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Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes

In 2019, synthetic cannabinoids accounted for more than one-third of new drugs of abuse worldwide; however, assessment of associated health risks is not ethical for controlled and often illegal substances, making CD-1 mouse exposure studies the gold standard. Interpretation of those findings then de...

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Autores principales: Crosby, Samantha V., Ahmed, Izzeldin Y., Osborn, Laura R., Wang, Zeyuan, Schleiff, Mary A., Fantegrossi, William E., Nagar, Swati, Prather, Paul L., Boysen, Gunnar, Miller, Grover P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9413144/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36005645
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo12080773
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author Crosby, Samantha V.
Ahmed, Izzeldin Y.
Osborn, Laura R.
Wang, Zeyuan
Schleiff, Mary A.
Fantegrossi, William E.
Nagar, Swati
Prather, Paul L.
Boysen, Gunnar
Miller, Grover P.
author_facet Crosby, Samantha V.
Ahmed, Izzeldin Y.
Osborn, Laura R.
Wang, Zeyuan
Schleiff, Mary A.
Fantegrossi, William E.
Nagar, Swati
Prather, Paul L.
Boysen, Gunnar
Miller, Grover P.
author_sort Crosby, Samantha V.
collection PubMed
description In 2019, synthetic cannabinoids accounted for more than one-third of new drugs of abuse worldwide; however, assessment of associated health risks is not ethical for controlled and often illegal substances, making CD-1 mouse exposure studies the gold standard. Interpretation of those findings then depends on the similarity of mouse and human metabolic pathways. Herein, we report the first comparative analysis of steady-state metabolism of N-(1-adamantyl)-1-(5-pentyl)-1H-indazole-3-carboxamide (5F-APINACA/5F-AKB48) in CD-1 mice and humans using hepatic microsomes. Regardless of species, 5F-APINACA metabolism involved highly efficient sequential adamantyl hydroxylation and oxidative defluorination pathways that competed equally. Secondary adamantyl hydroxylation was less efficient for mice. At low 5F-APINACA concentrations, initial rates were comparable between pathways, but at higher concentrations, adamantyl hydroxylations became less significant due to substrate inhibition likely involving an effector site. For humans, CYP3A4 dominated both metabolic pathways with minor contributions from CYP2C8, 2C19, and 2D6. For CD-1 mice, Cyp3a11 and Cyp2c37, Cyp2c50, and Cyp2c54 contributed equally to adamantyl hydroxylation, but Cyp3a11 was more efficient at oxidative defluorination than Cyp2c members. Taken together, the results of our in vitro steady-state study indicate a high conservation of 5F-APINACA metabolism between CD-1 mice and humans, but deviations can occur due to differences in P450s responsible for the associated reactions.
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spelling pubmed-94131442022-08-27 Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes Crosby, Samantha V. Ahmed, Izzeldin Y. Osborn, Laura R. Wang, Zeyuan Schleiff, Mary A. Fantegrossi, William E. Nagar, Swati Prather, Paul L. Boysen, Gunnar Miller, Grover P. Metabolites Article In 2019, synthetic cannabinoids accounted for more than one-third of new drugs of abuse worldwide; however, assessment of associated health risks is not ethical for controlled and often illegal substances, making CD-1 mouse exposure studies the gold standard. Interpretation of those findings then depends on the similarity of mouse and human metabolic pathways. Herein, we report the first comparative analysis of steady-state metabolism of N-(1-adamantyl)-1-(5-pentyl)-1H-indazole-3-carboxamide (5F-APINACA/5F-AKB48) in CD-1 mice and humans using hepatic microsomes. Regardless of species, 5F-APINACA metabolism involved highly efficient sequential adamantyl hydroxylation and oxidative defluorination pathways that competed equally. Secondary adamantyl hydroxylation was less efficient for mice. At low 5F-APINACA concentrations, initial rates were comparable between pathways, but at higher concentrations, adamantyl hydroxylations became less significant due to substrate inhibition likely involving an effector site. For humans, CYP3A4 dominated both metabolic pathways with minor contributions from CYP2C8, 2C19, and 2D6. For CD-1 mice, Cyp3a11 and Cyp2c37, Cyp2c50, and Cyp2c54 contributed equally to adamantyl hydroxylation, but Cyp3a11 was more efficient at oxidative defluorination than Cyp2c members. Taken together, the results of our in vitro steady-state study indicate a high conservation of 5F-APINACA metabolism between CD-1 mice and humans, but deviations can occur due to differences in P450s responsible for the associated reactions. MDPI 2022-08-22 /pmc/articles/PMC9413144/ /pubmed/36005645 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo12080773 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Crosby, Samantha V.
Ahmed, Izzeldin Y.
Osborn, Laura R.
Wang, Zeyuan
Schleiff, Mary A.
Fantegrossi, William E.
Nagar, Swati
Prather, Paul L.
Boysen, Gunnar
Miller, Grover P.
Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes
title Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes
title_full Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes
title_fullStr Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes
title_full_unstemmed Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes
title_short Similar 5F-APINACA Metabolism between CD-1 Mouse and Human Liver Microsomes Involves Different P450 Cytochromes
title_sort similar 5f-apinaca metabolism between cd-1 mouse and human liver microsomes involves different p450 cytochromes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9413144/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36005645
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo12080773
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