In many cases, CYP3A4 exhibits unusual kinetic characteristics that result from the metabolism of multiple substrates that coexist at the active site. In the present study, we observed that ...α-naphthoflavone (α-NF) exhibited a differential effect on CYP3A4-mediated product formation as shown by an increase and decrease, respectively, of the carboxylic acid (P2) and ω-3-hydroxylated (P1) metabolites of losartan, while losartan was found to be an inhibitor of the formation of the 5,6-epoxide of α-NF. Thus, to address this problem, a kinetic model was developed on the assumption that CYP3A4 can accommodate two distinct and independent binding domains for the substrates within the active site, and the resulting velocity equations were employed to predict the kinetic parameters for all possible enzyme-substrate species. Our results indicate that the predicted values had a good fit with the experimental observations. Therefore, the kinetic constants can be used to adequately describe the nature of the metabolic interaction between the two substrates. Applications of the model provide some new insights into the mechanism of drug-drug interactions at the level of CYP3A4.
The technique of accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) was validated successfully and used to study the pharmacokinetics and disposition in dogs of a preclinical drug candidate ...(7-deaza-2'-C-methyl-adenosine; Compound A), after oral and intravenous administration. The primary objective of this study was to examine whether Compound A displayed linear kinetics across subpharmacological (microdose) and pharmacological dose ranges in an animal model, before initiation of a human microdose study. The AMS-derived disposition properties of Compound A were comparable to data obtained via conventional techniques such as liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry and liquid scintillation counting analyses. Compound A displayed multiphasic kinetics and exhibited low plasma clearance (5.8 ml/min/kg), a long terminal elimination half-life (17.5 h), and high oral bioavailability (103%). Currently, there are no published comparisons of the kinetics of a pharmaceutical compound at pharmacological versus subpharmacological doses using microdosing strategies. The present study thus provides the first description of the full pharmacokinetic profile of a drug candidate assessed under these two dosing regimens. The data demonstrated that the pharmacokinetic properties of Compound A following dosing at 0.02 mg/kg were similar to those at 1 mg/kg, indicating that in the case of Compound A, the pharmacokinetics in the dog appear to be linear across this 50-fold dose range. Moreover, the exceptional sensitivity of AMS provided a pharmacokinetic profile of Compound A, even after a microdose, which revealed aspects of the disposition of this agent that were inaccessible by conventional techniques.
Estrogens and selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) are prescribed widely in the clinic to alleviate symptoms in postmenopausal women, and they are metabolized to reactive intermediates, ...which may elicit adverse effects. As part of our efforts to develop safer SERMs, in vitro covalent protein binding of (2S,3R)-(+)-3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-2-4-(2-piperidin-1-ylethoxy)phenyl-2,3-dihydro-1,4-benzoxathiin-6-ol (I) was evaluated. Radioactivity from 3HI became covalently bound to proteins in a fashion that was both time- and NADPH-dependent in human liver microsomes and reached a value of 1106 pmol equiv/mg protein following a 45 min incubation. At least three pathways are involved in the bioactivation of I, namely, oxidative cleavage of the dihydrobenzoxathiin moiety to give a hydroquinone/para-benzoquinone redox couple, hydroxylation at position 5 or 7 of the benzoxathiin moiety leading to an o-quinone intermediate, and metabolism of the piperidine ring to give an iminium ion. The latter reactive intermediate was identified as its bis-cyano adduct when human liver microsomal incubations were performed in the presence of sodium cyanide. Structural modification of I, including a replacement of the piperidine with a pyrrolidine group, led to (2S,3R)-(+)-3-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-2-4-(2-pyrrolidin-1-ylethoxy)phenyl-2,3-dihydro-1,4-benzoxathiin-6-ol (II), which did not form a reactive iminium ion. Following the incubation of II with human liver microsomes, covalent binding to proteins was reduced (461 pmol equiv/mg protein), the residual level of binding apparently due to the formation of a rearranged biphenyl quinone type metabolite. Studies with inhibitory antibodies and chemical inhibitors showed that P450 3A4 was the primary enzyme responsible for oxidative bioactivation of I and II in human liver microsomes. These studies thus demonstrated that gaining an understanding of bioactivation mechanisms may be exploited in terms of guiding structural modifications of drug candidates to minimize covalent protein binding and, hopefully, to lower the potential for drug-mediated adverse effects.
