Human cytochromes mediating N -demethylation of fluoxetine in vitro

Abstract
Biotransformation of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressant, fluoxetine, to its principal metabolite, norfluoxetine, was evaluated in human liver microsomes and in microsomes from transfected cell lines expressing pure human cytochromes. In human liver microsomes, formation of norfluoxetine from R,S-fluoxetine was consistent with Michaelis-Menten kinetics (mean Km = 33 μM), with evidence of substrate inhibition at high substrate concentrations in a number of cases. The reaction was minimally inhibited by coincubation with chemical probes inhibitory for P450-2D6 (quinidine), -1A2 (furafylline, α-naphthoflavone), and -2E1 (diethyldithiocarbamate). Substantial inhibition was produced by coincubation with sulfaphenazole (Ki = 2.8 μM), an inhibitory probe for P450-2C9, and by ketoconazole (Ki = 2.5 μM) and fluvoxamine (Ki = 5.2 μM). However, ketoconazole, relatively specific for P450-3A isoforms only at low concentrations, reduced norfluoxetine formation by only 20% at 1 μM, and triacetyloleandomycin (≥ 5 μM) reduced the velocity by only 20–25%. Microsomes from cDNA-transfected human lymphoblastoid cells containing human P450-2C9 produced substantial quantities of norfluoxetine when incubated with 100 μM fluoxetine. Smaller amounts of product were produced by P450-2C19 and -2D6, but no product was produced by P450-1A2, -2E1, or 3A4. Cytochrome P450-2C9 appears to be the principal human cytochrome mediating fluoxetine N-demethylation. P450-2C19 and -3A may make a further small contribution, but P450-2D6 is unlikely to make an important contribution.

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