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1.
It has previously been proposed that 4-methylphenol (p-cresol) is metabolically activated by oxidation of the methyl group to form a reactive quinone methide. In the present study a new metabolism pathway is elucidated in human liver microsomes. Oxidation of the aromatic ring leads to formation of 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone, which is further oxidized to a reactive intermediate, 4-methyl-ortho-benzoquinone. This bioactivation pathway is fully supported by the following observations: 1) one major and two minor glutathione (GSH) adducts were detected in microsomal incubations of p-cresol in the presence of glutathione; 2) a major metabolite of p-cresol was identified as 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone in microsomal incubations; 3) the same GSH adducts were detected in microsomal incubations of 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone; and 4) the same GSH adducts were chemically synthesized by oxidizing 4-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone followed by the addition of GSH, and the major conjugate was identified by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry and NMR as 3-(glutathione-S-yl)-5-methyl-ortho-hydroquinone. In addition, it was found that 4-hydroxybenzylalcohol, a major metabolite derived from oxidation of the methyl group in liver microsomes, was further converted to 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde. In vitro studies also revealed that bioactivation of p-cresol was mediated by multiple cytochromes P450, but CYP2D6, 2E1, and 1A2 are the most active enzymes for formation of quinone methide, 4-methyl-ortho-benzoquinone, and 4-hydroxybenzaldehyde, respectively. Implications of the newly identified reactive metabolite in p-cresol-induced toxicity remain to be investigated in the future.  相似文献   

2.
Etoposide (VP-16), a DNA topoisomerase II poison widely used as an antineoplastic agent is also known to cause leukemia. One of its major metabolic pathways involves O-demethylation to etoposide catechol (etoposide-OH) by cytochrome P450 3A4 (CYP3A4). The catechol metabolite can undergo sequential one- and two-electron oxidations to form etoposide semi-quinone (etoposide-SQ) and etoposide quinone (etoposide-Q), respectively, which have both been implicated as cytotoxic metabolites. However, etoposide-Q is known to react with glutathione (GSH), which can protect DNA from oxidative damage by this reactive metabolite. In this study, etoposide-Q was reacted with GSH and the two etoposide-GSH conjugates were characterized. The major conjugate was etoposide-OH-6'-SG and the minor product was etoposide-OH-2'-SG. Etoposide-OH-6'-SG, which arose from Michael addition of GSH to etoposide-Q, was characterized by mass spectrometry and 2-D NMR. It was identified as the sole product from in vitro metabolism experiments using recombinant human CYP3A4 or liver microsomes incubated with etoposide in the presence of GSH. Etoposide-OH-6'-SG was also detected from incubations of etoposide-OH and GSH alone. Therefore, the presence of etoposide-OH, which can be formed from etoposide metabolism by CYP3A4, is essential for formation of the GSH conjugate. The oxidation of etoposide-OH to a quinone intermediate is likely the precursor in the formation of etoposide-OH-6'-SG.  相似文献   

3.
Despite the beneficial effects of tamoxifen in the treatment and prevention of breast cancer, long-term usage of this popular antiestrogen has been linked to an increased risk of developing endometrial cancer in women. One of the suggested pathways leading to the potential toxicity of tamoxifen involves its oxidative metabolism to 4-hydroxytamoxifen, which may be further oxidized to an electrophilic quinone methide. Alternatively, tamoxifen could undergo O-dealkylation to give cis/trans-1,2-diphenyl-1-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-but-1-ene, which is commonly known as metabolite E. Because of its structural similarity to 4-hydroxytamoxifen, metabolite E could also be biotransformed to a quinone methide, which has the potential to alkylate DNA and may contribute to the genotoxic effects of tamoxifen. To further probe the chemical reactivity/toxicity of such an electrophilic species, we have prepared metabolite E quinone methide chemically and enzymatically and examined its reactivity with glutathione (GSH) and DNA. Like 4-hydroxytamoxifen quinone methide, metabolite E quinone methide is quite stable; its half-life under physiological conditions is around 4 h, and its half-life in the presence of GSH is approximately 4 min. However, unlike the unstable GSH adducts of 4-hydroxytamoxifen quinone methide, metabolite E GSH adducts are stable enough to be isolated and characterized by NMR and liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). Reaction of metabolite E quinone methide with DNA generated exclusively deoxyguanosine adducts, which were characterized by LC/MS/MS. These data suggest that metabolite E has the potential to cause cytotoxicity/genotoxicity through the formation of a quinone methide.  相似文献   

