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Isoform specificity of N-deacetyl ketoconazole by human and rabbit flavin-containing monooxygenases.
Drug Metab Dispos. 2000 Sep; 28(9):1083-6.DM

Abstract

N-Deacetyl ketoconazole (DAK) is the major metabolite of orally administered ketoconazole. This major metabolite has been demonstrated to be further metabolized predominately by the flavin-containing monooxygenases (FMOs) to the secondary hydroxylamine, N-deacetyl-N-hydroxyketoconazole (N-hydroxy-DAK) by adult and postnatal rat hepatic microsomes. Our current investigation evaluated the FMO isoform specificity of DAK in a pyrophosphate buffer (pH 8.8) containing the glucose 6-phosphate NADPH-generating system. cDNA-expressed human FMOs (FMO1, FMO3, and FMO5) and cDNA-expressed rabbit FMOs (FMO1, FMO2, FMO3, and FMO5) were used to assess the metabolism of DAK to its subsequent FMO-mediated metabolites by HPLC analysis. Human and rabbit cDNA-expressed FMO3 resulted in extensive metabolism of DAK in 1 h (71.2 and 64.5%, respectively) to N-hydroxy-DAK (48.2 and 47.7%, respectively) and two other metabolites, metabolite 1 (11.7 and 7.8%, respectively) and metabolite 3 (10.5 and 10.0%, respectively). Previous studies suggest that metabolite 1 is the nitrone formed after successive FMO-mediated metabolism of N-hydroxy-DAK. Moreover, these studies display similar metabolic profiles seen with adult and postnatal rat hepatic microsomes. The human and rabbit FMO1 metabolized DAK predominately to the N-hydroxy-DAK in 1 h (36.2 and 25.3%, respectively) with minimal metabolism to the other metabolites (</=5%). Rabbit FMO2 metabolized DAK to N-hydroxy-DAK (15.9%) and metabolite 1 (6.6%). Last, DAK did not appear to be a substrate for human or rabbit FMO5. Heat inactivation of cDNA-expressed FMOs abolished DAK metabolite formation. These results suggest that DAK is a substrate for human and rabbit FMO1 and FMO3, rabbit FMO2, but not human or rabbit FMO5.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331-3507, USA. Rosita.Rodriguez@orst.eduNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

10950853

Citation

Rodriguez, R J., and C L. Miranda. "Isoform Specificity of N-deacetyl Ketoconazole By Human and Rabbit Flavin-containing Monooxygenases." Drug Metabolism and Disposition: the Biological Fate of Chemicals, vol. 28, no. 9, 2000, pp. 1083-6.
Rodriguez RJ, Miranda CL. Isoform specificity of N-deacetyl ketoconazole by human and rabbit flavin-containing monooxygenases. Drug Metab Dispos. 2000;28(9):1083-6.
Rodriguez, R. J., & Miranda, C. L. (2000). Isoform specificity of N-deacetyl ketoconazole by human and rabbit flavin-containing monooxygenases. Drug Metabolism and Disposition: the Biological Fate of Chemicals, 28(9), 1083-6.
Rodriguez RJ, Miranda CL. Isoform Specificity of N-deacetyl Ketoconazole By Human and Rabbit Flavin-containing Monooxygenases. Drug Metab Dispos. 2000;28(9):1083-6. PubMed PMID: 10950853.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Isoform specificity of N-deacetyl ketoconazole by human and rabbit flavin-containing monooxygenases. AU - Rodriguez,R J, AU - Miranda,C L, PY - 2000/8/19/pubmed PY - 2000/10/7/medline PY - 2000/8/19/entrez SP - 1083 EP - 6 JF - Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals JO - Drug Metab Dispos VL - 28 IS - 9 N2 - N-Deacetyl ketoconazole (DAK) is the major metabolite of orally administered ketoconazole. This major metabolite has been demonstrated to be further metabolized predominately by the flavin-containing monooxygenases (FMOs) to the secondary hydroxylamine, N-deacetyl-N-hydroxyketoconazole (N-hydroxy-DAK) by adult and postnatal rat hepatic microsomes. Our current investigation evaluated the FMO isoform specificity of DAK in a pyrophosphate buffer (pH 8.8) containing the glucose 6-phosphate NADPH-generating system. cDNA-expressed human FMOs (FMO1, FMO3, and FMO5) and cDNA-expressed rabbit FMOs (FMO1, FMO2, FMO3, and FMO5) were used to assess the metabolism of DAK to its subsequent FMO-mediated metabolites by HPLC analysis. Human and rabbit cDNA-expressed FMO3 resulted in extensive metabolism of DAK in 1 h (71.2 and 64.5%, respectively) to N-hydroxy-DAK (48.2 and 47.7%, respectively) and two other metabolites, metabolite 1 (11.7 and 7.8%, respectively) and metabolite 3 (10.5 and 10.0%, respectively). Previous studies suggest that metabolite 1 is the nitrone formed after successive FMO-mediated metabolism of N-hydroxy-DAK. Moreover, these studies display similar metabolic profiles seen with adult and postnatal rat hepatic microsomes. The human and rabbit FMO1 metabolized DAK predominately to the N-hydroxy-DAK in 1 h (36.2 and 25.3%, respectively) with minimal metabolism to the other metabolites (</=5%). Rabbit FMO2 metabolized DAK to N-hydroxy-DAK (15.9%) and metabolite 1 (6.6%). Last, DAK did not appear to be a substrate for human or rabbit FMO5. Heat inactivation of cDNA-expressed FMOs abolished DAK metabolite formation. These results suggest that DAK is a substrate for human and rabbit FMO1 and FMO3, rabbit FMO2, but not human or rabbit FMO5. SN - 0090-9556 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/10950853/Isoform_specificity_of_N_deacetyl_ketoconazole_by_human_and_rabbit_flavin_containing_monooxygenases_ L2 - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&amp;pmid=10950853 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -