Metabolism of taxol by human hepatic microsomes and liver slices: participation of cytochrome P450 3A4 and an unknown P450 enzyme.
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- Vol. 54 (15) , 4026-35
Abstract
Incubation of taxol with human hepatic microsomal fractions or freshly isolated human liver slices yields three metabolite high performance liquid chromatography peaks, metabolite A, metabolite B, and 6 alpha-hydroxytaxol. These metabolites are formed in patients given taxol, with 6 alpha-hydroxytaxol formation representing the principal biotransformation pathway. Metabolite B and 6 alpha-hydroxytaxol are shown to be products of different, highly regioselective cytochrome P-450 (P450) enzymes, while metabolite A results from stepwise metabolism by each of these enzymes. Correlation of metabolite B formation with P450 3A markers was good (r2 = 0.91-0.94), but the correlation of 6 alpha-hydroxytaxol formation with markers for several P450 enzymes was poor. Chemical inhibitors that selectively inhibited metabolite B formation (troleandomycin, cyclosporine), that selectively inhibited 6 alpha-hydroxytaxol formation (naringenin, quercetin), or that nonselectively inhibited both pathways (felodipine, ketoconazole) were found. Metabolite B formation was selectively reduced by anti-P450 3A4 antibodies. Expressed human P450 3A4 preparations were efficient catalysts of metabolite B formation; no expressed P450 preparation tested showed a capacity for catalyzing taxane 6 alpha-hydroxylation reactions. The combined results of several experimental approaches show that P450 3A4 is the major catalyst of metabolite B formation and that the identity of the P450 enzyme or enzymes responsible for 6 alpha-hydroxytaxol formation cannot be assigned with certainty.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: