Abstract
The glucuronidation of a number of commonly used hepatic uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase drug substrates has been studied in human tissue microsomes. Prediction of in vivo hepatic drug glucuronidation from liver microsomal data yielded a consistent 10-fold underprediction. Consideration of protein binding was observed to be pivotal when predicting in vivo glucuronidation for acid substrates. Studies using human intestinal microsomes demonstrated the majority of drugs to be extensively glucuronidated such that the intrinsic clearance (CLint) of ethinylestradiol (CLint = 1.3 μl/min/mg) was twice that obtained using human liver microsomes (CLint = 0.7 μl/min/mg). The potential extrahepatic in vivo glucuronidation was calculated for a range of drug substrates from human microsomal data. These results indicate the contribution of intestinal drug glucuronidation to systemic drug clearance to be much less than either hepatic or renal glucuronidation. Therefore, data obtained with intestinal microsomes may be misleading in the assessment of the contribution of this organ to systemic glucuronidation. The use of hepatocytes to assess metabolic stability for drugs predominantly metabolized by glucuronidation was also investigated. Metabolic clearances for a range of drugs obtained using fresh preparations of human hepatocytes predicted accurately hepatic clearance reported in vivo. The use of cryopreserved hepatocytes as an in vitro tool to predict in vivo metabolism was also assessed with an excellent correlation obtained for a number of extensively glucuronidated drugs (R2 = 0.80, p < 0.001).
Footnotes
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This work was funded by AstraZeneca and The Wellcome Trust.
- Abbreviations:
- CLint
- intrinsic clearance
- P450
- cytochrome P450
- HKM
- human kidney microsomes
- UGT
- uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase
- HLM
- human liver microsomes
- UDPGA
- uridine diphosphate glucuronic acid
- HIM
- human intestine microsomes
- HPLC
- high-performance liquid chromatography
- BSA
- bovine serum albumin
- fu
- unbound fraction in plasma
- fu inc
- unbound fraction in in vitro microsomal incubation
- HH
- human hepatocyte
- Received September 7, 2001.
- Accepted December 12, 2001.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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