Title: Metabolism of Chemicals
1Metabolism of Chemicals
2- Metabolism (biotransformation) of compounds is
essential for survival of the organism. - Accomplished by a limited number of enzymes with
broad and overlapping substrate specificity. - Many of the enzymes are constitutively expressed,
but some require the presence of a drug or toxic
compound to be induced enzyme induction. - Primary aims of Metabolism
- - the parent molecule is transformed into a
more polar metabolite, often by the addition of
an ionizable group usually more H2O-soluble
than the parent compound. - - MW often increases.
- - Excretion, and therefore, elimination,
facilitated.
3Consequences of Metabolism
- The biological t1/2 decreases.
- Exposure duration decreases.
- Compound does not accumulate in the body.
- But biological activity may change.
- Duration of biological activity may be affected.
- Although H2O-solubility and elimination are often
increases, detoxification is not always the
result.
4Kinetics of Metabolism
- First-Order Kinetics The metabolism of
xenobiotics is catalyzed by enzymes, most of
which obey Michaelis-Menten kinetics. - v rate of xenobiotic metabolism
VmaxC/Km C - In most environmental situations, C ltlt Km.
Thus, the above eq. reduces to v rate
VmaxC/Km. - This indicates that the rate is directly
proportional to CFree. - This means that a constant percent of the
chemical is metabolized per unit time.
5Kinetics of Metabolism (Contd)
- Zero-Order Kinetics With a few agents, such as
aspirin, ethanol, and phenytoin, the doses are
very large. Thus, C gtgt Km and the velocity
equation becomes - v rate of xenobiotic metabolism
- VmaxC/C Vmax
- The enzyme is saturated by the CFree.
- The rate of metabolism remains constant over
time. - The means that a constant amount of the chemical
is metabolized per unit time (e.g., alcohol DH).
6Metabolism has 2 (or 3) Phases
- Phase 1 and Phase II (and Phase III).
- Liver has highest concentration of enzymes that
catalyze Phase I and Phase II reactions. - But enzymes are also located in skin, lungs,
nasal mucosa, eye, GIT, kidney, ovaries, plasma,
and placenta. - Phase III reactions are relatively minor
further metabolism of GSH conjugates from Phase
II reactions.
7Phase I Reactions and Metabolism
- Involves the addition of a functional group, such
as OH, -NH2, -SH, -COOH. - May also expose an existing functional group.
- Usually results in a small increases in H2O
solubility. - Prepares the compound for Phase II metabolism.
- Types of Reactions
- Oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis, hydration,
dehalogenation.
8Prostaglandin H2 plays an important role in the
activation of xenobiotics to toxic or
tumorigenic metabolites, particularly in
extrahepatic tissues that are low in CYP450s.
9Oxidation
- Majority are catalyzed by membrane-bound
mono-oxygenases in the SER known as microsomal
enzymes. - Others are found in the mitochondria and
cytoplasm. - Microsomal oxidations most are catalyzed by 1
enzyme system Cytochrome P-450 mono-oxygenase
system. - -- Collection of isozymes, which use heme as
prosthetic group.
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13Oxidation (Contd)
- Cytochrome P450 mono-oxygenase associated with
NAPDH cytochrome P450 reductase, which transfers
2 e-, 1 at a time, to cytochrome P450 molecules. - Some are inducible up to 2 orders of magnitude.
- Differences in the isozymes present may be due to
differences between species, gender, age, and
nutritional status. - Over 200,000 chemicals are thought to be
metabolized by P450s and play a role in over 90
of all drugs in clinical use today.
14Metabolic Cycle
- Step 1 Binding of the substrate to the enzyme
takes place when the Fe is in the oxidized Fe3
state. Binding occurs on a site close to the Fe
so that the substrate can interact with the O2
when it binds Fe. - Step 2 First e- reduction of the
enzyme-substrate complex. The Fe is reduced to
Fe2 state by e- transfer from NAPDH via cyt.
P-450 reductase.
15Metabolic Cycle (Contd)
- Step 3 Addition of molecular O2, which binds
Fe2. - Step 4 Addition of a 2nd e- from NAPDH or from
cyt. b5. The complex then rearranges with
insertion of 1 atom of O into the substrate to
yield the product (ROH). The other O atom is
reduced to H2O, which is the other product.
16Main reaction can be written as
NADP
NADPH H
ROH H2O
RH O2
Reduced P-450
Oxidized P-450
Or, alternatively,
ROH H2O
RH O2
17Nomenclature
- Gene Families currently 27 families based on
sequence homologies. - Greater than 40 sequence homology same family
CYP protein CYP gene family indicated by
Arabic numeral of 1,2,3, etc. - Subfamilies indicated by letter, gt55 sequence
homology. - Protein indicated by an Arabic number.
18CYP1A1 as an example
- P-450s have broad (low) substrate specificity gt
1 CYP (e.g., CYP1A1) may be able to metabolize
many different substrates. - Substrate specificity overlaps gt 1 substrate may
be metabolized to several different products by
several different CYPs. 1 CYP can also
metabolize a substrate to several different
products. - But there is significant stereoselectivity.
