kyanite
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2005
- Messages
- 248
blah my bad
feeling really shitty right now
the conjugate might be stable enough if it were an amide, and not a salt. in which case it really might be transported as a conjugate. ibuprofen is pretty planar and pretty hydrophobic, minus that carboxyl group.
keep in mind that the ibuprofen has to be attached to the nitrogen thats not adjacent to the carboxyl group of the lysine. that amino acid portion has to be unaffected for transporter binding.
edit:
Nope, looks like it's a salt and not an amide.
feeling really shitty right now
the conjugate might be stable enough if it were an amide, and not a salt. in which case it really might be transported as a conjugate. ibuprofen is pretty planar and pretty hydrophobic, minus that carboxyl group.
keep in mind that the ibuprofen has to be attached to the nitrogen thats not adjacent to the carboxyl group of the lysine. that amino acid portion has to be unaffected for transporter binding.
edit:
Nope, looks like it's a salt and not an amide.
linkNEOPROFEN is designated chemically as a-methyl-4-
(2-methyl propyl) benzeneacetic acid lysine salt.
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