| Literature DB >> 29117101 |
Christopher Trent Brewer1,2, Taosheng Chen3,4.
Abstract
Herbal supplements are a significant source of drug-drug interactions (DDIs), herb-drug interactions, and hepatotoxicity. Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes metabolize a large number of FDA-approved pharmaceuticals and herbal supplements. This metabolism of pharmaceuticals and supplements can be augmented by concomitant use of either pharmaceuticals or supplements. The xenobiotic receptors constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) and the pregnane X receptor (PXR) can respond to xenobiotics by increasing the expression of a large number of genes that are involved in the metabolism of xenobiotics, including CYP450s. Conversely, but not exclusively, many xenobiotics can inhibit the activity of CYP450s. Induction of the expression or inhibition of the activity of CYP450s can result in DDIs and toxicity. Currently, the United States (US) Food and Drug Administration does not require the investigation of the interactions of herbal supplements and CYP450s. This review provides a summary of herbal supplements that inhibit CYP450s, induce the expression of CYP450s, and/or whose toxicity is mediated by CYP450s.Entities:
Keywords: constitutive androstane receptor; cytochrome P450; drug-drug interactions; drug-herb interactions; drug-induced liver injury; herb-herb interactions; herb-induced liver injury; herbal supplement; pregnane X receptor; xenobiotic metabolism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29117101 PMCID: PMC5713322 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18112353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The effect of P450 inhibitors on drug toxicity. The parent compound can be the herbal supplement itself or a co-administered Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug. (A) Schematic of the general mechanism; (B) a specific example discussed in the text [5].
Figure 2The effect of P450 inducers on toxicity. The parent compound can be the herbal supplement itself or a co-administered FDA-approved drug. (A) Schematic of the general mechanism; (B,C) specific examples discussed in the text [10,11,12,13,14].
Figure 3The effect of compounds metabolized by the P450 system on toxicity. The parent compound can be the herbal supplement itself or a co-administered FDA-approved drug. (A) Schematic of the general mechanism; (B) a specific example discussed in the text [22,23,24].
Reports of herbal supplements that inhibit P450 activity or expression.
| Herbal Supplement | Preparation/Compound | Effect on P450 | CYP450 Reported |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mangosteen ( | Aqueous extract | Inhibition of activity [ | 2C8, 2C9, 2C19 |
| Black cohosh ( | Fukinolic acid and cimicfugic acids A and B | Inhibition of activity of purified enzymes [ | 1A2, 2D6, 2C9, 3A4 |
| Green tea * ( | (−)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate | Inhibition of activity in HLM (human liver micrsomes) and HIM (human intestinal microsomes) [ | 2B6, 2C8, 2C19, 2D6, 3A |
| Extract | Inhibition of activity in rat liver microsomes [ | 3a | |
| Menthol | Menthofuran | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 2A6 |
| Menthofuran | Inhibited coumarin 7-hyroxylation in purified enzymes [ | 2A6, 2A13 | |
| (−)-menthol * | Inhibited coumarin 7-hydroxylation in purified enzymes [ | 2A13, 2A6 | |
| Geniposide, extract | Decreased activity in rat liver microsomes [ | 3A4 | |
| Genipin | Inhibited activity and decreased mRNA and protein expression in HepG2 [ | 2C19, 3A4 | |
| Geniposide | Decreased activity in rat livers [ | 3a | |
| Garlic ( | Garlic oil | Inhibited activity reflected by 6-hydroxychlorzoxazone/chlorzaoxazone serum ratios in humans [ | 2E1 |
| Not noted | Inhibited activity reflected by decreased phenacetin metabolism in HLM [ | 1A2 | |
| Retrorsine | Inhibited activity in purified enzymes [ | 3A4 | |
| Grapefruit ( | Dhydrobergamottin, gergamottin | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 3A4 |
| Juice | Inhibited activity reflected by decreased midazolam concentrations in humans [ | 3A4 | |
| Saw palmetto ( | Extract | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 2C8 |
| Root Extract (pill) | Inhibition of activity reflected by decreased midazolam hydroxylation in humans [ | 3A4 | |
| Root Extract (pill) | Inhibition of activity as reflected by decreased caffeine metabolism in humans [ | 1A2 | |
| Marslinic acid, corosolic acid, ursolic acid | Inhibited the activity in HIM [ | 3A4 | |
| Cranberry ( | Extract | Inhibited activity of purified enzymes [ | 1A2, 2D6 |
| Milk thistle ( | Silybin, isosilybin | Decreased mRNA and inhibited PXR-mediated CYP-Luciferase activity in LS180 cell line [ | 3A4 |
| Inhibited promoter activity via hPXR [ | 3A4 | ||
| Tomato ( | Juice extract | Inhibited activity of purified enzymes [ | 3A4 |
| Capsicum ( | Dried and re-suspended in DMSO | Inhibited activity of purified enzymes [ | 3A4 |
| Potato ( | Dried and re-suspended in DMSO | Inhibited activity of purified enzymes [ | 1A2, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Eggplant ( | Dried and re-suspended in DMSO | Inhibited activity of purified enzymes [ | 1A2, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Sweet pepper ( | Dried and re-suspended in DMSO | Inhibited activity of purified enzymes [ | 1A2, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Black elderberry ( | Extract (pill) | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 1A2, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Fennel ( | Extract (tea) | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 1A2, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Horsetail ( | Extract (tea) | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 1A2, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Raspberry leaf ( | Extract (pill) | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 1A2, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Cinnamon ( | Inhibited activity in rat liver microsomes [ | 1a2, 2e1 | |
| Extract | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 2C9, 3A4 | |
| Ginger ( | Extract | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 2C9, 3A4 |
| Mace ( | Extract | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 2C9, 3A4 |
| Nutmeg ( | Extract | Inhibited activity in microsomes overexpressing CYP450 [ | 2C9, 3A4 |
| Valerian ( | Extract | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 2C8 |
| Madagascan medicinal plant ( | Ajmalicine | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 2D6 |
| Vindolene | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 2D6, 3A4 | |
| Serpentine | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 2D6, 3A4 | |
| Southern African medicinal plant ( | Extract | Inhibited activity in transfected microsomes [ | 3A4 |
| Southern African medicinal plant ( | Extract | Inhibited activity reflected by decreased testosterone hydroxylation in HLM [ | 3A4 |
| West African medicinal plants | Extract | Inhibited activity in transfected microsomes [ | 3A4, 3A5, 3A7 |
| West African medicinal plants | Extract | Inhibited activity in transfected microsomes [ | 3A4, 3A7 |
| Tanzanian medicinal plant | |||
| Tanzanian medicinal plant ( | Extract | Inhibited activity in transfected microsomes [ | 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Tanzanian medicinal plants | Extract | Inhibited activity in transfected microsomes [ | 2C9, 2C19, 3A4 |
| Tanzanian medicinal plants | Extract | Inhibited activity in transfected microsomes [ | 2C9, 3A4 |
| Peppermint ( | Oil | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 3A4 |
| Menthol * | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 3A4 | |
| Menthyl acetate | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 3A4 | |
| Ascorbyl palmitate | Inhibited activity in HLM [ | 3A4 | |
| Sesamin ( | Not noted | Inhibited activity reflected by decreased phenacetin, diclofenac, omeprazole, dextromethorphan, and midazolam metabolism in HLM [ | 1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 3A4 |
| Tumeric ( | Not noted | Inhibited activity reflected by decreased diclofenac, omeprazole, dextromethorphan, and midazolam metabolism in HLM [ | 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 3A4 |
| St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum) | Not noted | Inhibited activity reflected by decreased phenacetin, diclofenac, and midazolam metabolism in HLM [ | 1A2, 2C9, 3A4 |
Herbs, compounds, or preparations marked with an asterisk have been associated with alteration of P450 metabolism in human subjects or have been associated with hepatotoxicity and may be clinically significant.
Reports of herbal supplements with human Pregnane X Receptor (hPXR)-dependent or -independent induction of P450 expression.
| Herbal Supplement | Preparation/Compound | Effect on hPXR |
|---|---|---|
| Gan Gao-Licorice (Radix et Rhizoma Glycyrrhizae) | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Huang Qi- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Ji Xue Cao- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Ban Lan Gen- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Jin Yin Hua- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Hong Jing Tian- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Da Huang-Rhubarb (Radix et Rhizoma Rhei) | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Trans-resveratrol | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Fu Ling- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Bai Shao- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Sang Qi- | Extract * | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Chuan Xiong- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Dang Gui-Chinese angelica (Radix | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Ligustilide | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Sheng Di Huang-Rehmannia root (Radix Rehmanniae) | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Yin Yang Huo- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Di Gu Pi- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Bai Zhu- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Wu Wei Zi- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Schisantherin A | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Bai Shao- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Mai Dong- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Hu Zhang- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Huang Lian- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Berberine hydrochloride | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Yin Chen- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tian Hua Fen- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Shui Fei Ji- | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Zhi Zi-Gardenia fruit ( | Extract * | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Ren Shen–Ginseng (Radix et Rhizoma | Ginsenoside F2, protopanaxadiol | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Panaxatriol, Rg2, pseudoginsenoside F11, Rg1, ginsenodide, Rb3 | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Black pepper ( | Piperine | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR, increased mRNA and protein in intestinal cell lines and human hepatocytes [ |
| St. John’s Wort * ( | Hyperforin | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Hyperforin | Increased CYP2C9 and 3A4 protein and mRNA in human hepatocytes [ | |
| Extract (pill) | Increased CYP3A4 activity reflected by decreased phenytoin concentrations [ | |
| Increased CYP2C19 activity reflected by decreased omeprazole concentrations in humans dependent on CYP2C19 phenotype [ | ||
| Increased activity reflected by hydroxymidazolam/midazolam serum ratios in humans (CYP3A4) 6-hydroxychlorzoxazone/chlorzaoxazone serum ratios in humans (CYP2E1) [ | ||
| Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Gingkolide A, Gingkolide B | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Increased CYP2B6 and 3A4 mRNA in PHH [ | ||
| Leaf extract | Increased activity of CYP2C19 reflected by decreased plasma concentrations of omeprazole and increased 5-hydroxyomeprazole in humans [ | |
| Kava Kava * ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Desmethoxyangonin, dihydromethysticin | Increased Cyp3a23 mRNA in rat livers [ | |
| Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Extract | Increased CYP1A2 and 3A4 mRNA in HepG2 [ | |
| Extract | Increased CYP1A2 and 3A4 mRNA in HepG2 [ | |
| Thyme ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Clove ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tumeric ( | Curcumin | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Red wine ( | Resveratrol | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Southern African medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Rooperol | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Stimasterol | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ | |
| Southern African medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tanzanian medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tanzanian medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tanzanian medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tanzanian medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tanzanian medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Tanzanian medicinal plant ( | Extract | Activation of CYP3A4 promoter via hPXR [ |
| Allspice ( | Extract | Increased transcription of CYP3A4 in HepG2 cell line [ |
| Grape seed ( | Extract | Increased CYP3A4 mRNA in PHH [ |
| Garlic ( | Diallysulfide | Increased Cyp2b1 and 2b2 mRNA in rat livers [ |
Herbs, compounds or preparations marked with an asterisk have been associated with alteration of P450 metabolism in human subjects or have been associated with hepatotoxicity and may be clinically significant.
Reported Hepatotoxicity of Herbal Supplements.
| Herbal Supplement | Preparation/Compound | Toxicity |
|---|---|---|
| Black cohosh ( | Extract | Liver necrosis, autoimmune hepatitis, protein adducts [ |
| Ginseng ( | Extract | Possible liver injury in a patient after interaction with imatinib [ |
| Greater celandine ( | Extract | Reports of hepatocellular injury in humans [ |
| Single report of cholestasis in human [ | ||
| Black Pepper ( | Piperine | Increased liver enzymes with CCl4 and hepatic lipid peroxidation in mice [ |
| St. John’s Wort ( | Extract | Liver injury associated with copaiba use [ |
| Extract | Increased toxicity associated with tert-butyl hydroperoxide [ | |
| Green tea ( | Epigallocatechin-3-gallate | Hepatotoxic in mice [ |
| Extract | Hepatotoxic in rats [ | |
| Germander (Lamiaceae family, | Hepatotoxic in humans [ | |
| Teucrin A, teuchamaedryn A | Hepatotoxic to isolated rat hepatocytes, CYP3A4 dependent [ | |
| Teucrin A | Hepatocellular toxicity in mice [ | |
| Extract | May be hepatotoxic in mice [ | |
| Extract | Hepatotoxic in humans [ | |
| Camphor ( | Topical cream | Single report of hepatotoxicity in a human [ |
| Kava kava ( | Extract | Hepatotoxic in humans [ |
| Pennyroyal oil ( | Oil | Hepatotoxic in mice [ |
| Oil | Hepatotoxic in humans [ | |
| ( | CYP2E1/1A2-dependent hepatotoxicity in mice [ | |
| Pulegone, menthol | Hepatotoxic in mice [ | |
| Menthone | Hepatotoxic in rats [ | |
| Pulegone, menthol | Hepatotoxic in rats [ | |
| Extract (30% geniposide) | Hepatotoxic in rats [ | |
| Geniposide | Hepatotoxic in rats [ | |
| Extract | Hepatotoxic in rats [ | |
| Garlic ( | Homogenate | Hepatotoxic in rats [ |
| Found in multiple species of plants | Monocrotaline | CYP3A4-dependent hepatotoxicity in mice [ |
| Dehydromonocrotaline, dehydrorectronecine | Toxic to human hepatoma cell lines [ | |
| Extract | Hepatotoxic to humans [ | |
| Mistletoe ( | Extract | Hepatotoxic to humans [ |