4 research outputs found
Use of Electrochemical Oxidation and Model Peptides To Study Nucleophilic Biological Targets of Reactive Metabolites: The Case of Rimonabant
Electrochemical
oxidation of drug molecules is a useful tool to
generate several different types of metabolites. In the present study
we developed a model system involving electrochemical oxidation followed
by characterization of the oxidation products and their propensity
to modify peptides. The CB1 antagonist rimonabant was chosen as the
model drug. Rimonabant has previously been shown to give high covalent
binding to proteins in human liver microsomes and hepatocytes and
the iminium ion and/or the corresponding aminoaldehyde formed via
P450 mediated α-carbon oxidation of rimonabant was proposed
to be a likely contributor. This proposal was based on the observation
that levels of covalent binding were significantly reduced when iminium
species were trapped as cyanide adducts but also following addition
of methoxylamine expected to trap aldehydes. Incubation of electrochemically
oxidized rimonabant with peptides resulted in peptide adducts to the
N-terminal amine with a mass increment of 64 Da. The adducts were
shown to contain an addition of C<sub>5</sub>H<sub>4</sub> originating
from the aminopiperidine moiety of rimonabant. Formation of the peptide
adducts required further oxidation of the iminium ion to short-lived
intermediates, such as dihydropyridinium species. In addition, the
metabolites and peptide adducts generated in human liver microsomes
were compared with those generated by electrochemistry. Interestingly,
the same peptide modification was found when rimonabant was coincubated
with one of the model peptides in microsomes. This clearly indicated
that reactive metabolite(s) of rimonabant identical to electrochemically
generated species are also present in the microsomal incubations.
In summary, electrochemical oxidation combined with peptide trapping
of reactive metabolites identified a previously unobserved bioactivation
pathway of rimonabant that was not captured by traditional trapping
agents and that may contribute to the <i>in vitro</i> covalent
binding
Significantly Different Covalent Binding of Oxidative Metabolites, Acyl Glucuronides, and S‑Acyl CoA Conjugates Formed from Xenobiotic Carboxylic Acids in Human Liver Microsomes
Xenobiotic carboxylic acids may be
metabolized to oxidative metabolites,
acyl glucuronides, and/or S-acyl-CoA thioesters (CoA conjugates) in
vitro, e.g., in hepatocytes, and in vivo. These metabolites can potentially
be reactive species and bind covalently to tissue proteins and are
generally considered to mediate adverse drug reactions in humans.
Acyl glucuronide metabolites have been the focus of reactive metabolite
research for decades, whereas drug-CoA conjugates, which have been
shown to be up to 40–70 times more reactive, have been given
much less attention. In an attempt to dissect the contribution of
different pathways to covalent binding, we utilized human liver microsomes
supplemented with NADPH, uridine 5′-diphosphoglucuronic acid
(UDPGA), or CoA to evaluate the reactivity of each metabolite separately.
Seven carboxylic acid drugs were included in this study. While ibuprofen
and tolmetin are still on the market, ibufenac, fenclozic acid, tienilic
acid, suprofen, and zomepirac were stopped before their launch or
withdrawn. The reactivities of the CoA conjugates of ibuprofen, ibufenac,
fenclozic acid, and tolmetin were higher compared to those of their
corresponding oxidative metabolites and acyl glucuronides, as measured
by the level of covalent binding to human liver microsomal proteins.
