Determination of the immunostimulatory drug-glucosoaminyl-muramyl-dipeptide-in human plasma using HPLC-MS/MS and its application to a pharmacokinetic study.
Moskaleva. Natalia E NE; Markin. Pavel A PA; Kuznetsov. Roman M RM; Andronova. Tatiana M TM; Appolonova. Svetlana A SA
Key Findings
- A new HPLC‑MS/MS method can reliably detect GMDP in plasma from 50 to 3000 pg/mL.
- The assay shows high accuracy (1.6‑3.0% deviation) and low variability across runs.
- Using this method, the team generated the first human plasma pharmacokinetic profile for orally administered GMDP.
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, the study offers limited actionable info because it focuses on a lab measurement technique rather than dosing or performance effects. It does confirm that GMDP can be tracked in blood, which could be useful for future research but doesn’t change current self‑experiment protocols.
Summary
Researchers created a sensitive lab test to measure the drug GMDP (an immune‑boosting compound) in human blood and used it to see how the drug behaves after a person swallows it. The test works well, but the study doesn’t give dosing advice or clear benefits for everyday use.
Abstract
GMDP (glucosoaminyl-muramyl-dipeptide), a synthetic analog of the peptidoglycan fragment of the bacterial cell wall, is an active component of the immunomodulatory drug Licopid. But the pharmacokinetic parameters of GMDP in humans after oral administration have not been investigated yet. The present study aimed at developing and validating a sensitive LC-MS/MS method for the analysis of GMDP in human plasma. The sample was prepared by solid-phase extraction using Strata-X 33 μm polymeric reversed-phase 60 mg/3 mL cartridges Phenomenex (Torrance, CA, USA). The analytes were separated using an Acquity UPLC BEN C18 column, 1.7 μm 2.1 × 50 mm Waters (Milford, USA). GMDP and internal standard growth hormone releasing peptide-2 (pralmorelin) were ionized in positive electrospray ionization mode and detected in multiple reaction monitoring mode. The developed method was validated within a linear range of 50-3000 pg/mL for GMDP. Accuracy for all analytes, given as the deviation between the nominal and measured concentration and assay variability , ranged from 1.61 to 3.02% and from 0.89 to 1.79%, respectively, for both within- and between-run variabilities. The developed and validated HPLC-MS/MS method was successfully used to obtain the plasma pharmacokinetic profiles of GMDP distribution in human plasma.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-07-29T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/bmc.4948
1
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