Title: Biotransformation Xenobiotic metabolism
1BiotransformationXenobiotic metabolism
2Biotransformation
- Biotransformation means chemical alteration of
chemicals such as nutrients, amino acids, toxins,
xenobiotics or drugs in the body. It is also
needed to render nonpolar compounds polar so that
they are not reabsorbed in renal tubules and are
excreted. - Biotransformation may results into-
- Active Inactive form
- Active Active or
toxic form - Inactive Active form
- Unexcretable Excretable form
3Biotransformation
Results of biotransformation
Drug or Poison
biotransformed Drug or Poison
- In general -
- nonsynthetic precede synthetic reactions
- nonsynthetic reactions can produce active
metabolites - synthetic reactions produce inactive metabolites
4Biotransformation
5Biotransformation
Why is Biotransformation necessary? Most drugs
are excreted by the kidneys For renal
excretion drugs should have small molecular
mass be polar in nature should be fully
ionized at body pH Most drugs are complex and
do not have these properties and thus have to be
broken down to simpler products.
6Biotransformation
Ctd
- Pharmacologically active organic molecules tend
to- - Be highly lipophilic remain unionized or
partially ionized at physiologic PH. - Thus readily pass across biological barriers
membranes - Strongly bound to plasma proteins
- Such substances are not readily filtered at the
glomerulus. - Their lipophilicity also facilitates to be
reabsorbed through lipophilic renal tubular
membranes. - This property also stops them from getting
eliminated - They have to be converted to simpler
hydrophilic compounds so that they are eliminated
and their action is terminated.
7Biotransformation
Ctd
Biotransformation can also result in
bioactivation, which involves the production of
reactive metabolites that are more toxic,
mutagenic, or carcinogenic than their parent
compound(s). Drugs may converted to- less
toxic materials more toxic materials
materials with different type of effect or
toxicity Beside these, biotransformation is
called a biochemical defense mechanism as it
handles different xenobiotics, drugs, toxicants,
body wastes (hemoglobin) or other unwanted
substances to those we get exposed.
8Biotransformation
- Where do biotransformations occur?
- Liver is the principal organ of drug metabolism
although every tissue has some ability to
metabolize drugs. - Other tissues that display considerable activity
include the GIT, the lungs, the skin, and the
kidneys. - Following oral administration, many drugs (e.g.
isoproterenol,morphine) absorbed intact from the
small intestine and transported first via the
portal system to the liver, where they undergo
extensive metabolism ( first-pass metabolism). - Some orally administered drugs (e.g.clonazepam,
chlorpromazine) are extensively metabolized in
the intestine than in the liver.
9Biotransformation
Ctd
- Thus intestinal metabolism may contribute to the
overall first-pass effect. - First pass effects may so greatly limit the
bioavailability of orally administered drugs. - The lower gut harbors intestinal microorganisms
that are capable of many biotransformation
reactions. - Although drug biotransformation in vivo can occur
by spontaneous, noncatalyzed chemical reactions,
the vast majority are catalyzed by specific
cellular enzymes.At the cellular level, these
enzymes may be located in the - i) Endoplasmic reticulum ii) mitochondria iii)
cytosol iii) lysosomes iv) even the nuclear
envelope or v) plasma membrane.
10Biotransformation
- Water soluble xenobiotics are easier to eliminate
in urine, feces but not exhalation as t1/2 is
low. - Lipophilic barbiturates such as thiopental
phenobarbital would have half-lives greater than
100 years if they were not converted to
water-soluble compounds. - Multiple enzymes (families)
- Constitutively expressed
- Inducible
- Broad specificity
- Polymorphic
- Stereo-isomer specificity
11Biotransformation
Relatively harmless
Potentially toxic xenobiotic
Metabolic activation
Detoxification
Inactive metabolite
Reactive intermediate
12Converting lipophilic to water soluble compounds
Lipophilic (non-polar)
Xenobiotic
Phase I - Activation
Reactive intermediate
Phase II - Conjugation
Conjugate
Water soluble (polar)
Excretion
13Phase I
- introduction of functional group
- hydrophilicity increases slightly
- may inactivate or activate original compound
- major player is CYP or mixed function oxygenase
(MFO) system in conjunction with NAD(P)H - location of reactions is smooth endoplasmic
reticulum
14Phase II
- conjugation with endogenous molecules
- (GSH, glycine, cystein, glucuronic acid)
- hydrophilicity increases substantially
- neutralization of active metabolic intermediates
- facilitation of elimination
- location of reactions is cytoplasm
15Phase I reactions
- Oxidation
- Hydroxylation (addition of -OH group)
- N- and O- Dealkylation (removal of -CH side
chains) - Deamination (removal of -NH side chains)
- Epoxidation (formation of epoxides)
- Oxygen addition (sulfoxidation, N-oxidation)
- Hydrogen removal
- Reduction
- Hydrogen addition (unsaturated bonds to
saturated) - Donor molecules include GSH, FAD, NAD(P)H
- Oxygen removal
- Hydrolysis
- Splitting of C-N-C (amide) and C-O-C (ester) bonds
epoxide
16Biotransformation
- Activation of xenobiotics is a key element
- (e.g. benzene, vinyl chloride)
- Reactive intermediates include epoxides and free
radical species (unpaired electrons) that are
short-lived and hence highly reactive - Protection is provided by
- endogenous antioxidant substances, e.g. GSH
- vitamins C and E
- antioxidant enzymes
- Antioxidant molecules are oxidized in the process
but have the capacity to regenerate the reduced
form from the oxidized - NAD(P)H is a key player
17Cytochrome P450 (CYP) Mixed Function Oxidases
(MFO)
- Located in many tissues but highly in liver ER
- Human 16 gene families
- CYP 1,2,3 perform drug metabolism
- gt48 genes sequenced
- Key forms CYP1A2, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6,
CYP2E1, and CYP3A4 - Highly inducible
- Alcohol CYP2E1
- Barbiturates CYP2B
18CYPs are the major enzymes involved in drug
metabolism, accounting for 75 of the total
metabolism.Most drugs undergo deactivation by
CYPs, either directly or by facilitated excretion
from the body. Also, many substances are
bioactivated by CYPs to form their active
compounds.
Proportion of drugs metabolized by different CYPs
19Figure CYP450 Reaction Sequence
OH
NADPH H
e-
OH
CYP450 reductase
NADPH H
O
..
H
e-
O2
H2O
O21-
O2
20Oxidation of vinyl chloride to an epoxide
21Metabolic enzymes
- Microsomal
- CYP450 monooxygenases
- Flavin monooxygenase
- Non-microsomal
- Alcohol dehydrogenase
- Aldehyde dehydrogenase
- Monoamine and diamine oxidases
- Both
- Esterases and Amidases
- Prostaglandin synthase
- Peroxidases
22Cooxidation of acetaminophen by prostaglandin
endoperoxide synthetase
23Hydrolysis of esters and amides
24Hydrolysis of organophosphates
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28Hydrolysis of epoxides
29Stereoselective hydroxylation
30Metabolism of benzo(a)pyrene to 9,10
epoxide Potent mutagen that binds DNA