HEPATIC-METABOLISM OF TOLBUTAMIDE - CHARACTERIZATION OF THE FORM OF CYTOCHROME-P-450 INVOLVED IN METHYL HYDROXYLATION AND RELATIONSHIP TO INVIVO DISPOSITION

  • 1 June 1987
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 241  (3) , 1112-1119
Abstract
In vitro investigations suggest the same human liver cytochrome P-450 that catalyzes S-mephenytoin 4-hydroxylation, P-450MP, is responsible for methyl hydroxylation of the oral hypoglycemic agent tolbutamide. Tolbutamide hydroxylase activity copurified with P-450MP; electrophoretically homogeneous P-450MP catalyzed both tolbutamide and S-mephenytoin hydroxylation. Each substrate competitively inhibited hydroxylation of the other, and anti-P-450MP inhibited tolbutamide hydroxylation in human liver microsomes. Significant correlation between tolbutamide and S-mephenytoin hydroxylase activities was seen in a set of human liver samples. These findings suggested that subjects with a genetically determined impairment in ability to hydroxylate mephenytoin might also have deficient tolbutamide metabolism. However, plasma tolbutamide concentration-time profiles and urinary excretion of metabolites formed via the hydroxylation pathway were similar in four phenotypically poor and six extensive metabolizers of mephenytoin. We suggest that alteration of a substrate binding site of P-450MP may reduce its ability to hydroxylate S-mephenytoin but not tolbutamide.