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Differential CYP 2D6 metabolism alters primaquine pharmacokinetics

Authors :
Victor E. Zottig
Larry A. Walker
Gregory A. Reichard
Lisa H. Xie
Brittney Potter
Babu L. Tekwani
Christina K. Nolan
Qigui Li
Richard J. Sciotti
ThuLan Luong
Jason C. Sousa
H. M. T. Bandara Herath
Robert Paris
Sean R. Marcsisin
Lisa Read
N. P. Dhammika Nanayakkara
Ping Zhang
Chau Vuong
Jing Zhang
Dehui Duan
Philip L. Smith
Brandon S. Pybus
Source :
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy. 59(4)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Primaquine (PQ) metabolism by the cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2D family of enzymes is required for antimalarial activity in both humans (2D6) and mice (2D). Human CYP 2D6 is highly polymorphic, and decreased CYP 2D6 enzyme activity has been linked to decreased PQ antimalarial activity. Despite the importance of CYP 2D metabolism in PQ efficacy, the exact role that these enzymes play in PQ metabolism and pharmacokinetics has not been extensively studied in vivo . In this study, a series of PQ pharmacokinetic experiments were conducted in mice with differential CYP 2D metabolism characteristics, including wild-type (WT), CYP 2D knockout (KO), and humanized CYP 2D6 (KO/knock-in [KO/KI]) mice. Plasma and liver pharmacokinetic profiles from a single PQ dose (20 mg/kg of body weight) differed significantly among the strains for PQ and carboxy-PQ. Additionally, due to the suspected role of phenolic metabolites in PQ efficacy, these were probed using reference standards. Levels of phenolic metabolites were highest in mice capable of metabolizing CYP 2D6 substrates (WT and KO/KI 2D6 mice). PQ phenolic metabolites were present in different quantities in the two strains, illustrating species-specific differences in PQ metabolism between the human and mouse enzymes. Taking the data together, this report furthers understanding of PQ pharmacokinetics in the context of differential CYP 2D metabolism and has important implications for PQ administration in humans with different levels of CYP 2D6 enzyme activity.

Details

ISSN :
10986596
Volume :
59
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07484a5be50ae7d6f0802bf3ff98e64b