The highest covalent binding was observed for ibuprofenyl-CoA and
ibufenacyl-CoA, to levels of 1000 and 8600 pmol drug eq/mg protein,
respectively. In contrast and in agreement with the proposed P450-mediated
toxicity for these drug molecules, the reactivities of oxidative metabolites
of suprofen and tienilic acid were higher compared to the reactivities
of their conjugated metabolites, with NADPH-dependent covalent binding
of 250 pmol drug eq/mg protein for both drugs. The seven drugs all
formed UDPGA-dependent acyl glucuronides, but none of these resulted
in covalent binding. This study shows that, unlike studies with hepatocytes
or in vivo, human liver microsomes provide an opportunity to investigate
the reactivity of individual metabolites
Bioactivation of the Cannabinoid Receptor Antagonist Rimonabant to a Cytotoxic Iminium Ion Metabolite
The cannabinoid type 1 receptor (CB1r) antagonist rimonabant
was
approved in 2006 for the treatment of obesity but was withdrawn in
2008 due to serious drug-related psychiatric disorders. <i>In
vitro</i> metabolism studies with rimonabant have revealed high
levels of reactive metabolite formation, which resulted in irreversible
time-dependent P450 3A4 inhibition and in covalent binding to microsomal
proteins. In the present study, an <i>in vitro</i> approach
has been used to explore whether metabolic bioactivation of rimonabant
might result in cell toxicity. A panel of SV40-T-antigen-immortalized
human liver derived (THLE) cells that had been transfected with vectors
encoding various human cytochrome P450 enzymes (THLE-1A2, 2C9, 2C19,
2D6, and 3A4) or with an empty vector (THLE-Null) were exposed to
rimonabant. Cell toxicity and covalent binding to cellular proteins
were evaluated, as was metabolite formation. Rimonabant exhibited
markedly potentiated dose and time dependent cytotoxicity to THLE-3A4
cells, compared to that of all other THLE cell lines. This was accompanied
by high levels of covalent binding of [<sup>14</sup>C]-rimonabant
to THLE-3A4 cell proteins (1433 pmol drug equivalents/mg protein)
and the formation of several metabolites that were not generated by
THLE-Null cells. These included <i>N</i>-aminopiperidine
(NAP) and an iminium ion species. However, no toxicity was observed
when THLE cells were incubated with NAP. Glutathione depletion did
not alter the observed potent cell cytotoxicity of rimonabant to THLE-3A4
cells. Preincubation of THLE-3A4 cells with the cytochrome P450 3A4
inhibitor ritonavir blocked the selective toxicity of rimonabant to
these cells. In addition, ritonavir pretreatment blocked the metabolism
of the compound in the cells and thereby significantly decreased the
covalent binding of [<sup>14</sup>C]-rimonabant to THLE-3A4 cell proteins.
We conclude that the potent toxicity of rimonabant in THLE-3A4 cells
occurs by a mechanistic sequence, which is initiated by cytochrome
P450 3A4 mediated formation of a highly cytotoxic reactive iminium
ion metabolite that binds covalently to cellular proteins
In Vitro Approach to Assess the Potential for Risk of Idiosyncratic Adverse Reactions Caused by Candidate Drugs
Idiosyncratic adverse drug reactions (IADRs) in humans
can result
in a broad range of clinically significant toxicities leading to attrition
during drug development as well as postlicensing withdrawal or labeling.
IADRs arise from both drug and patient related mechanisms and risk
factors. Drug related risk factors, resulting from parent compound
or metabolites, may involve multiple contributory mechanisms including
organelle toxicity, effects related to compound disposition, and/or
immune activation. In the current study, we evaluate an <i>in
vitro</i> approach, which explored both cellular effects and
covalent binding (CVB) to assess IADR risks for drug candidates using
36 drugs which caused different patterns and severities of IADRs in
humans. The cellular effects were tested in an <i>in vitro</i> Panel of five assays which quantified (1) toxicity to THLE cells
(SV40 T-antigen-immortalized human liver epithelial cells), which
do not express P450s, (2) toxicity to a THLE cell line which selectively
expresses P450 3A4, (3) cytotoxicity in HepG2 cells in glucose and
galactose media, which is indicative of mitochondrial injury, (4)
inhibition of the human bile salt export pump, BSEP, and (5) inhibition
of the rat multidrug resistance associated protein 2, Mrp2. In addition,
the CVB Burden was estimated by determining the CVB of radiolabeled
compound to human hepatocytes and factoring in both the maximum prescribed
daily dose and the fraction of metabolism leading to CVB. Combining
the aggregated results from the <i>in vitro</i> Panel assays
with the CVB Burden data discriminated, with high specificity (78%)
and sensitivity (100%), between 27 drugs, which had severe or marked
IADR concern, and 9 drugs, which had low IADR concern, we propose
that this integrated approach has the potential to enable selection
of drug candidates with reduced propensity to cause IADRs in humans