IDENTIFICATION OF THE RABBIT AND HUMAN CYTOCHROMES-P-450IIIA AS THE MAJOR ENZYMES INVOLVED IN THE N-DEMETHYLATION OF DILTIAZEM

  • 1 September 1990
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 18 (5), 711-719
Abstract
Oxidative metabolism of diltiazem (DTZ), a calcium channel blocker, was investigated in rabbit and human liver microsomes as well as in primary cultures of human hepatocytes. DTZ N-demethylation, the major metabolic pathway in man, was strongly increased by treatment of animals, patients, and hepatocyte cultures with rifampicin and other inducers of the P-450IIIA subfamily. In a reconstituted system with purified forms of P-450 and NADPH cytochrome P-450 reductase, P-450IIIA7 exhibited the highest DTZ N-demethylase activity. In both rabbit and human liver microsomes, this activity was highly correlated with erythromycin demethylase, a characteristic substrate of P-450IIIA, or with an immunoquantitated level of P-450IIIA, and was specifically inhibited by anti-P-450IIIIA7 polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies. Cyclosporin A, another specific substrate of P-450IIIA in rabbit and human, competitively inhibited DTZ N-demethylase in both species. In primary cultures of human hepatocytes treated with various inducers, including rifampicin, dexamethasone, phenobarbital, phenylbutazone or .beta.-naphthoflavone, the rate of release of N-demethyl-DTZ in the extracellular medium was highly correlated with the intracellular level of P-450IIIA, which appeared to be strongly induced by rifampicin and phenobarbital and to a lesser extent by dexamethasone and phenylbutazone. In aggregate, these results are consistent with the view that in both rabbit and human, cytochromes P-450 from the P-450IIIA subfamily are the major enzymes involved in the N-demethylation of DTZ. Accordingly, drugs which may be specific substrates or inducers of this P-450 are likely to influence both the side effects and the efficacy of this molecule.

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