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Enhanced photo(geno)toxicity of demethylated chlorpromazine metabolites

Authors :
Universitat Politècnica de València. Instituto Universitario Mixto de Tecnología Química - Institut Universitari Mixt de Tecnologia Química
Universitat Politècnica de València. Departamento de Química - Departament de Química
Generalitat Valenciana
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad
Palumbo, Fabrizio
García Lainez, Guillermo
Limones Herrero, Daniel
Coloma, María Dolores
Escobar, Javier
Jiménez Molero, María Consuelo
Miranda Alonso, Miguel Ángel
Andreu Ros, María Inmaculada
Universitat Politècnica de València. Instituto Universitario Mixto de Tecnología Química - Institut Universitari Mixt de Tecnologia Química
Universitat Politècnica de València. Departamento de Química - Departament de Química
Generalitat Valenciana
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad
Palumbo, Fabrizio
García Lainez, Guillermo
Limones Herrero, Daniel
Coloma, María Dolores
Escobar, Javier
Jiménez Molero, María Consuelo
Miranda Alonso, Miguel Ángel
Andreu Ros, María Inmaculada
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Chlorpromazine (CPZ) is an anti-psychotic drug widely used to treat disorders such as schizophrenia or manic-depression. Unfortunately, CPZ exhibits undesirable side effects such as phototoxic and photoallergic reactions in humans. In general, the influence of drug metabolism on this type of reactions has not been previously considered in photosafety testing. Thus, the present work aims to investigate the possible photo(geno)toxic potential of drug metabolites, using CPZ as an established reference compound. In this case, the metabolites selected for the study are demethylchlorpromazine (DMCPZ), didemethylchlorpromazine (DDMCPZ) and chlorpromazine sulfoxide (CPZSO). The demethylated CPZ metabolites DMCPZ and DDMCPZ maintain identical chromophore to the parent drug. In this work, it has been found that the nature of the aminoalkyl side chain modulates the hydrophobicity and the photochemical properties (for instance, the excited state lifetimes), but it does not change the photoreactivity pattern, which is characterized by reductive photodehalogenation, triggered by homolytic carbon-chlorine bond cleavage with formation of highly reactive aryl radical intermediates. Accordingly, these metabolites are phototoxic to cells, as revealed by the 3T3 NRU assay; their photo-irritation factors are even higher than that of CPZ. The same trend is observed in photogenotoxicity studies, both with isolated and with cellular DNA, where DMCPZ and DDMCPZ are more active than CPZ itself. In summary, side-chain demethylation of CPZ, as a consequence of Phase I biotransformation, does not result a photodetoxification. Instead, it leads to metabolites that exhibit in an even enhanced photo(geno)toxicity.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
TEXT, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1138439855
Document Type :
Electronic Resource