4.
The primary pathway of clearance of the methylenedioxyphenyl-containing compound and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor paroxetine in humans involves P450 2D6-mediated demethylenation to a catechol intermediate. The process of demethylenation also results in the mechanism-based inactivation of the P450 isozyme. While the link between P450 2D6 inactivation and pharmacokinetic interactions of paroxetine with P450 2D6 substrates has been firmly established, there is a disconnect in terms of paroxetine's excellent safety record despite the potential for bioactivation. In the present study, we have systematically assessed the NADPH-dependent covalent binding of [(3)H]paroxetine to human liver microsomes and S-9 preparations in the absence and presence of cofactors of the various phase II drug-metabolizing enzymes involved in the downstream metabolism/detoxification of the putative paroxetine-catechol intermediate. Incubation of [(3)H]paroxetine with human liver microsomes and S-9 preparations resulted in irreversible binding of radioactive material to macromolecules by a process that was NADPH-dependent. The addition of reduced glutathione (GSH) to the microsomal and S-9 incubations resulted in a dramatic reduction of covalent binding. Following incubations with NADPH- and GSH-supplemented human liver microsomes and S-9, three sulfydryl conjugates with MH(+) ions at 623 Da (GS1), 779 Da (GS2), and 928 Da (GS3), respectively, were detected by LC-MS/MS. The collision-induced dissociation spectra allowed an insight into the structure of the GSH conjugates, based on which, bioactivation pathways were proposed. The formation of GS 1 was consistent with Michael addition of GSH to the quinone derived from two-electron oxidation of paroxetine-catechol. GS 3 was formed by the addition of a second molecule of GSH to the quinone species obtained via the two-electron oxidation of GS 1. The mechanism of formation of GS 2 can be rationalized via (i) further two-electron oxidation of the catechol motif in GS 3 to the ortho-quinone, (ii) loss of a glutamic acid residue from one of the adducted GSH molecules, and (iii) condensation of a cysteine-NH 2 with an adjacent carbonyl of the ortho-quinone to yield an ortho-benzoquinoneimine structure. Inclusion of the catechol-O-methyltransferase cofactor S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) in S-9 incubations also dramatically reduced the covalent binding of [(3)H]paroxetine, a finding that was consistent with O-methylation of the paroxetine-catechol metabolite to the corresponding guaiacol regioisomers in S-9 incubations. While the NADPH-dependent covalent binding was attenuated by GSH and SAM, these reagents did not alter paroxetine's ability to inactivate P450 2D6, suggesting that the reactive intermediate responsible for P450 inactivation did not leave the active site to react with other proteins. The results of our studies indicate that in addition to the low once-a-day dosing regimen (20 mg) of paroxetine, efficient scavenging of the catechol and quinone metabolites by SAM and GSH, respectively, serves as an explanation for the excellent safety record of paroxetine despite the fact that it undergoes bioactivation.  相似文献   

5.
Benzbromarone (BBR) is a uricosuric agent that has been used as a treatment for chronic gout. Although never approved in the United States, BBR was recently withdrawn from European markets due to several clinical cases linking the drug to an idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity that is sometimes fatal. We report here a possible mechanism of toxicity that involves the bioactivation of BBR through sequential hydroxylation of the benzofuran ring to a catechol, which can then be further oxidized to a reactive quinone intermediate capable of adducting protein. NADPH-supplemented human liver microsomes generated a single metabolite that was identified as 6-OH BBR by comparison with the synthesized chemical standard. CYP2C9 was the major recombinant enzyme capable of catalyzing the formation of 6-OH BBR, although CYP2C19 also showed a lower degree of activity. Further oxidation of either 6-OH BBR or 5-OH BBR by human liver microsomes resulted in the formation of a dihydroxy metabolite with identical chromatographic and mass spectral properties. This product of sequential metabolism of BBR was identified as the catechol, 5,6-dihydroxybenzbromarone. Incubation of the catechol with liver microsomes, in the presence of glutathione, resulted in the formation of two glutathione adducts that could derive from a single ortho-quinone intermediate. Isoform profiling with recombinant human P450s suggested that CYP2C9 is primarily responsible for the formation of this reactive quinone intermediate.  相似文献   

6.
A tyrosinase-directed therapeutic approach for treating malignant melanoma uses depigmenting phenolic prodrugs such as 4-hydroxyanisole (4-HA) for oxidation by melanoma tyrosinase to form cytotoxic o-quinones. However, in a recent clinical trial, both renal and hepatic toxicity were reported as side effects of 4-HA therapy. In the following, 4-HA (200 mg/kg i.p.) administered to mice caused a 7-fold increase in plasma transaminase toxicity, an indication of liver toxicity. Furthermore, 4-HA induced-cytotoxicity toward isolated hepatocytes was preceded by glutathione (GSH) depletion, which was prevented by cytochrome p450 inhibitors that also partly prevented cytotoxicity. The 4-HA metabolite formed by NADPH/microsomes and GSH was identified as a hydroquinone mono-glutathione conjugate. GSH-depleted hepatocytes were much more prone to cytotoxicity induced by 4-HA or its reactive metabolite hydroquinone (HQ). Dicumarol (an NAD(P)H/quinone oxidoreductase inhibitor) also potentiated 4-HA- or HQ-induced toxicity whereas sorbitol, an NADH-generating nutrient, prevented the cytotoxicity. Ethylenediamine (an o-quinone trap) did not prevent 4-HA-induced cytotoxicity, which suggests that the cytotoxicity was not caused by o-quinone as a result of 4-HA ring hydroxylation. Deferoxamine and the antioxidant pyrogallol/4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidene-1-oxyl (TEMPOL) did not prevent 4-HA-induced cytotoxicity, therefore excluding oxidative stress as a cytotoxic mechanism for 4-HA. A negligible amount of formaldehyde was formed when 4-HA was incubated with rat microsomal/NADPH. These results suggest that the 4-HA cytotoxic mechanism involves alkylation of cellular proteins by 4-HA epoxide or p-quinone rather than involving oxidative stress.  相似文献   

7.
4-Vinylphenol (4VP) has been identified as a minor urinary metabolite of styrene in rat and human volunteers. This compound has been shown to be more hepatotoxic and pneumotoxic than both styrene and styrene oxide at lower doses in rats and mice. To explore the possible toxicity mechanism of 4VP, the current study was conducted to investigate the metabolism of 4VP, the glutathione (GSH) conjugation of the metabolites of 4VP and its cytochrome P(450) (CYP) specificity in epoxidation in different microsomes in vitro. Incubations of 4VP with mouse lung microsomes afforded two major metabolites which were identified as 4-(2-oxiranyl)-phenol of 4VP (4VPO) and 4VP catechol. 4VPO was found to react with GSH to form GSH conjugate and 4VP catechol was found to further be metabolized to electrophilic species which react with GSH to form the corresponding 4VP catechol GSH conjugates. Relative formation rates for those GSH conjugates and the regioisomer formation of 4VPO-GSH conjugates with both inhibitors of CYP 2F2 and CYP 2E1 in microsomal incubation condition were also investigated. This present study provides better insight on the lung toxicity seen with 4VP, the toxic metabolite of commercial styrene.  相似文献   

8.
The oxidation of styrene to styrene oxide and the hydration of this metabolite to styrene glycol was investigated in hepatocytes, 9000 x g supernatant (S9) and the microsomal fraction from rat liver. Similar amounts of free styrene oxide were found in microsomes, hepatocytes and S9. However, on the basis of the formation of styrene glycol and the depletion of glutathione (GSH), it appeared that hepatocytes were the most active system in the metabolism of styrene, followed by S9 and microsomes.  相似文献   

