6533b858fe1ef96bd12b6dc5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

In vitro glucuronidation of 7-hydroxycoumarin derivatives in intestine and liver microsomes of Beagle dogs

Hannu RaunioRabia JehangirMoshe FinelRisto O. JuvonenOlli KärkkäinenOlli T. PentikäinenJohanna TrobergJuhani HuuskonenAki T. Heikkinen

subject

entsyymitColonGlucuronidationPharmaceutical Science02 engineering and technologyliver030226 pharmacology & pharmacyBeaglekoira7-hydroxycoumarin derivative03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineDogsGlucuronidesPharmacokineticsMicrosomesenzyme kineticsIntestine SmallmedicineAnimalsHumansUmbelliferonesGlucuronosyltransferasekumariinitaineenvaihduntachemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryglucuronidationdog intestinemaksaMetabolismlääkeaineet021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCoumarinSmall intestineEnzymemedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistryLiverfarmakokinetiikkasuolistoMicrosomekoe-eläinmallit0210 nano-technology

description

Beagle dog is a standard animal model for evaluating nonclinical pharmacokinetics of new drug candidates. Glucuronidation in intestine and liver is an important first-pass drug metabolic pathway, especially for phenolic compounds. This study evaluated the glucuronidation characteristics of several 7-hydroxycoumarin derivatives in beagle dog's intestine and liver in vitro. To this end, glucuronidation rates of 7-hydroxycoumarin (compound 1), 7-hydroxy-4-trifluoromethylcoumarin (2), 6-methoxy-7-hydroxycoumarin (3), 7-hydroxy-3-(4-tolyl)coumarin (4), 3-(4-fluorophenyl)coumarin (5), 7-hydroxy-3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)coumarin (6), 7-hydroxy-3-(4-methoxyphenyl)coumarin (7), and 7-hydroxy-3-(1H-1,2,4-tirazole)coumarin (8) were determined in dog's intestine and liver microsomes, as well as recombinant dog UGT1A enzymes. The glucuronidation rates of 1, 2 and 3 were 3–10 times higher in liver than in small intestine microsomes, whereas glucuronidation rates of 5, 6, 7 and 8 were similar in microsomes from both tissues. In the colon, glucuronidation of 1 and 2 was 3–5 times faster than in small intestine. dUGT1A11 glucuronidated efficiently all the substrates and was more efficient catalyst for 8 than any other dUGT1A. Other active enzymes were dUGT1A2 that glucuronidated efficiently 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, while dUGT1A10 glucuronidated efficiently 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 7. Kinetic analyses revealed that the compounds’ Km values varied between 1.1 (dUGT1A10 and 2) and 250 µM (dUGT1A7 and 4). The results further strengthen the concept that dog intestine has high capacity for glucuronidation, and that different dUGT1As mediate glucuronidation with distinct substrates selectivity in dog and human. peerReviewed

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201911054726