Conformational and synthon polymorphism in furosemide (Lasix)
Conformational and synthon polymorphism in furosemide (Lasix)
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Date
2010-04-07
Authors
Babu, N. Jagadeesh
Cherukuvada, Suryanarayan
Thakuria, Ranjit
Nangia, Ashwini
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Abstract
Two polymorphs of the well-known diuretic drug Lasix, generic name furosemide, are characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction to give a trimorphic cluster of polymorphs: known form 1 in P1̌ space group, and novel forms 2 and 3 in P21/n and P1̌ space groups. The conformationally flexible molecule 4-chloro-2-[(2-furanylmethyl)amino]-5- sulfamoylbenzoic acid has variable torsions at the sulfonamide and furyl ring portions in conformers which lie in a 6 kcal mol'1 energy window. A conformer surface map was calculated to show that the two conformations in crystal form 1 are ∼4.5 kcal mol'1 less stable than conformers present in forms 2 and 3 (0.7, 0.0 kcal mol'1). The stabilization of molecular conformations is analyzed in terms of attractive intramolecular N'HCl hydrogen bonds and minimization of repulsive S-OCl interactions. Phase stability relationships confirm the thermodynamic nature of form 1 in grinding and slurry experiments by X-ray powder diffraction and infrared spectroscopy. Despite the large difference in molecular conformer energies, crystal lattice energies of polymorphs 1'3 are very close ('41.65, '41.78, '41.53 kcal mol'1). These results show that the thermodynamic stability of polymorph 1 of furosemide concluded in crystallization experiments is not possible to predict through computations. Moreover, the presence of metastable conformers in the stable crystal structure reemphasizes that there is no substitute for experimental validation in polymorphic systems. The greater stability of polymorph 1 is ascribed to its more efficient crystal packing, higher density, and the presence of R42 (8) sulfonamide N'HO dimer synthon. Because of the differences in torsion angles and hydrogen bonding in polymorphs 1'3, they are more appropriately classified as conformational and synthon polymorphs. © 2010 American Chemical Society.
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Crystal Growth and Design. v.10(4)