9.
Previous work has shown that butylated hydroxytoluene [2,6-di-tert-butyl-4-methylphenol (BHT)] undergoes pi-oxidation in liver microsomes to form the quinone methide 2,6-di-tert-butyl-4-methylene-2,5-cyclohexadienone (QM). This electrophilic species binds covalently to glutathione and protein thiols and is believed to initiate pulmonary toxicity in mice. In the present investigation, we identified another quinone methide metabolite of BHT, 6-tert-butyl-2-(hydroxy-tert-butyl)-4-methylene-2,5-cyclohexadienone (QM-OH), formed subsequent to the microsomal hydroxylation of BHT at a tert-butyl group. Mouse liver and lung microsomes generate the two quinone methides, and evidence was obtained that both metabolites also are formed in vivo. In contrast, rat microsomes produce QM almost exclusively, with only traces of QM-OH formed in liver and none in lung. Studies of the chemical reactivities of the two quinone methides with GSH demonstrated that QM-OH reacts about 6-fold faster than QM. Infrared spectra, 1H NMR spectra, and electrochemical measurements all support the proposal that the enhanced electrophilicity of QM-OH is due to intramolecular hydrogen bonding of the ring oxygen with the side-chain hydroxyl. The results provide evidence, therefore, that the previous metabolic scheme for bioactivation of BHT to a pulmonary toxin should be amended to include tert-butyl hydroxylation and subsequent pi-oxidation to the activated electrophile QM-OH. This scheme is consistent with published data concerning BHT-induced pulmonary toxicity and provides an explanation for the species specificity of this effect.  相似文献   

10.
Raloxifene is a selective estrogen receptor modulator which is effective in the treatment of osteoporosis in postmenopausal women. We report herein that cytochrome P450 (P450)3A4 is inhibited by raloxifene in human liver microsomal incubations. The nature of the inhibition was irreversible and was NADPH- and preincubation time-dependent, with K(I) and k(inact) values estimated at 9.9 microM and 0.16 min(-1), respectively. The observed loss of P450 3A4 activity was attenuated partially by glutathione (GSH), implying the involvement of a reactive metabolite(s) in the inactivation process. Subsequently, GSH adducts of raloxifene were identified in incubations with human liver microsomes; substitution with GSH occurred at the 5- or 7-position of the benzothiophene moiety or at the 3'-position of the phenol ring, with the 7-glutathionyl derivative being most abundant based on LC/MS and NMR analyses. These adducts are postulated to derive from addition of GSH to raloxifene arene oxides followed by dehydration and aromatization. Alternatively, raloxifene may be oxidized to an extended quinone intermediate, which then is trapped by GSH conjugation. The bioactivation of raloxifene most likely is catalyzed by P450 3A4, since the formation of GSH adducts was almost abolished when liver microsomes were pretreated with ketoconazole or with an inhibitory anti-P450 3A4 IgG. The GSH adducts also were detected in incubations of raloxifene with rat or human hepatocytes, while the corresponding N-acetylcysteine adducts were identified in the bile and urine from rats treated orally with the drug at 5 mg/kg. Taken together, these data indicate that P450 3A4-mediated bioactivation of raloxifene in vitro is accompanied by loss of enzyme activity. The significance of these findings with respect to the clinical use of raloxifene remains to be determined.  相似文献   