Zafirlukast is a leukotriene antagonist indicated for the treatment of mild to moderate asthma, but the drug has been associated with occasional idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity. Structurally, ...zafirlukast is similar to 3-methylindole because it contains an N-methylindole moiety that has a 3-alkyl substituent on the indole ring. The results presented here describe the metabolic activation of zafirlukast via a similar mechanism to that described for 3-methylindole. NADP(H)-dependent biotransformation of zafirlukast by hepatic microsomes from rats and humans afforded a reactive metabolite, which was detected as its GSH adduct. Mass spectrometry and NMR data indicated that the GSH adduct was formed by the addition of GSH to the methylene carbon between the indole- and methoxy-substituted phenyl rings of zafirlukast. The formation of this reactive metabolite in human liver microsomes was shown to be exclusively catalyzed by CYP3A enzymes. Evidence for in vivo metabolic activation of zafirlukast was obtained when the same GSH adduct was detected in bile of rats given an iv or oral dose of the drug. On the basis of results with model peroxidases and of the structures of product alcohols from incubations containing H2 18O, it appeared that zafirlukast underwent dehydrogenation by two sequential one-electron oxidations. In addition, zafirlukast proved to be a mechanism-based inhibitor of CYP3A4 activity in human liver microsomes and in microsomes containing cDNA-expressed CYP3A4. The enzyme inhibitory property of zafirlukast was selective for this enzyme among all of the P450 enzymes that were tested in human liver microsomes. The inactivation was characterized by a K I of 13.4 μM and k inact of 0.026 min-1. In summary, zafirlukast dehydrogenation to an electrophilic α,β-unsaturated iminium intermediate may be associated with idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity and/or cause drug−drug interactions through inactivation of CYP3A4.
Recently, it was shown that diclofenac was metabolized in rats to reactive benzoquinone imines via cytochrome P450-catalyzed oxidation. These metabolites also were detected in human hepatocyte ...cultures in the form of glutathione (GSH) adducts. This report describes the results of further studies aimed at characterizing the human hepatic P450-mediated bioactivation of diclofenac. The reactive metabolites formed in vitro were trapped by GSH and analyzed by LC/MS/MS. Thus, three GSH adducts, namely, 5-hydroxy-4-(glutathion-S-yl)diclofenac (M1), 4‘-hydroxy-3‘-(glutathion-S-yl)diclofenac (M2), and 5-hydroxy-6-(glutathion-S-yl)diclofenac (M3), were identified in incubations of diclofenac with human liver microsomes in the presence of NADPH and GSH. The formation of the adducts was taken to reflect the intermediacy of the corresponding putative benzoquinone imines. While M2 was the dominant metabolite over a substrate concentration range of 10−50 μM, M1 and M3 became equally important products at ≥100 μM diclofenac. The formation of M2 was inhibited by sulfaphenazole or an anti-P450 2C9 antibody (5−10% of control values). The formation of M1 and M3 was inhibited by troleandomycin, ketoconazole, or an anti-P450 3A4 antibody (30−50% of control values). In studies in which recombinant P450 isoforms were used, M2 was generated only by P450 2C9-catalyzed reaction, while M1 and M3 were produced by P450 3A4-catalyzed reaction. Good correlations were established between the extent of formation of M2 and P450 2C9 activities (r = 0.93, n = 10) and between the extent of formation of M1 and M3 and P450 3A4 activities (r = 0.98, n = 10) in human liver microsomal incubations. Taken together, the data suggest that the biotransformation of diclofenac to M2 is P450 2C9-dependent, whereas metabolism of the drug to M1 and M3 involves mainly P450 3A4. Although P450s 2C9 and 3A4 both catalyze the bioactivation of diclofenac, P450 2C9 is capable of producing the benzoquinone imine intermediate at lower drug concentrations which may be more clinically relevant.
Cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4) plays a prominent role in the metabolism of a vast array of drugs and xenobiotics and exhibits broad substrate specificities. Most cytochrome P450-mediated reactions ...follow simple Michaelis-Menten kinetics. These parameters are widely accepted to predict pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic consequences in vivo caused by exposure to one or multiple drugs. However, CYP3A4 in many cases exhibits allosteric (sigmoidal) characteristics that make the Michaelis constants difficult to estimate. In the present study, diazepam, temazepam and nordiazepam were employed as substrates of CYP3A4 to propose a kinetic model. The model hypothesized that CYP3A4 contains two substrate-binding sites in a single active site that are both distinct and co-operative, and the resulting velocity equation had a good fit with the sigmoidal kinetic observations. Therefore, four pairs of the kinetic estimates (KS1, kalpha, KS2, kbeta, KS3, kdelta, KS4 and kgamma) were resolved to interpret the features of binding affinity and catalytic ability of CYP3A4. Dissociation constants KS1 and KS2 for two single-substrate-bound enzyme molecules (SE and ES) were 3-50-fold greater than KS3 and KS4 for a two-substrate-bound enzyme (SES), while respective rate constants kdelta and kgamma were 3-218-fold greater than kalpha and kbeta, implying that access and binding of the first molecule to either site in an active pocket of CYP3A4 can enhance the binding affinity and reaction rate of the vacant site for the second substrate. Thus our results provide some new insights into the co-operative binding of two substrates in the inner portions of an allosteric CYP3A4 active site.