19CYP1A1 as an example (Contd)
- CYP1A subfamily and 2 proteins (CYP1A1 and
CYP1A2) have been found in all classes of the
animal kingdom. - The majority of chemical carcinogens are
substrates and/or inducers of CYP1A1. - Levels of CYP1A1 and CYP1A2 are regulated by the
Ah receptor, which binds planar PAHs and their
derivatives. TCDD is the most potent inducer of
CYP1A1.
20CYP1A1 as an example (Contd)
- Translocation of the Ah receptor-ligand complex
to the nucleus gives rise to transcriptional
activation of the CYP1 genes, increases in CYP1
mRNA, and microsomal CYP1 enzymes. - Ligand binding to the Ah receptor is also
associated oncogene activation with initiation of
the PKC cascade, which leads to cell
proliferation (hyperplasia and tumor formation)
via modulation of EGF interactions.
21CYP1A1 as an example (Contd)
- CYP1A1 is readily inducible in lung tissue
following tobacco smoke inhalation. - There is no discovered endogenous role the Ah
receptor to date.
22Flavin-Containing Mono-Oxygenase System
- Found in the microsomal fraction of liver,
kidneys and lungs. - Catalyzes hydroxylation reactions at N, S, and P
atoms, but not at C atoms.
23Flavin-Containing Mono-Oxygenase System (Contd)
- Examples of Types of Oxidation Reactions
- Aromatic hydroxylation generally proceed via
the formation of an epoxide intermediate, which
can be further metabolized to dihydrodiols, then
to catechols. - Aliphatic hydroxylation Unsaturated compounds
proceed via epoxide formation. Aliphatic
hydrocarbons are more likely to be metabolized if
they are side-chains on aromatic structures.
24Flavin-Containing Mono-Oxygenase System (Contd)
- Alicyclic hydroxylation With mixed aromatic and
alicyclic systems, hydroxylation of alicyclic
systems predominates. - Heterocyclic hydroxylation.
- N-, S-, O-Dealkylation.
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30Reduction Reactions
- Located in both microsomal fraction and
cytoplasm. - Present in GIT microflora.
- Examples of Reductions
- -- Azo- and Nitro-Reductions
- -- Disulfide reduction
- -- Reductive dehalogenation
- -- Quinone Reduction
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32Hydroylsis Reactions
- Enzymes include carboxlesterases, peptidases, and
epoxide hydrolases. - Acetylcholinesterase involve in organophosphorus
insecticide metabolism. - Epoxide hydrolase involved in converting epoxides
to dihydrodiols. - Epoxide hydrolase is found in ER in close
proximity to P450 enzymes.
33Phase II Reactions and Metabolism
- Products from Phase I reactions and other
xenobiotics containing functional groups OH, NH2,
COOH, epoxide, or halogen, can undergo
conjugation reactions with endogenous metabolites
(e.g., sugars, aas, GSH, SO4, etc. - Conjugation products are more polar, less toxic,
and more readily excreted than their parent
compounds are.
34- Most Phase II enzymes are cytosolic however,
glucuronidation reactions are microsomal. - Types of Reactions
- Glucuronidation
- Sulphate conjugation
- Acetylation
- Methylation
- Conjugation with GSH
- Conjugation with amino acids
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36Glucuronidation
- Major type of reaction that involves a
high-energy co-factor. - Has wide cross-species prevalence, but not in
cats. - Co-factor uridine diphosphate-glucuronic acid
(UDPGA) reaction is catalyzed by UDP
glucuronisyltransferase enzymes (several
isozymes). - Glucuronic acid (GA) is transferred to OH and
COOH groups plus N, S, and occasionally C atoms.
Bonding is to the C1 on GA moiety.
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38Glucuronidation (Contd)
- Glucuronide conjugates of compounds are polar and
H2O-soluble. Therefore, elimination occurs
either via urine or bile, depending on MW. - The COOH moiety of GA is ionized at physiol. pH,
and the compounds are recognized by urinary and
biliary organic anion transporters, which enable
conjugates to be secreted into urine or bile. - Co-factor availability can limit the rate of
glucuronidation of drugs administered in high
doses (e.g., aspirin, acetominophen).
39Glucuronidation (Contd)
- Although glucuronidation generally decreases
biol. activity of the drug, occasionally, it is
increased. - e.g., bioactivation of N-hydroxy-3-acetylaminoflu
orine UDPGA ? hepatocarcinogen. - Also, NSAIDS, hypolipidemic drugs, and
anticonvulsants UDPGA ? carcinogenic,
cytotoxic, and immunologic effects. - Low rates of glucuronidation predispose neonates
to jaundice and to toxic effects of some
antibiotics.
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41Sulphate Conjugation
- High-energy co-factor is 3-phosphoadenosyl-5-pho
sphosulphate (PAPS), which is formed from ATP and
inorganic sulphate ? energetically expensive for
the cell 2 ATP to process. - Conjugation reaction is catalyzed by
sulphotransferases located in the cytosol of
primarily the liver, GIT, mucosa, and kidneys, - Sulphate conjugation involves the transfer of
SO3- from PAPS to drug or toxic compound. - Sulphate conjugates excreted mainly in urine.
