Title: Metabolic Changes of Drugs
1Metabolic Changes of Drugs
Books 1. Wilson and Gisvolds Textbook of
Organic Medicinal and Pharmaceutical Chemistry
11th ed. Lippincott, Williams Wilkins ed. 2.
Foyes Principles of Medicinal Chemistry
2Introductory Concepts
- Biochemically speaking Metabolism means
Catabolism (breaking down of substances)
Anabolism (building up or synthesis of
substances) - But when we speak about drug metabolism, it is
only catabolism - That is drug metabolism is the break down of drug
molecules - So what is building the drug molecules? We use
the word synthesis, then - Drugs are synthesized in laboratory and thus is
not an endogenous event - Lipid soluble drugs require more metabolisms to
become polar, ionizable and easily excretable
which involve both phase I and phase II
mechanisms.
3What Roles are Played by Drug Metabolism?
- One of four pharmacokinetic parameters, i.e.,
absorption, distribution, metabolism and
excretion (ADME) - Elimination of Drugs Metabolism and excretion
together are elimination - Excretion physically removes drugs from the body
- The major excretory organ is the kidney. The
kidney is very good at excreting polar and
ionized drugs without any major metabolism. The
kidney is unable to excrete drugs with high LWPC - In general, by metabolism drugs become more
polar, ionizable and thus more water soluble to
enhance elimination - It also effect deactivation and thus detoxication
or detoxification - Many drugs are metabolically activated (Prodrugs)
- Sometimes drugs become more toxic and carcinogenic
4Routes that result in the formation of inactive
metabolites are often referred to as
detoxification.
The metabolite may exhibit either a different
potency or duration of action or both to the
original drug.
5Stereochemistry of Drug Metabolism
6Sites of Drug Metabolism
- Liver Major site, well organized with all enzyme
systems
The first-pass effect Following drugs are
metabolized extensively by first-pass effect
Isoproterenol, Lidocaine Meperidine, Morphine,
Pentazocine, Propoxyphene, Propranolol,
Nitroglycerin, Salicylamide
- Intestinal Mucosa The extra-hepatic metabolism,
contains CYP3A4 isozyme - Isoproterenol exhibit considerable sulphate
conjugation in GI tract - Levodopa, chlorpromazine and diethylstilbestrol
are also reportedly metabolized in GI tract - Esterases and lipases present in the intestine
may be particularly important carrying out
hydrolysis of many ester prodrugs - Bacterial flora present in the intestine and
colon reduce many azo and nitro drugs (e.g.,
sulfasalazine) - Intestinal b-glucuronidase can hydrolyze
glucuronide conjugates excreted in the bile,
thereby liberating the free drug or its
metabolite for possible reabsorption
(enterohepatic circulation or recycling)
7Enzymes Involved in Drug Metabolism
CYP450, Hepatic microsomal flavin containing
monooxygenases (MFMO or FMO) Monoamine Oxidase
(MAO) and Hydrolases
- Cytochrome P450 system localized in the smooth
endoplasmic reticulum. - Cytochrome P450 is a Pigment that, with CO bound
to the reduced form, absorbs maximally at 450nm - Cytochromes are hemoproteins (heme-thiolate) that
function to pass electrons by reversibly changing
the oxidation state of the Fe in heme between the
2 and 3 state and serves as an electron
acceptordonor - P450 is not a singular hemoprotein but rather a
family of related hemoproteins. Over 1000 have
been identified in nature with 50 functionally
active in humans with broad substrate specificity
Simplified apoprotein portion
Heme portion with activated Oxygen
8Cytochrome P450 Naming
- Before we had a thorough understanding of this
enzyme system, the CYP450 enzymes were named
based on their catalytic activity toward a
specific substrate, e.g., aminopyrine
N-demethylase now known as CYP2E1 - Currently, all P450s are named by starting with
CYP (CYtochrome P450, N1, L, N2 - the first
number is the family (gt40 homology), the letter
is the subfamily (gt 55 homology), and the second
number is the isoform. The majority of drug
metabolism is by 10 isoforms of the CYP1, CYP2
and CYP3 families in humans - Major human forms of P450 Quantitatively, in the
liver the percentages of total P450 protein are
CYP3A4 28, CYP2Cx 20, CYP1A2 12, CYP2E1
6, CYP2A6 4, CYP2D6 4 - By number of drugs metabolized the percentages
are CYP3A4 35, CYP2D6 20, CYP2C8 and
CYP2C9 17, CYP2C18 and CYP2C19 - 8 CYP 1A1
and CYP1A2 -10, CYP2E1 4, CYP2B6 3
9Few Important CYP450 Isozymes
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11Drug Interactions Metabolism
- The drug interactions depend upon
- the isoform(s) required by the drug in question,
- the isoforms altered by concomitant therapy,
- the type of enzyme alteration (induction or
inhibition).
