| Literature DB >> 26899628 |
Yumi Nishiya1, Daisuke Nakai1, Yoko Urasaki1, Hideo Takakusa1, Satoru Ohsuki2, Yuji Iwano2, Takanori Yasukochi2, Tomoko Takayama3, Shohei Bazyo3, Chikahiro Oza3, Atsushi Kurihara1, Ronald E Savage4, Takashi Izumi5.
Abstract
1. In prior studies, it has been shown that tivantinib is extensively metabolized in humans to many oxidative metabolites and glucuronides. In order to identify the responsible enzymes, we investigated the in vitro metabolism of tivantinib and its four major circulating metabolites. 2. The primary isoforms involved in the elimination of tivantinib were CYP2C19 and CYP3A4/5. CYP2C19 showed catalytic activity for the formation of M5 (hydroxylated metabolite), but not for M4 (a stereoisomer of M5), whereas CYP3A4/5 catalyzed the formation of both metabolites. For the elimination of M4, M5 and M8 (keto-metabolite), CYP3A4/5 was the major cytochrome P450 isoform and UGT1A9 was mainly involved in the glucuronidation of M4 and M5. 3. ADH4 was identified as one of the major alcohol dehydrogenase isoforms contributing to the formation of M6 (sequential keto-metabolite of M4 and M5) and M8. The substrate preference of ADH for M4, and not M5, was observed in the formation of M6. 4. In conclusion, CYP2C19, CYP3A4/5, UGT1A9 and ADH4 were the primary drug metabolizing enzymes involved in the in vitro metabolism of tivantinib and its metabolites. The stereoselective hydroxylation by CYP2C19 and substrate stereoselectivity of ADH4-catalyzed oxidation in the in vitro metabolism of tivantinib was discovered.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol dehydrogenase; UDP-glucuronosyltransferase; c-Met inhibitor; cytochrome P450; enzyme identification; human
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26899628 DOI: 10.3109/00498254.2016.1144896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Xenobiotica ISSN: 0049-8254 Impact factor: 1.908