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Pharmacology: Drug Metabolism (Lash) INTRODUCTION: Drug Metabolism: chemical alteration of xenobiotics in the body RAR of chemical bonds Incorporation or loss of atoms or molecules A combination of these reactions Xenobiotic: any compound normally foreign to living systems Xenobiotic transformation results from: o Enzymatic processes o Non-enzymatic processes (ie. acid hydrolysis) o Rearrangements (ie. of unstable metabolites) Metabolism: Of drugs/xenobiotics that are analogues of physiological substances: often metabolized by specific enzymes normally responsible for metabolizing the physiological compounds Of drugs/xenobiotics that have no endogenous counterparts: metabolized by enzyme systems that exhibit a broad range of specificity (many appear to have evolved for this purpose) End Result of Metabolism: Facilitates Elimination: generally converts xenobiotics to more POLAR, HYDROPHILIC compounds that are more readily excreted Pharmacological Inactivation: may also occur, but NOT ALWAYS SITES OF DRUG BIOTRANSFORMATION: Liver: principal organ of drug metabolism (although almost all tissues have some capacity for this process) Portals of Entry: many have significant capacity for drug metabolism Examples: o Lung (inhalation) o GI tract (ingestion) o Skin (dermal absorption) o Nasal mucosa (inhalation) These sites may have enzymes that exhibit higher specific activities than the liver: but total capacity for metabolism may be less than the liver Kidneys: also involved in drug metabolism (not just excretion) First Pass Effect: Orally administered drug Absorbed from SI Enters portal system Travels to liver Metabolized before reaching circulation o Other contributors to first-pass effect: Extensive metabolism of some drugs in intestinal mucosa itself Metabolism by intestinal microorganisms Greatly restricts the oral bioavilability of some drugs Subcellular Localization of Drug Metabolizing Enzymes: Smooth endoplasmic reticulum (microsomal fraction) Cytoplasm Mitochondria OVERVIEW OF PATHWAYS OF DRUG METABOLISM: Two Major Categories: Phase I: oxidation, reduction or hydrolysis reactions o Convert parent compound to more polar metabolite o May make the compound more readily excreted o May reveal a functional group that can serve as a site for additional metabolism Phase II: conjugation of a small, endogenous substrate molecule with functional groups already present on drug or added/revealed by phase I metabolism Important Point: either one of the above phases may occur first PHASE I REACTIONS- MONOOXYGENASE SYSTEM (MIXED-FUNCTION OXIDASE): Cytochrome P450 Monooxygenase System: Overall Reaction: Drug + NADPH + O2 Oxidized Drug + NADP+ + H2O Basics: o Flavoprotein (NADPH cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase) + a hemoprotein terminal oxidase (cyt. P450) o Requires NADPH (source of reducing equivalents) o P450s located in two different compartments (SER and mitochondria) and have 2 different electron transfer chains in these compartments o Identified by distinct optical spectrum due to thiol ligand to heme moiety Type I Ligands: include many drugs and environmental chemicals Bind hydrophobic site on the protein in close enough proximity to the heme iron to all both perturbation of the absorption spectrum and interaction with molecular oxygen Vast majority of these ligands are SUBSRATES Type II Ligands: interact directly with heme iron of P450 Associated with organic compounds having nitrogen atoms with sp2 or sp3 nonbonded electrons that are sterically accessible Vast majority of these ligands are INHIBITORS o Important Difference Spectra: Oxidized P450: most important difference spectra is type I Reduced P450: most important difference spectra are carbon monoxide spectrum and type III spectrum CO: characteristic Amax of 450nm Type III: two pH-dependent peaks at 430 and 455nm Components Required for P450 System: o NADPH o NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase (flavoprotein) o Cytochrome P450 o Lipid environment Cytochrome P450 Catalytic Cycle: o Drug adds first to cytochrome P450 (Fe3+) o Addition of electron from NADPH (Fe2+) o Addition of O2 (Fe2+−O) o Addition of another electron from NADPH (Fe2+−O2(-)) o Addition of 2 protons (H+) and release of water (Fe3+−O) o Transfer of O to drug and release of hydoxylated drug (d-OH) regeneration of P450 (Fe3+) Cytochrome P450 Nomenclature: o Example of CYP2C11 CYP: cytochrome P450 2: gene family C: gene subfamily 11: individual gene o Pseudogene: P450 name followed by a P Cytochrome P450 in Humans: o 18 Families and 44 Subfamilies: CYPs for Drug Metabolism: CYP1 (3 subfamilies, 3 genes, 3 pseudogenes) CYP2 (13 subfamilies, 16 genes, 16 pseudogenes) o Also involved in steroid metabolism CYP3 (1 subfamily, 4 genes, 2 pseudogenes) Many CYPs with Other Functions Pertaining to Endogenous Compounds: Synthesis and elimination of cholesterol Regulation of blood homeostasis Steroid metabolism Arachidonic acid metabolism Specific CYPs to Know: CYP3A4: involved in biotransformation of a majority of all drugs o Expressed at significant levels (especially extrahepatically) o - Now known to be a significant contributing factor to poor bioavailability of many drugs- participates in metabolism in the GI tract o Humans have 57 sequenced CYP genes and 58 psuedogenes Pseudogene: defective gene that does not produce a functional protein Relics of gene duplications where one of the copies has degenerated and lost its function Cytochrome P450 exhibit a broad substrate specificity and are capable of catalyzing lots of reactions o Drugs can also be substrates of MORE THAN 1 CYP Reactions Catalyzed by Cytochrome P450s: o Hydroxylations: RH ROH Aliphatic (reaction on aliphatic side chain) Aromatic (reaction on ring structure) o Epoxidation: R2C=C2R epoxide (can occur at C=C) o Dealkylation and Deamination: Deamination: N-CH3 NH o N-Oxidation: Hydroxylamines: amide/primary or secondary amine (R2NH R2NOH) N-oxides: tertiary amines (R3N R3N-O) o Sulfur Oxidation: R2S R2S=O o Dehalogenation: RX ROH (halogen replaced by OH) o Desulfuration: RSH (thiol) ROH (hydroxyl) Flavin-Containing Monooxygenase (FMO, Ziegler’s Enzyme): Basics: o Require NO additional proteins (ie. no reductase required) o Do require NADPH o Catalyze same overall monooxygenase reaction as cytochrome P450s o Located in the SER Also exhibit a broad specificity (like P450s), but do have some preference: o Prefer oxidation of secondary and tertiary amines to hydroxyl amines and N-oxides o Also catalyze S-oxidation Also represent a multiple gene family: however, only 5 gene products (compared to >600 CYP gene products) known in mammals Reactions Catalyzed by FMOs: o Tertiary amines N-oxides (N-oxidation) o Secondary amines (ie. N-Acylarylamines) hydroxylamines o Oxidation of hydrazines followed by removal of H2O and N2 reactive intermediates o 2 Thiols Disulfide bond (*ONLY IN FMOs*) o Sulfur oxidation to form sulfides Catalytic Cycle: o Major Difference from CYPs: drug does not add first! o Basic Cycle: NADPH + H+ adds to FMO-FAD FMO-FADH2 (NADP+) O2 adds to give FMO-FADOOH (NADP+) Drug (X) adds and is oxidized and released (XO) FMO-FADHOH (NADP+) NADP+ + H2O release, regenerating FMO-FAD PHASE II REACTIONS: Basics: Require a parent drug or phase I metabolite with suitable functional groups (OH, NH2, SH) to undergo conjugation with endogenous substances Drug conjugates are more polar, less lipid-soluble, and more readily excreted o Can often be less biologically active (but not always) - Involve High-Energy Intermediates and Specific Enzymes (Transferases): o UDP-glucoronosyl transferase (SER) o N-acetyl transferase (in this lecture, we are talking about the ones in the SER/microsome) o Glutathione S-transferase (cytoplasm, SER) o Acyl-CoA glycine transferase (cytoplasm) o Sulfotransferase (cytoplasm) o Transmethylase (cytoplasm) Glucoronidation Pathways (3 Steps): UTP + G1P UDPG + Pyrophosphate (UDPG pyrophosphorylase) o UDPG= uridine diphosphate glucose UDPG + 2 NAD+ + H2O UDPGA + 2 NADH + 2H+ (UDPG dehydrogenase) o UDPGA= uridine diphosphate glucuronic acid (performs conjugation reaction) O-Glucuronide Formation: o –OH + UDPGA O-glucuronide (UDP glucuronosyl transferase) N-Glucuronide Formation: o –SH + UDPGA S-glucuronide (UDP glucuronosyl transferase) Other Molecules Formed Via this Pathway: o S-glucuronides o C-glucuronides o O-glycosides Sulfate Conugation Pathway (3 Steps): ATP + SO4 APS + pyrophosphate o APS= adenosine-5’-phosphosulfate APS + ATP PAPS + ADP o PAPS= 3’-Phosphoadenosine-5’-phosphosulfate (performs conjugation reactions) Conjugation reactions occur at: o –OH groups o –NH groups Glutathione Conjugation (Mercapturate) Pathway: R-X + GSH R-SG o Loses glutamate (γ-glutamyl transpeptidase) o Loses glycine (cysteinyl glycine dipeptidase) to form a cysteine conjugate Cysteine conjugate Mercapturate (readily excreted) o Utilizes N-Acetyltransferases in microsome/SER Conjugation reactions can occur at: o Halogen side groups o C=C o Epoxides FACTORS AFFECTING DRUG METABOLISM: General: Possible Factors: genetic, environmental and physiological factors Most Important: o Genetically determined polymorphisms in drug oxidations and conjugations o Concomitant use of other drugs o Exposure to environmental pollutants and industrial chemicals o Disease state o Age Responsible for: o Decreased efficacy o Prolonged pharmacological effects o Increased toxicity Induction: Increased synthesis of de novo cytochrome P450 protein Leads to an increased rate of biotransformation and decreased availability of parent drug OR increased toxicity if metabolized to a reactive species Some drugs can induce their own metabolism as well (ie. carbamazepine) - Generally specific for a given P450 family, although within a family structurally diverse chemicals can have similar effects o Induction of CYP1A: exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons from industrial pollutants, cigarette smoke, and charbroiled meats (induction both in liver and extrahepatically) o Induction of CYP3A4: glucocorticoids, anticonvulsants o Induction of CYP2E1: isoniazid, acetone, chronic EtOH consumption Many inducers of P450s also induce enzymes involved in phase II biotransformation Inhibition: Results in elevated levels of parent drug, prolonged pharmacological effects, and increased incidence of druginduced toxicity Competition between 2 or more drugs for the active site of an enzyme may lead to decrease in metabolism of one agent Examples: o Inhibition of CYP2D6: by quinidine o Inhibition of oxidative drug metabolism: Cimetidine and ketoconazole (form a tight complex with heme iron of cytochrome P450) Macrolide Abx (metabolite of these compounds binds heme) Suicide inactivators of P450 that result in destruction of heme Secobarbital Synthetic steroids (norethindrone and ethinyl estradiol) o Inhibition of phase II enzymes: depletion of necessary co-factors Genetic Polymorphisms: Genetic differences in the ability of individuals to metabolize a drug through a given pathway Can be rapid or slow metabolizers Impaired metabolism through a given pathway associated with increased incidence of adverse effects in slow metabolizers All deficiencies of drug metabolism inherited as autosomal recessive traits