Lec 66: Drug Absorption and Distribution and Drug Metabolism I Flashcards
Identify the major metabolic pathways by which drugs are chemically modified.
- Phase I or Non-synthetic (drug is split)
- Phase II or Synthetic (something is added to the drug to make it more hydrophilic via conjugation)
Define the Phase I metabolic reaction.
Phase I metabolic reactions: HOR - Hydrolysis, Oxidation, Reduction Usually convert the parent drug to a polar metabolite by introducing or unmasking a functional group (-OH, NH2, SH)
Define the Phase II metabolic reaction.
Phase II metabolic reactions: *GAS* = Glucuronidation, Acetylation, Sulfation - Point is to increase polarity
- Conjugation with a polar or charged group
- require a donor molecule as source of conjugated group
- High capacity reactions (not rate limiting)
- Usually follow a non-synthetic (Phase I) reaction
- Facilitate excretion and usually inactivate
- Biological function
Name the major cytochrome P450 substrates for CYP1A2:
Substrates: Acetaminophen (important because of toxicity factor), Caffeine, Theophylline, Warfarin
Name the major cytochrome P450 substrates for CYP2A6:
Substrates: Warfarin (minor), Zidovudine
Name the major cytochrome P450 substrates for CYP2C9:
**S-Warfarin (CYP2C9 is the main enzyme that metabolizes the biologically active form of warafin)
Name the major cytochrome P450 substrates for CYP2C19:
Substrates: Diazepam, Omeprazole, Propanolol
Name the major cytochrome P450 substrates for CYP2D6
Substrates: Amitriptyline, Codeine (converts to morphine), Fluoxetine, Hydrocodone, Timolol
Name the major cytochrome P450 substrates for CYP2E1
Substrates: Acetaminophen, Ethanol
Name the major cytochrome P450 substrates for CYP3A4
*the really important one*
Substrates:
- steroids (testosterone, progesterone, cortisol, etc.)
- calcium channel blockers (nifedipine, diltiazem, verapamil)
- benzodiazepines (diazepam, triazolam)
- amiodarone
- **erythromycin (and other macrolide antibiotics)
- Can lead to toxicity if administered when CYP3A4 is blocked
Explain the critical steps in the P450 reaction pathway, including the roles of NADPH, cytochrome P450 reductase and molecular oxygen.
Net reaction is oxidation R-H -> R-OH
Requires:
- NADPH important Cofactor - used 2x
- molecular Oxygen
- Cytochrome P450 reductase
- Drug substrate (R-H) combines with oxidized (Fe3+) cytochrome P450 to form a binary complex.
- NADPH donates an electron to the flavoprotein, NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase, which in turn reduces the oxidized CYP450-drug complex.
- The same flavone reductase introduces a second electron (also from NADPH) to reduce molecular oxygen and form an “activated oxygen” - CYP450-drug complex.
- This complex transfers oxygen to the drug substrate to form the oxidized drug product (R-OH), liberates water, and leaves free oxidized (Fe3+) CYP450 to react with another drug molecule.
Identify other non-P450 Phase I reactions.
- Oxidation–Flavin monooxygenases, alcohol dehydrogenase, amine oxidases
- Hydrolysis–Particularly esterases and amidases
- Reduction–Nitro- and Azo- compound reduction by reductases
List the major conjugation reactions (Phase II).
- Glucuronidation (the major conjugation reaction)
- Sulfation
- Acetylation
- Glutathione conjugation
- Glycine conjugation
- Methylation
Explain mechanisms that result in increased (enzyme induction) or decreased (enzyme inhibition) rates of drug metabolism or altered distribution (through changes in drug transporter expression).
- Mechanism of enzyme induction: Ligand (substrate of metabolism enzyme) binds nuclear receptors which activate transcription of metabolic enzymes (CYP450 -> metabolize drugs; Conjugating enzymes; drug transporters). the metabolic enzyme then acts on the ligand or potentially other drugs in the body.
- Effect is increased metabolism of drugs:
- increased toxicity from metabolites
- Ineffective treatments due to drug being metabolized too fast
- Mechanism of enzyme inhibition: drugs that bind, modify, or compete for the substrates (like NADPH for P450 enzymes) of active metabolic enzymes.
- ex: erethormycin covalently binds to the heme group of P450 enzymes => inactivation
Recognize the factors (drugs, over-the-counter or herbal medications, dietary factors) that may influence drug metabolism in humans.
Nutrition:
- Grapefruit and grapefruit juice: a component of the juice binds to and inactivates CYP3A4
- Isosafrole, safrole: CYP1A1, CYP1A2 inhibitor - found in root beer and perfume.
- Ethanol: CYP2E1 inducer (note importance in acetaminophen metabolism)
- Charcoal broiling: CYP1A enzyme induction
- Tobacco (not really a food): CYP1A induction (benzo[a]pyrene)
- Cruciferous vegetables (like broccoli): CYP1A induction
Drug Classes Known to Cause Clinically Relevant Interactions:
- Anti-epileptics (low therapeutic index, CYP metabolism)
- Protease inhibitors (co-administration with CYP inducers, example: rifampin)
- Statins (metabolized by CYP3A enzymes in gut and liver)
- Warfarin (metabolized by CYPs; highly protein bound)
- Digoxin (multiple interactions, low therapeutic index)