12General Metabolic Pathways
- Oxidation
- Aromatic moieties
- Olefins
- Benzylic allylic C atoms and a-C of CO and CN
- At aliphatic and alicyclic C
- C-Heteroatom system
- C-N (N-dealkylation, N-oxide formation,
N-hydroxylation) - C-O (O-dealkylation)
- C-S (S-dealkylation, S-oxidation, desulfuration)
- Oxidation of alcohols and aldehydes
- Miscellaneous
- Hydrolytic Reactions
- Esters and amides
- Epoxides and arene oxides by epoxide hydrase
Phase II - Conjugation
Phase I - Functionalization
Drug Metabolism
- Reduction
- Aldehydes and ketones
- Nitro and azo
- Miscellaneous
- Glucuronic acid conjugation
- Sulfate Conjugation
- Glycine and other AA
- Glutathion or mercapturic acid
- Acetylation
- Methylation
13Tetrahydrocannabinol (D1-THC) Metabolism
The metabolite is polar, ionisable and hydrophilic
14Oxidative Reactions
15- Hydroxylation is the primary reaction mediated by
CYP450 - Hydroxylation can be followed by non-CYP450
reactions including conjugation or oxidation to
ketones or aldehydes, with aldehydes getting
further oxidized to acids - Hydroxylation of the carbon a to heteroatoms
often lead to cleavage of the carbon heteroatom
bond seen especially with N, O and S, results in
N, S or Odealkylation. - Must have an available hydrogen on atom that gets
hydroxylated, this is important!!!
16Aromatic Hydroxylation
- Mixed function oxidation of arenes to arenols via
an epoxide intermediate arene oxide - Major route of metabolism for drugs with phenyl
ring - Occurs primarily at para position
- Substituents attached to aromatic ring influence
the hydroxylation - Activated rings (with electron-rich substituents)
are more susceptible while deactivated (with
electron withdrawing groups, e.g., Cl, NR3,
COOH, SO2NHR) are generally slow or resistant to
hydroxylation
17Amphetamine
Phenytoin
p-hydroxyphenytoin
Warfarin sodium
17-a-Ethinylestradiol
Propranolol
Phenylbutazone
Atorvastatin
18Antihypertensive drug clonidine undergo little
aromatic hydroxylation and the uricosuric agent
probenecid has not been reported to undergo any
aromatic hydroxylation
Probenecid
Clonidine
Preferentially the more electron rich ring is
hydroxylated
Diazepam
Chlorpromazine
NIH Shift Novel Intramolecular Hydride shift
named after National Institute of Health where
the process was discovered. This is most
important detoxification reaction for arene oxides
19Oxidation of olefinic bonds (also called alkenes)
- The second step may not occur if the epoxide is
stable, usually it is more stable than arene
oxide - May be spontaneous and result in alkylation of
endogenous molecules - Susceptable to enzymatic hydration by epoxide
hydrase to form trans-1,2-dihydrodiols (also
called 1,2-diols or 1,2-dihydroxy compounds) - Terminal alkenes may form alkylating agents
following this pathway
Q. Any similarities or dissimilarities with
aromatic NIH Shift, Conjugation with
macromolecules?
20Benzylic Carbon Hydroxylation
- Hydroxylate a carbon attached to a phenol group
(aromatic ring) - R1 and R2 can produce steric hindrance as they
get larger and more branched - So a methyl group is most likely to hydroxylate
- Primary alcohol metabolites are often oxidized
further to aldehyde and carboxylic acids and
secondary alcohols are converted to ketones by
soluble alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase
Dicarboxylic acid is the major metabolite
21Oxidation at Allylic Carbon Atoms
22Pentazocine
23Hydroxylation at C a to CO and CN
The benzodiazepines are classic examples with
both functionalities
The sedative hypnotic glutethimide possesses C a
to carbonyl function
24Aliphatic hydroxylation
- Catalyzes hydroxylation of the ? and ?-1 carbons
in aliphatic chains - Generally need three or more unbranched carbons
Pentobarbital Metabolism
Ibuprofen Metabolism
25Alicyclic (nonaromatic ring) Hydroxylation
- Cyclohexyl group is commonly present in many drug
molecules - The mixed function oxydase tend to hydroxylate at
the 3 or 4 position of the ring - Due to steric factors if position 4 is
substituted it is harder to hydroxylate the
molecules
Acetohexamide Metabolism
26Oxidation Involving Carbon-Heteroatom Systems
- C-N, C-O and occasionally C-S
- Two basic types of biotransformation processes
- Hydroxylation of a-C attached directly to the
heteroatom (N,O,S). The resulting intermediate is
often unstable and decomposes with the cleavage
of the C-X bond -
- Oxidative N-, O-, and S-dealkylation as well as
oxidative deamination reaction fall under this
category - Hydroxylation or oxidation of heteroatom (N, S
only, e.g., N-hydroxylation, N-oxide formation,
sulfoxide and sulfone formation) - Metabolism of some N containing compounds are
complicated by the fact that C or N hydroxylated
products may undergo secondary reactions to form
other, more complex metabolic products (e.g.,
oxime, nitrone, nitroso, imino)
27C-N systems
- Aliphatic (1o, 2o, 3o,) and alicyclic (2o and 3o)
amines Aromatic and heterocyclic nitrogen
compounds Amides - Enzymes
- CYP mixed-function oxidases a-C hydroxylation
and N-oxidation - Amine oxidases or N-oxidases (non-CYP, NADPH
dependent flavoprotein and require O)
N-oxidation
- 3o Aliphatic and alicyclic amines are metabolized
by oxidative N-dealkylation (CYP) - Aliphatic 1o, 2o amines are susceptible to
oxidative deamination, N-dealkylation and
N-oxidation reactions - Aromatic amines undergoes similar group of
reactions as aliphatic amines, i.e., both
N-dealkylation and N-oxidation
28N-Dealkylation (Deamination)
- Deamination and N-dealkylation differ only in the
point of reference If the drug is R1 or R2 then
it is a deamination reaction and If the drug is
R3 or R4 then it is an N-dealkylation - In general, least sterically hindered carbon (a)
will be hydroxylated first, then the next, etc.
Thus the more substituent on this C, the slower
it proceeds branching on the adjacent carbon
slows it down, i.e. R1, R2 H is fastest. - Any group containing an a-H may be removed, e.g.,
allyl, benzyl. Quaternary carbon cannot be
removed as contain no a-H - The more substituents placed on the nitrogen the
slower it proceeds (steric hindrance) - The larger the substituents are the slower it
proceeds (e.g. methyl vs. ethyl). In general,
small alkyl groups like Me, Et and iPro are
rapidly removed branching on these substituents
slows it down even more
Imipramine N-Dealkylation
29Alicyclic Amines Often Generate Lactams
303oAmine drugs
Tamoxifen
Disopyramide
Lidocaine
Diphenhydramine
Chlorpromazine
Benzphetamine
Brompheniramine
Alicyclic Amine drugs
Meperidine
Morphine
Dextromethorphan
312o 1o Amines
Generally, dealkylation of secondary amines
occurs before deamination. The rate of
deamination is easily influenced by steric
factors both on the a-C and on the N so it is
easier to deaminate a primary amine but much
harder for a tertiary amine.
32Exceptions Some 2o and 3o amines can undergo
deamination directly without dealkylation.
33N-Oxidation
Aromatic amines
1 amines
2 amines
3 amines
34- The attack is on the unbonded electrons so 3o
amines can be oxidized - Generally, only occurs if nothing else can
happen, so it is a rare reaction - Performed by both amine oxidases and hepatic
MFOs - Good examples would include amines attached to
quaternary carbons since they cannot be deaminated
Chlorphentermine N-Hydroxylation
Hydroxylamine
Nitroso
Nitro
Phentermine
Amantadine
35Amides
C-N bond cleavage via a-C hydroxylation
(formation of carbinolamide) and N-hydroxylation
reactions
36Oxidation involving C-O System (O-Dealkylation)
- Converts an ether to an alcohol plus a ketone or
aldehyde - Steric hindrance discussion similar to
N-dealkylation
Trimethoprim O-Dealkylation
37Codeine
Phenacetin
Indomethacin
Metoprolol
Prazosin
- One exception that appears to be a form of
O-dealkylation is the oxidation of ethanol by
CYP2E1 - In this case R3 is hydrogen instead of carbon to
form the terminal alcohol rather than an ether - The enzyme involved is CYP2E1 and has been
historically referred to as the Microsomal
Ethanol Oxidizing System (MEOS)
38Oxidation involving C-S System
- S-Dealkylation
- Desulfuration
- S-Oxidation
Steric hindrance discussion similar to
N-dealkylation
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41Oxidative Dehalogenation
- Requires two halogens on carbon
- With three there is no hydrogen available to
replace - With one, the reaction generally wont proceed
- The intermediate acyl halide is very reactive
Q. What is Gray Baby Syndrome?
42Hepatic Microsomal Flavin Containing
Monooxygenases (MFMO or FMO)
- Oxidize S and N functional groups
- Mechanism is different but end products are
similar to those produced by S and N oxidation by
CYP450 - FMOs do not work on primary amines
- FMOs will not oxidize substrates with more than
a single charge - FMOs will not oxidize polyvalent substrates
Cimetidine MFMO S-Oxidation
Q. What is the difference with MFO?
43Non-Microsomal Oxidation Reactions
- Monoamine oxidase (outer membrane of
mitochondria, flavin containing enzyme ) - Dehydrogenases (cytoplasm)
- Purine oxidation (Xanthene oxidase)
Monoamine oxidase
- Two MAOs have been identified MAOA and MAOB.
Equal amounts are found in the liver, but the
brain contains primarily MAOB MAOA is found in
the adrenergic nerve endings - MAOA shows preference for serotonin,
catecholamines, and other monoamines with
phenolic aromatic rings and MAOB prefers
nonphenolic amines - Metabolizes 1 and 2 amines N must be attached
to a-carbon both C N must have at least one
replaceable H atom. 2 amines are metabolized by
MAO if the substituent is a methyl group - bPhenylisopropylamines such as amphetamine and
ephedrine are not metabolized by MAOs but are
potent inhibitors of MAOs
44Alcohol dehydrogenase
Aldehyde dehydrogenase
Metabolizes 1 and 2 alcohols and aldehydes
containing at least one H attached to a-C 1
alcohols typically go to the aldehyde then acid
2 alcohols are converted to ketone, which cannot
be further converted to the acid. The aldehyde is
converted back to an alcohol by alcohol (keto)
reductases (reversible), however, it goes forward
as the aldehyde is converted to carboxylic acid
3 alcohols and phenolic alcohols cannot be
oxidized by this enzyme No H attached to
adjacent carbon
Ethanol Metabolism
Purine oxidation
Molybdenum Containing
45Reductive Reactions
- Bioreduction of CO (aldehyde and keton)
generates alcohol (aldehyde ? 1o alcohol ketone
? 2o alcohol) - Nitro and azo reductions lead to amino
derivatives - Reduction of N-oxides to their corresponding 3o
amines and reduction of sulfoxides to sulfides
are less frequent - Reductive cleavage of disulfide (-S-S-) linkages
and reduction of CC are minor pathways in drug
metabolism - Reductive dehalogenation is a minor reaction
primarily differ from oxidative dehalogenation is
that the adjacent carbon does not have to have a
replaceable hydrogen and generally removes one
halogen from a group of two or three
46Reduction of Aldehydes Ketones
- CO moiety, esp. the ketone, is frequently
encountered in drugs and additionally, ketones
and aldehydes arise from deamination - Ketones tend to be converted to alcohols which
can then be glucuronidated. Aldehydes can also be
converted to alcohols, but have the additional
pathway of oxidation to carboxylic acids - Reduction of ketones often leads to the creation
of an asymmetric center and thus two
stereoisomeric alcohols are possible - Reduction of a, b unsaturated ketones found in
steroidal drugs results not only in the reduction
of the ketone but also of the CC - Aldoketo oxidoreductases carry out bioreductions
of aldehydes and ketones. Alcohol dehydrogenase
is a NAD dependent oxidoreductase that oxidizes
alcohols but in the presence of NADH or NADPH,
the same enzyme can reduce carbonyl compounds to
alcohols
47Naloxone
Daunomycin
Naltrexone
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49Reduction of Nitro Azo Compounds
50- R1 and R2 are almost always aromatic
- Usually only seen when the NO2 functional group
is attached directly to an aromatic ring and are
rare - Nitro reduction is carried out by NADPH-dependent
microsomal and soluble nitroreductases (hepatic) - NADPH dependent multicomponent hepatic microsomal
reductase system reduces the azo - Bacterial reductases in intestine can reduce both
nitro and azo
Dantrolene
Sulfasalazine
Clonazepam
51Reduction of Sulfur Containing Compounds
Sulfoxide reduction (Cannot reduce a sulfone)
X
Sulfoxide
Sulfone
Disulfide reduction
Sulindac
52Hydrolytic Reactions
Hydrolyzes (adds water to) esters and amides and
their isosteres the OH from water ends up on the
carboxylic acid (or its isostere) and the H in
the hydroxy or amine
- Enzymes Non-microsomal hydrolases however,
amide hydrolysis appears to be mediated by liver
microsomal amidases, esterases, and deacylases - Electrophilicity of the carbonyl carbon, Nature
of the heteroatom, substituents on the carbonyl
carbon, and substituents on the heteroatom
influnce the rate of hydrolysis - In addition, Nucleophilicity of attacking
species, Electronic charge, and Nature of
nucleophile and its steric factors also influence
the rate of hydrolysis
Table Naming carbonyl - heteroatom groups
53The Reactions
Ester hydrolysis
Amide hydrolysis (slower)
Carbonate hydrolysis
Carbamate hydrolysis
Urea hydrolysis
Hydrazide hydrolysis
54Drug Examples
Indomethacin
Prazosin
Lidocaine
55Stereoselectivity of Hydrolysis
- Etomidate (Amidate, hypnotic) R-()-isomer is
more rapidly hydrolyzed, but S-(-)-isomer is more
rapidly hydroxylated.
56The Concept of Prodrugs and Antedrugs
- Prodrug Need metabolic activation
- Antedrug Active drug that is quickly inactivated
thereby minimizing systemic effects
57Prodrugs and Related Terms
- Albert in 1958 coined the term prodrug to refer a
pharmacologically inactive compound that is
metabolically activated in the mammalian system - Hard Drugs are not susceptible to metabolic or
chemical transformation, have high lipid
solubility and thus accumulation or high water
solubility - Celecoxib t1/2 10-12 h in humans t1/2 ca.
680 h (Liver toxicity) - Soft drugs are active compounds that after
exerting its action undergo inactivation to give
a nontoxic product. Indeed soft drugs are a group
of modified compounds that are also designed to
delivery the drugs in to the brain (the chemical
delivery system). Bodor coined the term.
58Basic Concepts of Prodrugs
- Carrier-linked prodrugs a pro-moiety is
attached, which is not necessary for activity but
may impart some desired property to the drug,
such as increased lipid or water solubility, or
site-directed delivery - Advantages may include
- increased absorption
- alleviation of pain at the site of injection if
the agent is given parenterally - elimination of an unpleasant taste associated
with the drug - decreased toxicity
- decreased metabolic inactivation
- increased chemical stability
- prolonged or shortened action
- Bioprecursor prodrugs contain no pro-moiety but
rather rely on metabolism to introduce the
functionality necessary to create an active
species
59Prodrug Chloramphenicol Hemisuccinate Na Salt
Prodrug Prednisolon Hemisuccinate Sodium Salt
- Inactive as it is and activated by hydrolysis by