- Need not undergo prior Phase I rxn (Table 6-4).
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43Sulphate Conjugation (Contd)
- Those excreted in bile may be hydrolyzed by
suphatases present in the GIT microflora, leading
to contributing to enterohepatic circulation. - The inorganic sulphate precursor of PAPs may
become depleted when large amounts of a foreign
compound conjugated with sulphate, such as
paracetamol, are administered. - Sulphate conjugation may increase toxicity in
certain rare cases.
44Acetylation
- The activated co-factor Acetyl coenzyme A.
- Acetyltransferase found in the cytosol of
hepatocytes, GIT mucosa and macrophages. - Products of acetylation may be less H2O-soluble
than the parent compound metabolites tend to
precipitate out in the urine in kidney tubules,
leading to nephron necrosis. - N-acetylation is a major route of
biotransformation for foreign compounds
containing an aromatic amine (R-NH2) or a
hydrazine group (R-NH-NH2).
45Methylation
- Methyl donor, S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM) is
formed from met and ATP. Methyltransferase is
mainly cytosolic, but can also be in ER. CH3
group is transferred to an O, N, or S atom. - This is a common, but usually minor, form of
biotransformation. - Metals can also be methylated. Hg and As can be
single or di-methylated, while Se can be
single,-double- or triple-methylated. - Methylation tends to increase lipophilicity,
thereby increasing the toxicity of some compounds.
46Conjugation with Glutathione (GSH)
- GSH is a tripeptide (glu-cys-gly)
- GSH is one of the most important cellular
defenses against toxic compounds. Found in most
cells, but especially abundant in liver. - Cys provides SH group so that GSH will react as
the thiolate ion, GS-. - GSH conjugation may be an enzyme-catalyzed
reaction (GSH-S- transferase) or simply a
chemical reaction.
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49Conjugation with Glutathione (GSH) (Contd)
- GSH can react with C, O, N, and S atoms.
- GSH conjugates can be excreted, usually in bile,
rather than in urine. - Or, the conjugate can be further metabolized by
removal of glu and gly, followed by acetylation
of the cys NH3 group to yield mercapturic acid. - Resistance to certain toxic compounds is often
assoc. with an over-expression of GSH
S-transferase.
50Rhodanese
- Mitochondrial enzyme that converts CN- to a far
less toxic metabolite, thiocyanate - CN- S2O32- SCN- SO32-
- cyanide thiosulphate thiocyanate
sulfite - SO32- SO43-
- Alternatively, CN detoxification can be achieved
using 4-dimethylaminophenol, which induces
methemoglobinemia.
Sulfite oxidase
Mb
51Conjugation with Amino Acids
- 2 Pathways
- (1) Conjugation of xenobiotics containing a COOH
group with the NH3 group of aa. - Most commonly occurs with gly.
- But usually also occurs with gln, arg, taurine,
and ornithine. - Involves activation of xenobiotics with CoA prior
to reaction with aa. - Conjugates are usually excreted in the urine.
52Conjugation with Amino Acids (Contd)
- (2) Conjugation of xenobiotics containing an
aromatic hydroxylamine with carboxylic acid group
of aas, such as ser and pro. - Amino acids are activated by amino-tRNA synthase.
53Phase I and Phase II Reactions
- Phase I Usually the rate-limiting step.
- Induction Compound incr gene expression of a
metabolizing enzyme. - - Dont confuse this with inhibition or
antagonism! - - Occurs with a wide variety of cpds (PAHs,
drugs, insecticides, etc.) - - Induce mono-oxygenases, but these cpds all
share the following property organic and
lipophillic.
54Induction (contd)
- Induction of CYP450s incr rate of
biotransformation of xenobiotics (see Table 6-2). - Induction can incr activation of procarcinogens
to DNA-reactive metabolites. - Can lead to pharmacokinetic tolerance by which
larger drug doses must be administered to achieve
the desired therapeutic levels(blood) because of
incr drug biotransformation
55Phase I and Phase II Reactions (cont)
- Inhibition P450s may be inhibited in 3 ways
- Competitive inhibition by 2 different drugs for
the same P450 enzyme. - Noncompetitive 1 of the drugs binds covalently
to P450. - Competitive, but the inhibitor is not a substrate
for the affected P450.
56Types of P450 Ligands
- Type I Broad class of drugs, pesticides, and
other cpds that bind to CYP450s at a hydrophobic
site near the heme so as to cause conformational
changes, making the active sterically accessible. - Type II Ligands that actually interact with the
heme Fe - Thus, such ligands must be small, usually
diatomic, assoc with organic cpds with N atoms
with sp2 or sp3 nonbonded e- that are sterically
accessible, such as gases (O2, CO, NO, CN, CO2)
57An Example of Drug Interaction as a Result of
Metabolism