11.
Luteolin (LUT), an active ingredient in traditional Chinese medicines and an integral part of the human diet, has shown promising pharmacological activities with a great potential for clinical use. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of cytochrome P450 (CYP450)‐mediated reactive ortho‐benzoquinone metabolites formation and glutathione (GSH) depletion in LUT‐induced cytotoxicity in primary rat hepatocytes. A reactive ortho‐benzoquinone metabolite was identified by liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry (LC‐MS/MS) in rat liver microsomes (RLMs) and rat hepatocytes. Using a specific chemical inhibitor method, the CYP3A subfamily was found to be responsible for the reactive metabolite formation in RLMs. Induction of CYP3A by dexamethasone enhanced LUT‐induced cytotoxicity, whereas inhibition of CYP3A by ketoconazole (Keto) decreased the cytotoxicity. The cytotoxicity and cell apoptosis induced by LUT were related to the amount of reactive metabolite formation. Furthermore, Keto inhibited the LUT‐induced GSH exhaustion. The cytotoxicity was significantly enhanced by pretreatment with L‐buthionine sulfoximine to deplete the intracellular GSH. A time course experiment showed that GSH depletion by LUT was not via oxidation of GSH and occurred prior to the increase in 2', 7'‐dichlorofluorescein in hepatocytes. Collectively, these data suggest that CYP3A‐mediated reactive metabolite formation plays a critical role in LUT‐induced hepatotoxicity, and the direct GSH depletion is an initiating event in LUT‐mediated cytotoxicity in primary rat hepatocytes. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent organic pollutants that exhibit various toxic effects in animals and exposed human populations. The molecular mechanisms of PCB toxicity have been attributed to the toxicological properties of its metabolites, such as hydroquinones, formed by cytochrome‐P‐450 oxidation. The effects of PCB hydroquinone metabolites towards freshly isolated rat hepatocytes were investigated. Hydroquinones can be oxidized to semiquinones and/or quinone metabolites. These metabolites can conjugate glutathione or can oxidize glutathione as a result of redox cycling. This depletes hepatocyte glutathione, which can inhibit cellular defence mechanisms, causing cell death and an increased susceptibility to oxidative stress. However in the following, glutathione‐depleted hepatocytes became more resistant to the hydroquinone metabolites of PCBs. This suggested that their glutathione conjugates were toxic and that there was a third type of quinone toxicity mechanism which involved a hydrogen peroxide‐accelerated autoxidation of the hydroquinones to form toxic electrophilic quinone and semiquinone–glutathione conjugates. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Compound I, (2-[3-[(2,2-difluoro-2(2-pyridyl)ethyl)amino]-6-methyl-2-oxohydropyrazinyl]-N-[(3-fluoro(2-pyridyl))methyl]acetamide, is a potent competitive inhibitor of thrombin that reacts stoichiometrically with the protease. Compounds of this class possess therapeutic potential as anticoagulation agents. During the metabolic characterization of compound I, evidence was obtained for extensive metabolic activation of the pyrazinone ring system. Following administration of (14)C-labeled I to rats, significant levels of irreversibly bound radioactivity to proteins were detected in rat plasma and liver. LC/MS/MS analysis of metabolites formed in rat and human liver microsomes fortified with glutathione (GSH) revealed the presence of two structurally distinct GSH adducts. It is proposed that the first of these GSH conjugates derives from a two electron oxidation of the 6-methyl-2-oxo-3-aminopyrazinone moiety to afford an electrophilic imine-methide intermediate, while the second is formed by addition of GSH to an epoxide formed by P-450-mediated oxidation of the double bond at the 5-6 position of the pyrazinone ring. The addition of GSH to the proposed epoxide facilitates opening of the pyrazinone ring and a rearrangement to afford a stable, rearranged imidazole-containing metabolite. Elucidation of the metabolic activation pathways of I provides structural guidance for the design of thrombin inhibitors with decreased potential for the generation of chemically reactive intermediates.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of 3-monoalkyl- and 3,5-dialkyl-substitution on the cytotoxicity of paracetamol (PAR) in rat hepatocytes was studied. PAR is known to be bioactivated by the hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450 containing a mixed-function oxidase system presumably to N-acetyl-para-benzoquinone imine (NAPQI), a reactive metabolite which upon overdosage of the drug causes depletion of cellular glutathione (GSH) and hepatotoxicity. The four 3-mono- and the four 3,5-di-alkyl-substituted derivatives of PAR investigated in this study (R = CH3, C2H5, C3H7, C4H9) interacted with cytochrome P-450 giving rise to reverse type I spectral changes. Like PAR, all derivatives underwent cytochrome P-450-mediated oxidation to NAPQIs. In contrast to induction by phenobarbital, induction of cytochrome P-450 by 3-methylcholanthrene enhanced the microsomal oxidation of PAR and its derivatives. The NAPQIs formed from PAR and the 3-mono-alkyl derivatives by microsomal oxidation were found to conjugate with GSH and to oxidise GSH to GSSG. The NAPQIs formed from the 3,5-dialkyl-substituted derivatives, however, only oxidized GSH to GSSG. PAR and the 3-monoalkyl derivatives were found to deplete cellular GSH to about the same extent and to be equally toxic in freshly isolated hepatocytes from 3-methylcholanthrene treated rats. In contrast, the 3,5-di-alkyl-substituted derivatives of PAR did not affect the GSH levels and were not toxic in the hepatocytes, even at higher concentrations. It is suggested that the difference between the way of reacting of 3,5-dialkyl-NAPQIs and NAPQIs from PAR and 3-monoalkyl derivatives with thiols of cellular GSH and protein could account for the observed difference between the toxicity of the 3,5-dialkyl- and the 3-monoalkyl-substituted derivatives of PAR.  相似文献   

15.
The hypothesis that the psychological side effects associated with the anesthetic phencyclidine (PCP) may be caused by irreversible binding of PCP or its reactive metabolite(s) to critical macromolecules in the brain has resulted in numerous in vitro studies aimed at characterizing pathways of PCP bioactivation. The studies described herein extend the current knowledge of PCP metabolism and provide details on a previously unknown metabolic activation pathway of PCP. Following incubations with NADPH- and GSH-supplemented human and rat liver microsomes and recombinant P450 2B enzymes, two sulfhydryl conjugates with MH+ ions at 547 and 482 Da, respectively, were detected by LC/MS/MS. Shebley et al. [(2006) Drug Metab. Dispos. 34, 375-383] have also observed the GSH conjugate 1 with MH+ at 547 Da in PCP incubations with rat P450 2B1 and rabbit P450 2B4 isoforms fortified with NADPH and GSH. The molecular weight of 1 is consistent with a bioactivation pathway involving Michael addition of the sulfhydryl nucleophile to the putative 2,3-dihydropyridinium metabolite of PCP obtained via a four-electron oxidation of the piperidine ring in the parent compound. The mass spectrum of the novel GSH adduct 2 with an MH+ ion at 482 Da was suggestive of a unique PCP bioactivation pathway involving initial ortho- or para-hydroxylation of the phenyl ring in PCP followed by spontaneous decomposition to piperidine and an electrophilic quinone methide intermediate, which upon reaction with GSH yielded adduct 2. The LC retention times and mass spectral properties of enzymatically generated 2 were identical to those of a reference standard obtained via reaction of GSH with synthetic p-hydroxyPCP in phosphate buffer (pH 7.4, 37 degrees C). 1H NMR and 13C-distortionless enhancement by polarization transfer (DEPT) NMR spectral studies on synthetically generated 2 suggested that the structural integrity of the p-hydroxyphenyl and cyclohexyl rings likely was preserved and that the site of GSH addition was the benzylic carbon joining the two scaffolds. The formation of 2 in human microsomes was reduced upon addition of the dual P450 2C19/P450 2B6 inhibitor (+)- N-3-benzylnirvanol. Consistent with this finding, both recombinant P450 2B6 and P450 2C19 catalyzed PCP bioactivation to 2. In the absence of GSH, synthetic p-hydroxyPCP underwent rapid decomposition (t1/2 approximately 5.2 min) to afford p-hydroxyphenylcyclohexanol and p-hydroxyphenylcyclohexene, presumably via the quinone methide intermediate. Overall, our findings on the facile degradation of synthetic p-hydroxyPCP to yield an electrophilic quinone methide intermediate capable of reacting with nucleophiles, including GSH and water, suggest an inherent instability of the putative phenolic PCP metabolite. Thus, if formed enzymatically in vivo, p-hydroxyPCP may not require further metabolism to liberate the quinone methide, which can then react with macromolecules. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a quinone methide reactive intermediate obtained in human-liver microsomal metabolism of PCP.  相似文献   