plasma esterases to chloramphenicol/ prednisolon - Increased water solubility for parenteral
administration, which otherwise would precipitate
and cause pain by damaging surrounding tissues
Prodrug Chloramphenicol Palmitate
Prodrug Clindamycin Palmitate
- Inactive as it is activated by hydrolysis by
intestinal esterases to chloramphenicol/
clindamycin - Minimize their bitter taste and improve their
palatability in pediatric liquid suspensions
60Prodrug Carbenicillin Indanyl Ester
- Inactive as it is and activated by hydrolysis by
plasma esterases to carbenicillin - Lipophilic indanyl ester furnish improved oral
bioavailability
61Prodrugs of Functional Groups
- Carboxylic acids and alcohols Most common
- Amines and azo linkages Not been used much
- Carbonyl compounds Not found to be used widely
62Carboxylic Acids and Alcohols
Converted to ester prodrugs which are often
hydrolyzed to active drug by different types of
esterase enzymes Ester hydrolase Lipase Choleste
rol esterase Acetylcholinesterase Carboxypeptidase
Cholinesterase Microflora in the
gut Manipulation of steric and electronic
properties of promoiety allows control of rate
and extent of hydrolysis
63Advantage of Prodrug Formation I Increased
absorption of hydrophilic drugs by making less
hydrophilic or more lipophilic
- Prodrug of Epinephrine Dipivefrin
- More lipophilic, thus achieve higher intraocular
concentration - Hydrolysis occur in cornea, conjunctiva, and
aqueous humor after ophthalmic application
64Advantage of Prodrug Formation II Masking
unpleasant taste
Chloramphenicol palmitate and Clindamycin
palmitate has already been shown. Other drugs
include
N-Acetyl sulfisoxazole
Erythromycin estolate
Troleandomycin
65Not all carboxylic esters hydrolyzed in vivo
where double ester approach is used
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67Advantage of prodrug formation III Increase
hydrophilicity and thus water solubility to apply
parenterally or also orally when compounds are
too lipophilic to formulate in liquid dosage form
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69Chemical Delivery System
The site specific delivery of drugs is an
important way of increasing drugs therapeutic
index. The knowledge of prodrug and drug
metabolism is used to concentrate drugs at its
target site thus minimizing the systemic
toxicity.
70Antedrugs (Soft Drugs)
I stopped taking medicine as I prefer original
disease to side effects !!
Why ?
Because, Vioxxll treat pain but wholl treat
vioxx ??
71Safety-Based Drug Withdrawals from U.S. Market
(2006-2007)
72Why the Adverse Drug Reactions Occur?
- Because of unintended systemic actions in most
therapeutic classes of drugs
To bring a drug from concept to market
- It takes about 10-15 years
- 897 millions to 1.7 billions
- Overall attrition rate 10,0001
73What is Antedrug?
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75Chemical Approaches
- The Carboxylic Esters and Amides
- 20-Thioester Derivatives
- g-Butyrolactone Derivatives
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77Advantages of Antedrugs
- Localization of the drug effects
- Elimination of toxic metabolites, increasing the
therapeutic index - Avoidance of pharmacologically active metabolites
that can lead to long-term effects - Elimination of drug interactions resulting from
metabolite inhibition of enzymes - Simplification of PK problems caused by multiple
active species
M.O.F.Khan, K.K.Park, H.J.Lee. Antedrugs An
Approach to Safer Drugs. Curr. Med. Chem.,
12(19), 2227-2239, 2005.
78Phase II Drug Conjugation
- Attachment of small polar endogenous molecules
such as glucuronic acid, sulfate and amino acids
to Phase I metabolites or parent drugs - Products are more water-soluble and easily
excretable - Attenuate pharmacological activity and thus
toxicity - Trapping highly electrophilic molecules with
endogenous nucleophiles such as glutathione
prevent damage to important macromolecules (DNA,
RNA, proteins) - Regarded as true detoxifying pathway (with few
exceptions) - In general, appropriate transferase enzymes
activate the transferring group (glucuronate,
sulphate, methyl, acetyl) in a coenzyme form
79Glucuronic Acid Conjugation
- Glucuronidation is the most common conjugation
pathway - The coenzyme, UDP glucuronic acid is synthesized
from the corresponding phosphate - UDP-glucuronic acid contains D-glucuronic acid in
the a-configuration at the anomeric center, but
glucuronate conjugates are b-glycoside, meaning
inversion of stereochemistry is involved in the
glucuronidation - Glucuronides are highly hydrophilic and water
soluble - UDP glucuronosyltransferase is closely associated
with Cyp450 so that Phase I products of drugs are
efficiently conjugated - Four general classes of glucuronides O-, N-, S-,
and C- - Neonates have undeveloped liver
UDP-glucuronosyltransferase activity, and may
exhibit metabolic problem. For example,
chloramphenicol (Chloroptic) leads neonates to
gray baby syndrome - Neonatal jaundice may be attributable to their
inability to conjugate bilirubin with glucuronic
acid
80Formation of Glucuronide Conjugate
81Types of Compounds Forming Glucuronides
82Salicylic acid
Aryl acids
Fenoprofen
Arylalkyl acids
N-Glucuronides
Sulfonamides
7-Amino-5-nitroindazole
Arylamines
Sulfisoxazole
Alkylamines
3o Amines
Desipramine
Cyproheptadine
Meprobamate
Amides
83S-Glucuronides
Methimazole
Sulfhydryl
Carbodithioic acid
Disulfirum (reduced form)
C-Glucuronides
Phenylbutazone
84Sulfate Conjugation
- Occurs less frequently than does glucuronidation
presumably due to fewer number of inorganic
sulfates in mammals and fewer number of
functional groups (phenols, alcohols, arylamines
and N-hydroxy compounds) - Three enzyme-catalyzed reactions are involved in
sulfate conjugation
85Sulfation of Drugs
- Phenolic sulfation predominates
- Phenolic O-glucuonidation competes favorably with
sulfation due to limited sulfate availability - Sulfate conjugates can be hydrolyzed back to the
parent compound by various sulfatases - Sulfoconjugation plays an important role in the
hepatotoxicity and carcinogenecity of
N-hydroxyarylamides - In infants and young children where
glucuronyltransferase activity is not well
developed, have predominating O-sulfate
conjugation - Examples include a-methyldopa, albuterol,
terbutaline, acetaminophen, phenacetin
a-Methyldopa
Terbutaline
Albuterol
86Possible Mechanism of Phenacetin Toxicity
Electrophilic nitreneum
87Amino Acid Conjugation
- The first mammalian drug metabolite isolated,
hippuric acid, was the product of glycine
conjugation of benzoic acid - Amino acid conjugation of a variety of caroxylic
acids, such as aromatic, arylacetic, and
heterocyclic carboxylic acids leads to amide bond
formation - Glycine conjugates are the most common
- Taurine, arginine, asparagine, histidine, lysine,
glutamate, aspartate, alanine, and serine
conjugates have also been found
88Mechanism of Amino Acid conjugation
89Brompheniramine Metabolism
90Glutathione Conjugation
- Glutathione is a tripeptide (Glu-Cys-Gly) found
virtually in all mammalian tissues - Its thiol functions as scavenger of harmful
electrophilic parent drugs or their metabolites - Examples include SN2 reaction, SNAr reaction, and
Michael addition
91SN2 Examples
92SNAr Examples
93Michael Addition
94Mercapturic Acid Conjugates
95Acetyl Conjugation
- Metabolism for drugs containing a primary amino
group, (aliphatic and aromatic amines), amino
acids, sulfonamides, hydrazines, and hydrazides - The function of acetylation is to deactivate the
drug, although N-acetylprocainamide is as potent
as the parent antiarrhythmic drug procainamide
(Procanbid) or more toxic than the parent drug,
e.g., N-acetylisoniazid - Acetylation is two-step, covalent catalytic
process involving N-acetyl transferase
Genetic polymorphism in N-acetyltransferase
activity Multiple NAT2 alleles (NAT25, 6, 7,
and 14) have substantially decreased acetylation
activity and are common in Caucasians and
populations of African descent. In these groups,
most individuals carry at least one copy of a
slow acetylator allele, and less than 10 are
homozygous for the wild type (fast acetylator)
trait. The ratio of NAT2 activity is 7 in
Caucasians to 18 in the Chinese population.
