Hi,
I often see in literature people making pivaloyloxymethyl,acetoxmethyl, methoxymethyl as well as methyl and ethyl esters. The first three are said to be better suited pro-drugs in situations where a more prolonged administration of the agent is required. I understand that this means that these are more resistant to hydrolysis than the methyl and ethyl esters, but how come? Is it a matter of hindrance?
Also, in case of methyl ester, won't we produce methanol as result of the hydrolysis, and isn't methanol toxic? Ethyl ester will just get people drunk afterwards, I don't understand why people make both the methyl and the ethyl either other than it just being "the usual protocol" :S
Just to clarify, I am referring to their enzymatic hydrolysis in cells etc, not in organic chemistry reactions.
Thanks,
Nescafe.