations. Since most chiral antibiotic macrocycles are ionizable, somewhat flexible, and contain hydrophobic and hydrophilic moieties, they tend to be significantly affected by variations in the solution environment.Keywords
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