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Continuum of Host-Gut Microbial Co-metabolism: Host CYP3A4/3A7 are Responsible for Tertiary Oxidations of Deoxycholate Species

Authors :
Ke Lan
Wen-Lin Wu
Yan Ni
Yu-Jie Chen
Jia Miao
Kim L. R. Brouwer
Ling-Zhi Gao
Hong Chen
Mingming Su
Ping-Ping Zhu
Shan-Shan Yin
Changxiao Liu
Liang Xu
Wei Jia
Jian Zhang
Source :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition. 47:283-294
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Society for Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET), 2019.

Abstract

The gut microbiota modifies endogenous primary bile acids (BAs) to produce exogenous secondary BAs, which may be further metabolized by cytochrome P450 enzymes (P450s). Our primary aim was to examine how the host adapts to the stress of microbe-derived secondary BAs by P450-mediated oxidative modifications on the steroid nucleus. Five unconjugated tri-hydroxyl BAs that were structurally and/or biologically associated with deoxycholate (DCA) were determined in human biologic samples by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry in combination with enzyme-digestion techniques. They were identified as DCA-19-ol, DCA-6β-ol, DCA-5β-ol, DCA-6α-ol, DCA-1β-ol, and DCA-4β-ol based on matching in-laboratory synthesized standards. Metabolic inhibition assays in human liver microsomes and recombinant P450 assays revealed that CYP3A4 and CYP3A7 were responsible for the regioselective oxidations of both DCA and its conjugated forms, glycodeoxycholate (GDCA) and taurodeoxycholate (TDCA). The modification of secondary BAs to tertiary BAs defines a host liver (primary BAs)-gut microbiota (secondary BAs)-host liver (tertiary BAs) axis. The regioselective oxidations of DCA, GDCA, and TDCA by CYP3A4 and CYP3A7 may help eliminate host-toxic DCA species. The 19- and 4β-hydroxylation of DCA species demonstrated outstanding CYP3A7 selectivity and may be useful as indicators of CYP3A7 activity.

Details

ISSN :
1521009X and 00909556
Volume :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c67c3369501a532bb3869be02be4ff57
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/dmd.118.085670