| Literature DB >> 11911838 |
Ravi K Nandigama1, Paige Newton-Vinson, Dale E Edmondson.
Abstract
Recent studies with rat tissue preparations have suggested that the anorectic drug phentermine inhibits serotonin degradation by inhibition of monoamine oxidase (MAO) A with a K(I) value of 85-88 microM, a potency suggested to be similar to that of other reversible MAO inhibitors (Ulus et al., Biochem Pharmacol 2000;59:1611-21). Since there are known differences between rats and humans in substrate and inhibitor specificities of MAOs, the interactions of phentermine with recombinant human purified preparations of MAO A and MAO B were determined. Human MAO A was competitively inhibited by phentermine with a K(I) value of 498+/-60 microM, a value approximately 6-fold weaker than that observed for the rat enzyme. Phentermine was also observed to be a competitive inhibitor of recombinant human liver MAO B with a K(I) value of 375+/-42 microM, a value similar to that observed with the rat enzyme (310-416 microM). In contrast to the behavior with rat tissue preparations, no slow time-dependent behavior was observed for phentermine inhibition of purified soluble human MAO preparations. Difference absorption spectral studies showed similar perturbations of the covalent FAD moieties of both human MAO A and MAO B, which suggests a similar mode of binding in both enzymes. These data suggest that phentermine inhibition of human MAO A (or of MAO B) is too weak to be of pharmacological relevance.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11911838 DOI: 10.1016/s0006-2952(02)00840-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Pharmacol ISSN: 0006-2952 Impact factor: 5.858