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Cytochrome P450 2JGenes Are Expressed in Dogs, Cats, and Pigs, and Encode Functional Drug-Metabolizing Enzymes

Authors :
Uno, Yasuhiro
Murayama, Norie
Ijiri, Moe
Kawaguchi, Hiroaki
Yamato, Osamu
Shiraishi, Mitsuya
Asano, Atsushi
Teraoka, Hiroki
Mizukawa, Hazuki
Nakayama, Shouta M.M.
Ikenaka, Yoshinori
Ishizuka, Mayumi
Yamazaki, Hiroshi
Source :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition; 2022, Vol. 50 Issue: 11 p1434-1441, 8p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Cytochrome P450s (P450s) have been identified and analyzed in dogs and pigs, species that are often used in preclinical drug studies. Moreover, P450s are clinically important for drug therapy not only in humans, but also in species under veterinary care, including dogs and cats. In the present study, seven P450s homologous to human CYP2J2, namely, dog CYP2J2; cat CYP2J2; and pig CYP2J33, CYP2J35, CYP2J91, and CYP2J93, were newly identified and characterized, along with pig CYP2J34 previously identified. The cDNAs of these CYP2Js contain open reading frames of 502 amino acids, except for CYP2J35 (498 amino acids), and share high sequence identity (77%–80%) with human CYP2J2. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that dog and cat CYP2J2 were closely related, whereas pig CYP2Js formed a cluster. All seven CYP2Jgenes contain nine coding exons and are located in corresponding genomic regions, with the pig CYP2Jgenes forming a gene cluster. These CYP2J2 mRNAs were predominantly expressed in the small intestine with additional expression in the kidney and brain for dog CYP2J2 and pig CYP2J91 mRNAs, respectively. All seven CYP2Js metabolized human CYP2J2 substrates terfenadine, ebastine, and astemizole, indicating that they are functional enzymes. Dog CYP2J2 and pig CYP2J34 and CYP2J35 efficiently catalyzed ebastine primary hydroxylation and secondary carebastine formation at low substrate concentrations, just as human CYP2J2 does. Velocity-versus-substate plots exhibited sigmoidal relationships for dog CYP2J2, cat CYP2J2, and pig CYP2J33, indicating allosteric interactions. These results suggest that dog, cat, and pig CYP2Js have similar functional characteristics to human CYP2J2, with slight differences in ebastine and astemizole oxidations.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTDog CYP2J2; cat CYP2J2; and pig CYP2J33, CYP2J34, CYP2J35, CYP2J91, and CYP2J93, homologous to human CYP2J2, were identified and characterized by sequence, phylogenetic, and genomic structure analyses. Intestinal expression patterns of CYP2J mRNAs were characteristic in dogs, cats, and pigs. Dog, cat, and pig CYP2Js likely play roles as drug-metabolizing enzymes in the small intestine, similar to human CYP2J2.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00909556 and 1521009X
Volume :
50
Issue :
11
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs61023780
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.122.000930