Detoxification By The Liver Flashcards
What is a xenobiotic?
A xenobiotic is a chemical substance found within an organism that is not naturally produced or expected to be present within the organism.
What is a biotransformation reaction?
Phase I
Phase II
Biotransformation is the process by which a substance changes from one chemical to another (transformed) by a chemical reaction within the body.
Phase I = reactions introduce or expose functional groups on the drug with the goal of increasing the polarity of the compound
Phase II = reactions are conjugation reactions where a molecule normally present in the body is added to the reactive site of the Phase I metabolite . The result is a conjugated metabolite that is more water soluble (hydrophilicity) than the original xenobiotic or Phase I metabolite.
Where do biotransformations usually occur?
They occur in the liver in the SER!!!
What is a cytochrome P450 enzyme?
Function?
The cytochromes P450 (P450s or CYPs) constitute a large heme enzyme superfamily, members of which catalyse oxidative and other transformation of a wide range of organic substrates, and whose functions are crucial to xenobiotic metabolism.
THEY ARE INVOLVED IN PHASE I REACTIONS
Present in SER
Oxidise substrate
Have a cytochrome reductase subunit which uses NADPH
They generate a free radical component
There activity is induce less by drugs, diet etc
placed into families based on % of a.a that the cytochromes share
How can cytochrome P450 enzymes be induced?
By diet example
Activities such as smoking and some drugs can result in decreased concentrations of drugs as they are broken down quicker. Other drugs can cause increased concentrations of medications as they are not broken down.
Grapefruit juice - inhibits cytochrome involved in statin metabolism — increased statin concentration in the blood = toxic
Active drugs — new active metabolites
Active drug — inactive metabolite
Prodrug — active agent
Inactive drug to active metabolite
Active drug to reactive intermediate
Pro drug = inactive drug - converted to active in liver
E.g paracetamol — reactive intermediate
Ethanol causes more build up of its toxic intermediate — hepatocyte damage
Examples of phase I reactions:
Oxidation : Hydroxylation Deamination (remove NH) Oxygen addition Hydrogen removal
Reduction:
Hydrogen addition
Oxygen removal
Example of phase II reaction:
Sulphation
Methylation
Acylation
Phase I ration = expose fucntional group for a phase II reaction
Ethanol metabolism doesn’t fit into either Phase
Effect on liver?
• Most of the ethanol in the body is broken down in the liver by an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), which transforms ethanol into a toxic compound called acetaldehyde.
Acetaldehyde is converted to acetate by oxidation, which is then broken down to CO2 and H2O mostly.
A small amount Is passed out via urine
If the liver can not oxidise acetaldehyde due to being overwhelmed it builds up and leads to alcohol induced hepatitis