| Literature DB >> 30190484 |
Philippa H Harlow1, Simon J Perry1, Alexander J Stevens1, Anthony J Flemming2.
Abstract
We investigated the metabolic capabilities of C. elegans using compounds whose metabolism has been well characterised in mammalian systems. We find that similar metabolites are produced in C. elegans as in mammals but that C. elegans is deficient in CYP1-like metabolism, as has been seen in other studies. We show that CYP-34A9, CYP-34A10 and CYP-36A1 are the principal enzymes responsible for the metabolism of tolbutamide in C. elegans. These are related to the mammalian enzymes that metabolise this compound but are not the closest homologs suggesting that sequence comparison alone will not predict functional conservation among cytochrome P450s. In mammals, metabolite production from amytryptiline and dextromethorphan is dependent on specific cytochrome P450s. However, in C. elegans we did not find evidence of similar specificity: the same metabolites were produced but in small amounts by numerous cytochrome P450s. We conclude that, while some aspects of cytochrome P450 mediated metabolism in C. elegans are similar to mammals, there are differences in the production of some metabolites and in the underlying genetics of metabolism.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30190484 PMCID: PMC6127299 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-31215-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The concentration of known metabolites of the test compounds produced in C. elegans.
| Compound | Metabolite identified in mammals[ | Mammalian CYP450 required for metabolite production | Metabolite recovered in supernatant (ng/ml) | Metabolite recovered in pellet (ng/ml) | Evidence that this reaction can occur in |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phenacetin | Paracetamol | CYP1A2 | 5 | 14 | yes |
| Tolbutamide | Hydroxytolbutamide | CYP2C8/9/19 | 1387 | 276 | yes |
| Carboxytolbutamide | CYP2C8/9/19 | 4.5 | 1 | yes | |
| Diclofenac | Hydroxydiclofenac | CYP2C9 | 67 | 667 | yes |
| Amitriptyline | Nortriptyline | CYP2C19 | 207 | not tested | yes |
| E-10-hydroxyamitriptyline | CYP2D6 | 40 | not tested | yes | |
| Clomipramine | Norclomipramine | CYP2C19 | 230 | 1969 | yes |
| Dextromethorphan | Dextrorphan | CYP2D6 | 1842 | 1251 | yes |
| 3-methoxymorphinan | CYP3A4 | 228 | 250 | yes | |
| Nifedipine | Oxidised nifedipine | CYP3A4 | 692 | 10725* | yes |
We started with 50 µg/ml parent compound in 50 ml flasks over 48 h. Metabolite concentration was then measured after the 50 ml culture had been allowed to settle and concentration was measured by LCMS both in the worm pellet and in the supernatant. The concentration of metabolites produced is expressed in ng/ml. *As this value falls outside the linear calibration range of the experiment (see Methods), it should be taken only to confirm substantial production of the metabolite rather than a precise measure of quantity.
Figure 1RNAi knockdown of specific cytochrome P450 genes affects the hydroxylation of tolbutamide. Hydroxytolbutamide produced (ng/ml) in the supernatant in response to certain treatment conditions. Error bars show standard error. (n = 3). (A) Data in red show N2 (wild type control) compared to emb-8 (hc69), a temperature sensitive strain which was exposed to emb-8 RNAi and shifted to the restrictive temperature four days before testing. emb-8 encodes the C. elegans cytochrome P450 reductase; under these conditions the mutant strain does not have any detectable NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activity[3]. The emb-8 animals showed reduced hydroxytolbutamide production (t-test: p = 0.02). Data in blue are a separate experiment showing RNAi knockdown of groups of P450 genes. In this experiment N2 grew faster than anticipated and starved before measurement so metabolism is likely underestimated, indeed N2 versus the cyp-34A9, cyp-34A10 and cyp-36A1 group shows no significant difference (Tukey’s multiple comparisons test: p = 0.9998). However, the reduction of metabolism in this RNAi group is substantial compared to other RNAi treatments (e.g. versus the cyp-25A1-2 group (Tukey’s multiple comparisons test: p = 0.0474) and so, given the starved N2 control, we chose to study this group in a further experiment – see panel B, this figure. (B) Simultaneous RNAi knockdown of cyp-34A9, cyp-34A10 and cyp-36A1as a group, RNAi of the same genes individually and N2. In this experiment the assay was modified to ensure no animals starved – see Methods. Compared to N2, all treatments showed significantly reduced metabolite production (Tukey’s multiple comparisons test: p < 0.0001 for all treatments compared to N2). The effects of RNAi of cyp-34A10 alone was also significantly different to cyp-34A9 or cyp-36A1 alone. (Tukey’s multiple comparisons test: cyp-34A9 vs cyp-34A10 p = 0.0008, cyp-34A10 vs cyp-36A1 p = 0.0095).