Although zomepirac (ZP) and tolmetin (TM) induce anaphylactic reactions and form reactive acyl glucuronides, a direct link between the two events remains obscure. We report herein that, in addition ...to acyl glucuronidation, both drugs are subject to oxidative bioactivation. Following incubations of ZP with human liver microsomes fortified with NADPH and glutathione (GSH), a metabolite with an MH+ ion at m/z 597 was detected by LC/MS/MS. On the basis of collision-induced dissociation and NMR evidence, the structure of this metabolite was determined to be 5-4'-chlorobenzoyl-1,4-dimethyl-3-glutathionylpyrrole-2-acetic acid (ZP-SG), suggesting that the pyrrole moiety of ZP had undergone oxidation to an epoxide intermediate, followed by addition of GSH and loss of the elements of H2O to yield the observed conjugate. The oxidative bioactivation of ZP most likely is catalyzed by cytochrome P450 (P450) 3A4, since the formation of ZP-SG was reduced to approximately 10% of control values following pretreatment of human liver microsomes with ketoconazole or with an inhibitory anti-P450 3A4 IgG. A similar GSH adduct, namely 5-4'-methylbenzoyl-1-methyl-3-glutathionylpyrrole-2-acetic acid (TM-SG), was identified when TM was incubated with human liver microsomal preparations. The relevance of these in vitro findings to the in vivo situation was established through the detection of the same thiol adducts in rats treated with ZP and TM, respectively. Taken together, these data suggest that, in addition to the formation of acyl glucuronides, oxidative metabolism of ZP and TM affords reactive species that may haptenize proteins and thereby contribute to the drug-mediated anaphylactic reactions.
We investigated the pharmacology of three novel compounds, Org 27569 (5-chloro-3-ethyl-1H-indole-2-carboxylic acid 2-(4-piperidin-1-yl-phenyl)-ethyl-amide), Org 27759 ...(3-ethyl-5-fluoro-1H-indole-2-carboxylic acid 2-94-dimethylamino-phenyl)-ethyl-amide), and Org 29647 (5-chloro-3-ethyl-1H-indole-2-carboxylic acid (1-benzyl-pyrrolidin-3-yl)-amide, 2-enedioic acid salt), at the cannabinoid CB1 receptor. In equilibrium binding assays, the Org compounds significantly increased the binding of the CB1 receptor agonist 3HCP 55,940 (1R,3R,4R)-3-2-hydroxy-4-(1,1-dimethylheptyl)phenyl-4-(3-hydroxypropyl)cyclohexan-1-ol, indicative of a positively cooperative allosteric effect. The same compounds caused a significant, but incomplete, decrease in the specific binding of the CB1 receptor inverse agonist 3HSR 141716A N-(piperidin-1-yl)-5-(4-chlorophenyl)-1-(2,4-dichlorophenyl)-4-methyl-1H-pyrazole-3-carboximide hydrochloride, indicative of a limited negative binding cooperativity. Analysis of the data according to an allosteric ternary complex model revealed that the estimated affinity of each Org compound was not significantly different when the radioligand was 3HCP 55,940 or 3HSR 141716A. However, the estimated cooperatively factor for the interaction between modulator and radioligand was greater than 1 when determined against 3HCP 55,940 and less than 1 when determined against 3HSR 141716A. 3HCP 55,940 dissociation kinetic studies also validated the allosteric nature of the Org compounds, because they all significantly decreased radioligand dissociation. These data suggest that the Org compounds bind allosterically to the CB1 receptor and elicit a conformational change that increases agonist affinity for the orthosteric binding site. In contrast to the binding assays, however, the Org compounds behaved as insurmountable antagonists of receptor function; in the reporter gene assay, the guanosine 5'-O-(3-35Sthio)triphosphate binding assay and the mouse vas deferens assay they elicited a significant reduction in the Emax value for CB1 receptor agonists. The data presented clearly demonstrate, for the first time, that the cannabinoid CB1 receptor contains an allosteric binding site that can be recognized by synthetic small molecule ligands.