96Example of Acetylated Drugs
97Fatty Acid and Cholesterol Conjugation
- Hydroxyl-containing drugs can undergo conjugation
with a wide range of endogenous fatty acids such
as saturated acids from C10 to C16 and
unsaturated acids such as oleic and linoleic
acids - Cholesterol ester metabolites have been detected
for drugs containing either an ester or a
carboxylic acid
98Methyl Conjugation
- Minor conjugation pathway, important in
biosynthesis of epinephrine and melatonin in the
catabolism of norepinephrine, dopamine,
serotonin, and histamine and in modulating the
activities of macromolecules (proteins and
nucleic acids) - Except for the formation of quarternary ammonium
salts, methylation of an amine reduces the
polarity and hydrophilicity of the substrates - A variety of methyl transferase, such as COMT
(catechol O-methyl transferase),
phenol-O-methyltransferase, N-methyl transferase,
S-methyltransferase etc are responsible for
catalyzing the transfer of methyl group from SAM
to RXH
99Case Study
Case 2. Imagine yourself as a drug information
specialist at a poison control center. A
technician from the coroners office is
investigating a case and requires assistance in
identifying the possible sources of
benzodiazepines (BZDs) in the toxicology profile
of a particular corpse. The technician has
identified four distinct BZDs in this blood
sample. She believes that the major component is
diazepam (1) (72 of the identified BZDs) and
that the remaining three components are
metabolites (NOTE the assay identifies only
active compounds).
Q. What are the three structures of potential
ACTIVE metabolites for diazepam?
Assignment Due by this Friday
http//www-home.cr.duq.edu/harrold/basic_concepts
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100Study Guide
- What Roles are Played by Drug Metabolism? Know
with structural examples - Role of stereochemistry in metabolism of drugs
with example of warfarin, ibuprofen and itomidate - What is first pass effect enterohepatic
circulation? Why and how they occur? Drug
examples - Metabolisms in the intestinal mucosa
- CYP450, Hepatic microsomal flavin containing
monooxygenases (MFMO or FMO) Monoamine Oxidase
(MAO) and Hydrolases. Drugs metabolised by these
enzymes and the active sites of these enzymes.
Types of metabolic reaction catalyzed by these
enzymes - Specific CYP enzymes with the number of drugs
they metabolize - Few CYP family with their main functions
- Drug interaction basics related to metabolic
enzymes
101Study Guide Cont.
- Mechanism and routes of aromatic hydroxylation.
The effects of electron donating and withdrawing
groups in aromatic hydroxylation. Drug examples.
What is NIH shift? - Oxidation of olefins. Role of epoxide hydrolase.
Can olefenic epoxide be converted to alcohol as
in aromatic epoxide by NIH shift? - What type of C in a drug molecule can not be
hydroxylated? - What is allylic and benzylic hydroxylation? Show
drug examples. - Show the drug examples where hydroxylation occur
on Ca to CO and CN bonds - Show the drug examples where hydroxylation occur
at aliphatic and alicyclic carbon atoms. Which
carbons are more easily hydroxylated? - What is N-oxidatin and N-dealkylation. What
enzymes are involved? How do you differentiate
between N-dealkylation and deamination. Drug
examples. What types of drugs generates lactams
instead of causing dealkylation? - What is the difference between mixed function
oxidases and amine oxidases?
102Study Guide Cont.
- What is the difference between ethanol oxidation
and O-dealkylation? - What is S-dealkylation, desulfuration and
S-oxidation? Drug examples. - How does steric factors influence S- O- and
N-dealkylations? - Oxidative dehalogenation with special example of
chloramphenicol. Why chloramphenicol cause
toxicity to the babies? - What is MFMO and its active site? What types of
functional groups are metabolized by this enzyme?
Drug examples. - MAO, dehydrogenases, xanthene oxidases and their
functions with drug examples. Difference between
MAO-A and MAO-B. - Alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenases, the
coenzymes and the types of drugs they work on. - Azo and nitro reductases, their coenzymes and the
drugs they act on.
103Study Guide Cont.
- Different types of hydrolytic enzymes. Compare
rate of hydrolysis of esters, amides, carbonates
and carbamates. - What are prodrugs and antedrugs? What are the
advantages? Examples. - What are different types of conjugation
reactions? - The enzymes and substrates involved in
glucuronidation, and sulfate conjugation. - Why acetaminophen is toxic to neonates? Mechanism
of phenacetin and acetaminophen toxicity. - What types of drugs or metabolites may form
glycin conjugates? - What are different mechanisms involved in
glutathione conjugation? What is mercapturic acid
conjugate? Mercapturic acid conjugate of
acetaminophen is a sign of its toxicity why? - Mechanism of acetylation. What is slow and fast
acetylator? - What is COMT? What coenzymes is involved in its
action? What types of drugs and/or
neurotransmitters are metabolized by COMT?