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Diltiazem Inhibition of Cytochrome P-450 3A Activity is Due to Metabolite Intermediate Complex Formation

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Specialty Pharmacology
Date 1999 Aug 24
PMID 10454485
Citations 29
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Abstract

Diltiazem (DTZ) N-demethylation occurs by cytochrome P-450 (CYP) 3A based on the following observations: 1) a single enzyme Michaelis-Menten model of metabolite formation, 2) high correlations of DTZ N-demethylation activity to other CYP3A activities, 3) inhibition of DTZ N-demethylation activity by triacetyloleandomycin, and 4) DTZ N-demethylation activity by expressed CYP3A enzymes only. The mean K(m)s for DTZ N-demethylation in human liver microsomes and expressed CYP3A4(+b(5)) were 53 and 16 microM, respectively. A 30-min preincubation of DTZ in expressed CYPs inhibited CYP3A4(+b(5)) by 100%, of which 55% was due to formation of a metabolite intermediate complex (MIC), which is an inactive form of CYP. MIC was observed in human liver microsomes and cDNA-expressed CYP3A only. In experiments to assess simultaneous MIC formation and loss of CYP3A activity, DTZ caused greater than 80% inhibition of midazolam hydroxylation after a 60-min preincubation in human liver microsomes. The rate constants for MIC formation and loss of midazolam hydroxylation activity were equivalent for the line of best fit for both data sets, which illustrates that MIC formation causes the inhibition of CYP3A activity. The mechanistic inhibition was characterized in expressed CYP3A4(+b(5)), which exhibited a concentration-dependent formation of MIC by DTZ (1-100 microM) with an estimated k(inact) of 0.17 min(-1) and K(I) of 2.2 microM. The partition ratio for expressed CYP3A4(+b(5)) was substrate concentration dependent and varied from 13 to 86. This study showed that DTZ inhibition of CYP3A substrate metabolism occurs primarily by MIC formation.

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