16.
Tamoxifen is widely prescribed for the treatment of hormone-dependent breast cancer, and it has recently been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the chemoprevention of this disease. However, long-term usage of tamoxifen has been linked to increased risk of developing endometrial cancer in women. One of the suggested pathways leading to the potential toxicity of tamoxifen involves its oxidative metabolism to 4-hydroxytamoxifen, which may be further oxidized to an electrophilic quinone methide. The resulting quinone methide has the potential to alkylate DNA and may initiate the carcinogenic process. To further probe the chemical reactivity and toxicity of such an electrophilic species, we have prepared the 4-hydroxytamoxifen quinone methide chemically and enzymatically, examined its reactivity under physiological conditions, and quantified its reactivity with GSH. Interestingly, this quinone methide is unusually stable; its half-life under physiological conditions is approximately 3 h, and its half-life in the presence of GSH is approximately 4 min. The reaction between 4-hydroxytamoxifen quinone methide and GSH appears to be a reversible process because the quinone methide GSH conjugates slowly decompose over time, regenerating the quinone methide as indicated by LC/MS/MS data. The tamoxifen GSH conjugates were detected in microsomal incubations with 4-hydroxytamoxifen; however, none were observed in breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7) perhaps because very little quinone methides is formed. Toremifene, which is a chlorinated analogue of tamoxifen, undergoes similar oxidative metabolism to give 4-hydroxytoremifene, which is further oxidized to the corresponding quinone methide. The toremifene quinone methide has a half-life of approximately 1 h under physiological conditions, and its rate of reaction in the presence of excess GSH is approximately 6 min. More detailed analyses have indicated that the 4-hydroxytoremifene quinone methide reacts with two molecules of GSH and loses chlorine to give the corresponding di-GSH conjugates. The reaction mechanism likely involves an episulfonium ion intermediate which may contribute to the potential cytotoxic effects of toremifene. Similar to what was observed with 4-hydroxytamoxifen, 4-hydroxytoremifene was metabolized to di-GSH conjugates in microsomal incubations at about 3 times the rate of 4-hydroxytamoxifen, although no conjugates were detected with MCF-7 cells. Finally, these data suggest that quinone methide formation may not make a significant contribution to the cytotoxic and genotoxic effects of tamoxifen and toremifene.  相似文献   

17.
Secondary and tertiary alicyclic amines are widely found in pharmaceuticals and environmental compounds. The formation of iminium ions as reactive intermediates in the metabolic activation of alicyclic amines has previously been investigated in radiometric assays where radiolabeled cyanide is typically employed. In this paper, we report a relatively high throughput LC-MS/MS method for the detection of the nonradiolabeled cyanide adduct formed in rat or human liver microsomal incubations via constant neutral loss scan followed by structural characterization using product ion scan on a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer. A total of 14 alicyclic amine compounds were investigated with the cyanide trapping LC-MS/MS screen and also with the glutathione (GSH) trapping screen, a well-established and commonly employed technique for reactive metabolite screening. Our results are found to be in general agreement with the previous metabolism reports for these compounds, demonstrating the effectiveness, speed, and simplicity of the cyanide trapping LC-MS/MS method to study the iminium ion intermediates from alicyclic amines and its complementarities to GSH trapping method for reactive metabolite screenings.  相似文献   

18.
  1. 4-Vinylphenol (4VP) has been identified as a minor urinary metabolite of styrene in rat and human volunteers. This compound has been shown to be more hepatotoxic and pneumotoxic than both styrene and styrene oxide at lower doses in rats and mice. To explore the possible toxicity mechanism of 4VP, the current study was conducted to investigate the metabolism of 4VP, the glutathione (GSH) conjugation of the metabolites of 4VP and its cytochrome P450 (CYP) specificity in epoxidation in different microsomes in vitro.

  2. Incubations of 4VP with mouse lung microsomes afforded two major metabolites which were identified as 4-(2-oxiranyl)-phenol of 4VP (4VPO) and 4VP catechol. 4VPO was found to react with GSH to form GSH conjugate and 4VP catechol was found to further be metabolized to electrophilic species which react with GSH to form the corresponding 4VP catechol GSH conjugates. Relative formation rates for those GSH conjugates and the regioisomer formation of 4VPO-GSH conjugates with both inhibitors of CYP 2F2 and CYP 2E1 in microsomal incubation condition were also investigated.

  3. This present study provides better insight on the lung toxicity seen with 4VP, the toxic metabolite of commercial styrene.

  相似文献   

19.
Diclofenac is widely used in the treatment of, for example, arthritis and muscle pain. The use of diclofenac has been associated with hepatotoxicity, which has been linked to the formation of reactive metabolites. Diclofenac can be metabolized to 4'-OH- and 5-OH-diclofenac, both of which are able to form quinone imines capable of reacting with, for example, GSH and nucleophilic groups in proteins. Electrochemistry has been shown to be a suitable tool for mimicking some types of oxidative drug metabolism and for studying the formation of reactive metabolites. In these studies, the electrochemical oxidation of diclofenac to a +16 Da metabolite was shown to be identical to a synthetic standard of 5-OH-diclofenac. Furthermore, two different experimental designs were investigated with respect to the electrochemical oxidation of 4'-OH- and 5-OH-diclofenac. In the first approach, the oxidized sample was collected in an aqueous solution of GSH, whereas in the other approach, GSH was added to the sample before the oxidation was performed. From these electrochemical oxidations, a range of GSH conjugates of 4'-OH- and 5-OH-diclofenac were observed and characterized by MS/MS. This allowed the development of sensitive LC-MS methods in order to detect the GSH conjugates from in vivo (rat bile) and in vitro (human liver microsomes (HLM), rat liver microsomes (RLM), and rat hepatocytes) samples. A wide range of mono-, di-, and triglutathionyl conjugates were detected in the in vitro and in vivo samples. It was also observed that 5-OH-diclofenac formed GSH conjugates with RLM and HLM without addition of NADPH, whereas GSH conjugate formation of 4'-OH-diclofenac was NADPH-dependent. This indicated that 5-OH-diclofenac was prone to auto-oxidation. The oxidation potentials of the two hydroxy metabolites were determined by cyclic voltammetry. A difference of 69 mV was observed between the two oxidation potentials, which in part may explain the extent of auto-oxidation for 5-OH-diclofenac. In conclusion, it was shown that electrochemical oxidation was capable of mimicking the metabolic hydroxylation of diclofenac to 5-OH-diclofenac. Furthermore, electrochemical oxidation was used to generate a range of GSH conjugates of 4'-OH- and 5-OH-diclofenac and a number of these conjugates were also detected in metabolism studies with microsomes (HLM/RLM) and freshly isolated rat hepatocytes, and in vivo in rat bile.  相似文献   

20.
A reactive metabolite may react covalently with proteins or DNA to form adducts that ultimately may lead to a toxic response. Reactive metabolites can be formed via, for example, cytochrome P450-mediated phase 1 reactions, and in this study, we report the development and evaluation of an electrochemical method for generating reactive metabolites. Paracetamol was used as a test compound to develop the method. The stability of the electrochemically generated N-acetyl-p-benzoquinoneimine (NAPQI) from paracetamol was investigated at 37 degrees C at pH 5.0, 7.4, and 9.0. The highest stability of NAPQI was observed at pH 7.4. The reaction rate between NAPQI and glutathione (GSH) was studied with cyclic voltammetry. NAPQI reacted quantitatively with GSH within 130 ms. The reactivity of NAPQI toward other nucleophiles was investigated, and for the reaction with N-acetyltyrosine, a time-dependent formation of a conjugate with N-acetyltyrosine was observed from 0 to 4 min. The applicability of the method was evaluated with compounds that were able to form quinone imines (amodiaquine), quinones (3-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyanisole and p-cresol), imine methides (3-methylindole; trimethoprim), quinone methides (3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxytoluene), and nitrenium ions (clozapine). The compounds were oxidized in an analytical electrochemical cell, and the formed reactive metabolites were trapped with GSH. The samples were then analyzed by LC-MS and LC-MS/MS. For comparison, all compounds were incubated with GSH in rat and human liver microsomes, and the formation of GSH conjugates was compared with that observed by electrochemical oxidation. Furthermore, the electrochemical method was used to synthesize a GSH conjugate of clozapine, which made it possible to obtain structural information by NMR. In summary, a high degree of similarity was observed between the conjugates identified from electrochemical oxidation and GSH conjugates identified from incubation with liver microsomes. In conclusion, we have developed a method that is useful for studies on reactive metabolites and furthermore can be scaled up for the synthesis of GSH conjugates for NMR.  相似文献   

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