Figure 2RNAi knockdown of cytochrome P450 genes affects the metabolism of dextromethorphan. Dextrorphan recovered (ng/ml) in the supernatant. Error bars show standard error (n = 3). (A) P450s knocked down in small groups. (B) P450s knocked down individually.
Figure 3RNAi knockdown of cytochrome P450 genes affects the metabolism of amitriptyline. Nortriptyline produced (ng/ml) in the supernatant. Error bars show standard error (n = 3). (A) P450s knocked down in small groups. (B) P450s knocked down individually.
Specific associations between individual cytochrome P450s and metabolite production identified in this and other studies.
| Compound | Details | Mammalian Metabolising P450 enzyme | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CYP-35A3 & CYP-35A4 | Certain imidazole fungicides | Changes in toxicity |
[ | |
| CYP-34A9 & CYP-36A1 & CYP34A10 | Tolbutamide | RNAi knockdown - LCMS | CYP-2C8/9/19 | This study |
| CYP-13A4 | Cadmium | Changes in toxicity |
[ | |
| CYP-14A3 & CYP-34A6 | PCB52 | RNAi knockdown - GCMS | CYP1A1, 2A6, 2A8 and 2B1 |
[ |
| CYP-35A2 | Fenitrothion | Changes in toxicity |
[ | |
| CYP-35D1 | Thiabendazole | RNAi knockdown – HPLC-UV and changes in toxicity | CYP1A and CYP2B |
[ |
Parameters used in the LC-MS analysis.
| Compound | Retention time (minutes) | Ionisation mode | SRM transition | Collision energy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phenacetin | 4.3 | Positive | 180 > 110 | 24 |
| Paracetamol | 3.1 | Positive | 152 > 110 | 24 |
| Tolbutamide | 1.8 | Negative | 269 > 170 | 20 |
| 4-Hydroxytolbutamide | 1.1 | Negative | 285 > 186 | 20 |
| Carboxytolbutamide | 1.2 | Negative | 299 > 200 | 19 |
| Diclofenac | nd | nd | nd | nd |
| 4-Hydroxydiclofenac | 4.9 | Positive | 312 > 230 | 24 |
| Amitriptyline | 4.7 | Positive | 278 > 91 | 32 |
| Nortriptyline | 4.6 | Positive | 264 > 91 | 32 |
| Clomipramine | 4.2 | Positive | 315 > 86 | 24 |
| Norclomipramine | 4.1 | Positive | 301 > 72 | 24 |
| Dextromethorphan | 3.8 | Positive | 272 > 171 | 37 |
| Dextrorphan | 3.4 | Positive | 258 > 157 | 38 |
| 3-Methoxymorphinan | 3.7 | Positive | 258 > 215 | 20 |
| Nifedipine | 5.4 | Positive | 329 > 284* | 24 |
| Oxidised nifedipine | 5.1 | Positive | 345 > 284 | 24 |
Rows group parent compound (top) and corresponding metabolites. nd = not detected, *parent ion selected results from loss of water from the protonated molecular ion.