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1.
Mol Pharm ; 21(6): 2740-2750, 2024 Jun 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38717252

ABSTRACT

Despite the increasing importance of aldehyde oxidase (AO) in the drug metabolism of clinical candidates, ontogeny data for AO are limited. The objective of our study was to characterize the age-dependent AO content and activity in the human liver cytosolic fraction (HLC) and human hepatocytes (HH). HLC (n = 121 donors) and HH (n = 50 donors) were analyzed for (1) AO protein content by quantitative proteomics and (2) enzyme activity using carbazeran as a probe substrate. AO activity showed high technical variability and poor correlation with the content in HLC samples, whereas hepatocyte samples showed a strong correlation between the content and activity. Similarly, AO content and activity showed no significant age-dependent differences in HLC samples, whereas the average AO content and activity in hepatocytes increased significantly (∼20-40-fold) from the neonatal levels (0-28 days). Based on the hepatocyte data, the age at which 50% of the adult AO content is reached (age50) was 3.15 years (0.32-13.97 years, 95% CI). Metabolite profiling of carbazeran revealed age-dependent metabolic switching and the role of non-AO mechanisms (glucuronidation and desmethylation) in carbazeran elimination. The content-activity correlation in hepatocytes improved significantly (R2 = 0.95; p < 0.0001) in samples showing <10% contribution of glucuronidation toward the overall metabolism, confirming that AO-mediated oxidation and glucuronidation are the key routes of carbazeran metabolism. Considering the confounding effect of glucuronidation on AO activity, AO content-based ontogeny data are a more direct reflection of developmental changes in protein expression. The comprehensive ontogeny data of AO in HH samples are more reliable than HLC data, which are important for developing robust physiologically based pharmacokinetic models for predicting AO-mediated metabolism in children.


Subject(s)
Aldehyde Oxidase , Hepatocytes , Liver , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult , Aldehyde Oxidase/metabolism , Cytosol/enzymology , Hepatocytes/enzymology , Liver/enzymology , Proteomics
2.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 51(10): 1362-1371, 2023 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37429730

ABSTRACT

We investigated the effect of variability and instability in aldehyde oxidase (AO) content and activity on the scaling of in vitro metabolism data. AO content and activity in human liver cytosol (HLC) and five recombinant human AO preparations (rAO) were determined using targeted proteomics and carbazeran oxidation assay, respectively. AO content was highly variable as indicated by the relative expression factor (REF; i.e., HLC to rAO content) ranging from 0.001 to 1.7 across different in vitro systems. The activity of AO in HLC degrades at a 10-fold higher rate in the presence of the substrate as compared with the activity performed after preincubation without substrate. To scale the metabolic activity from rAO to HLC, a protein-normalized activity factor (pnAF) was proposed wherein the activity was corrected by AO content, which revealed up to sixfold higher AO activity in HLC versus rAO systems. A similar value of pnAF was observed for another substrate, ripasudil. Physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling revealed a significant additional clearance (CL; 66%), which allowed for the successful prediction of in vivo CL of four other substrates, i.e., O-benzyl guanine, BIBX1382, zaleplon, and zoniporide. For carbazeran, the metabolite identification study showed that the direct glucuronidation may be contributing to around 12% elimination. Taken together, this study identified differential protein content, instability of in vitro activity, role of additional AO clearance, and unaccounted metabolic pathways as plausible reasons for the underprediction of AO-mediated drug metabolism. Consideration of these factors and integration of REF and pnAF in PBPK models will allow better prediction of AO metabolism. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This study elucidated the plausible reasons for the underprediction of aldehyde oxidase (AO)-mediated drug metabolism and provided recommendations to address them. It demonstrated that integrating protein content and activity differences and accounting for the loss of AO activity, as well as consideration of extrahepatic clearance and additional pathways, would improve the in vitro to in vivo extrapolation of AO-mediated drug metabolism using physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling.


Subject(s)
Aldehyde Oxidase , Carbamates , Humans , Aldehyde Oxidase/metabolism , Carbamates/metabolism , Kinetics , Metabolic Clearance Rate , Liver/metabolism
3.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 51(12): 1591-1606, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37751998

ABSTRACT

Underestimation of aldehyde oxidase (AO)-mediated clearance by current in vitro assays leads to uncertainty in human dose projections, thereby reducing the likelihood of success in drug development. In the present study we first evaluated the current drug development practices for AO substrates. Next, the overall predictive performance of in vitro-in vivo extrapolation of unbound hepatic intrinsic clearance (CLint,u) and unbound hepatic intrinsic clearance by AO (CLint,u,AO) was assessed using a comprehensive literature database of in vitro (human cytosol/S9/hepatocytes) and in vivo (intravenous/oral) data collated for 22 AO substrates (total of 100 datapoints from multiple studies). Correction for unbound fraction in the incubation was done by experimental data or in silico predictions. The fraction metabolized by AO (fmAO) determined via in vitro/in vivo approaches was found to be highly variable. The geometric mean fold errors (gmfe) for scaled CLint,u (mL/min/kg) were 10.4 for human hepatocytes, 5.6 for human liver cytosols, and 5.0 for human liver S9, respectively. Application of these gmfe's as empirical scaling factors improved predictions (45%-57% within twofold of observed) compared with no correction (11%-27% within twofold), with the scaling factors qualified by leave-one-out cross-validation. A road map for quantitative translation was then proposed following a critical evaluation on the in vitro and clinical methodology to estimate in vivo fmAO In conclusion, the study provides the most robust system-specific empirical scaling factors to date as a pragmatic approach for the prediction of in vivo CLint,u,AO in the early stages of drug development. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Confidence remains low when predicting in vivo clearance of AO substrates using in vitro systems, leading to de-prioritization of AO substrates from the drug development pipeline to mitigate risk of unexpected and costly in vivo impact. The current study establishes a set of empirical scaling factors as a pragmatic tool to improve predictability of in vivo AO clearance. Developing clinical pharmacology strategies for AO substrates by utilizing mass balance/clinical drug-drug interaction data will help build confidence in fmAO.


Subject(s)
Aldehyde Oxidase , Liver , Humans , Aldehyde Oxidase/metabolism , Metabolic Clearance Rate , Liver/metabolism , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Microsomes, Liver/metabolism
4.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 49(9): 743-749, 2021 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34162687

ABSTRACT

Aldehyde oxidase (AOX) is a soluble, cytosolic enzyme that metabolizes various N-heterocyclic compounds and organic aldehydes. It has wide tissue distribution with highest levels found in liver, kidney, and lung. Human clearance projections of AOX substrates by in vitro assessments in isolated liver fractions (cytosol, S9) and even hepatocytes have been largely underpredictive of clinical outcomes. Various hypotheses have been suggested as to why this is the case. One explanation is that extrahepatic AOX expression contributes measurably to AOX clearance and is at least partially responsible for the often observed underpredictions. Although AOX expression has been confirmed in several extrahepatic tissues, activities therein and potential contribution to overall human clearance have not been thoroughly studied. In this work, the AOX enzyme activity using the S9 fractions of select extrahepatic human tissues (kidney, lung, vasculature, and intestine) were measured using carbazeran as a probe substrate. Measured activities were scaled to a whole-body clearance using best-available parameters and compared with liver S9 fractions. Here, the combined scaled AOX clearance obtained from the kidney, lung, vasculature, and intestine is very low and amounted to <1% of liver. This work suggests that AOX metabolism from extrahepatic sources plays little role in the underprediction of activity in human. One of the notable outcomes of this work has been the first direct demonstration of AOX activity in human vasculature. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This work demonstrates aldehyde oxidase (AOX) activity is measurable in a variety of extrahepatic human tissues, including vasculature, yet activities and potential contributions to human clearance are relatively low and insignificant when compared with the liver. Additionally, the modeling of the tissue-specific in vitro kinetic data suggests that AOX may be influenced by the tissue it resides in and thus show different affinity, activity, and modified activity over time.


Subject(s)
Aldehyde Oxidase/metabolism , Blood Vessels/enzymology , Intestines/enzymology , Kidney/enzymology , Lung/enzymology , Aldehydes/metabolism , Correlation of Data , Enzyme Assays/methods , Heterocyclic Compounds/metabolism , Humans , Liver/enzymology , Metabolic Clearance Rate , Tissue Distribution/physiology
5.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 45(1): 1-7, 2017 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27784718

ABSTRACT

The concept of target-specific covalent enzyme inhibitors appears attractive from both an efficacy and a selectivity viewpoint considering the potential for enhanced biochemical efficiency associated with an irreversible mechanism. Aside from potential safety concerns, clearance prediction of covalent inhibitors represents a unique challenge due to the inclusion of nontraditional metabolic pathways of direct conjugation with glutathione (GSH) or via GSH S-transferase-mediated processes. In this article, a novel pharmacokinetic algorithm was developed using a series of Pfizer kinase selective acrylamide covalent inhibitors based on their in vitro-in vivo extrapolation of systemic clearance in rats. The algorithm encompasses the use of hepatocytes as an in vitro model for hepatic clearance due to oxidative metabolism and GSH conjugation, and the use of whole blood as an in vitro surrogate for GSH conjugation in extrahepatic tissues. Initial evaluations with clinical covalent inhibitors suggested that the scaling algorithm developed from rats may also be useful for human clearance prediction when species-specific parameters, such as hepatocyte and blood stability and blood binding, were considered. With careful consideration of clearance mechanisms, the described in vitro-in vivo extrapolation approach may be useful to facilitate candidate optimization, selection, and prediction of human pharmacokinetic clearance during the discovery and development of targeted covalent inhibitors.


Subject(s)
Hepatocytes/metabolism , Microsomes, Liver/metabolism , Models, Biological , Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism , Plasma/metabolism , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/pharmacokinetics , Algorithms , Animals , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , Glutathione/metabolism , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Male , Metabolic Clearance Rate , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Pharmaceutical Preparations/blood , Predictive Value of Tests , Protein Binding , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/blood , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Species Specificity
6.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 44(1): 102-14, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26512042

ABSTRACT

N-Methyl-2-[3-((E)-2-pyridin-2-yl-vinyl)-1H-indazol-6-ylsulfanyl]-benzamide (axitinib) is an oral inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors 1-3, which is approved for the treatment of advanced renal cell cancer. Human [(14)C]-labeled clinical studies indicate axitinib's primary route of clearance is metabolism. The aims of the in vitro experiments presented herein were to identify and characterize the enzymes involved in axitinib metabolic clearance. In vitro biotransformation studies of axitinib identified a number of metabolites including an axitinib sulfoxide, several less abundant oxidative metabolites, and glucuronide conjugates. The most abundant NADPH- and UDPGA-dependent metabolites, axitinib sulfoxide (M12) and axitinib N-glucuronide (M7) were selected for phenotyping and kinetic study. Phenotyping experiments with human liver microsomes (HLMs) using chemical inhibitors and recombinant human cytochrome P450s demonstrated axitinib was predominately metabolized by CYP3A4/5, with minor contributions from CYP2C19 and CYP1A2. The apparent substrate concentration at half-maximal velocity (Km) and Vmax values for the formation of axitinib sulfoxide by CYP3A4 or CYP3A5 were 4.0 or 1.9 µM and 9.6 or 1.4 pmol·min(-1)·pmol(-1), respectively. Using a CYP3A4-specific inhibitor (Cyp3cide) in liver microsomes expressing CYP3A5, 66% of the axitinib intrinsic clearance was attributable to CYP3A4 and 15% to CYP3A5. Axitinib N-glucuronidation was primarily catalyzed by UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) UGT1A1, which was verified by chemical inhibitors and UGT1A1 null expressers, with lesser contributions from UGTs 1A3, 1A9, and 1A4. The Km and Vmax values describing the formation of the N-glucuronide in HLM or rUGT1A1 were 2.7 µM or 0.75 µM and 8.9 or 8.3 pmol·min(-1)·mg(-1), respectively. In summary, CYP3A4 is the major enzyme involved in axitinib clearance with lesser contributions from CYP3A5, CYP2C19, CYP1A2, and UGT1A1.


Subject(s)
Angiogenesis Inhibitors/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/metabolism , Glucuronosyltransferase/metabolism , Imidazoles/metabolism , Indazoles/metabolism , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , Protein Kinase Inhibitors/metabolism , Axitinib , Cytochrome P-450 CYP1A2/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 CYP2C19/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/genetics , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Female , Genotype , Glucuronides/metabolism , Glucuronosyltransferase/genetics , Humans , Inactivation, Metabolic , Kinetics , Male , Metabolic Clearance Rate , Microsomes, Liver/drug effects , Models, Biological , Oxidation-Reduction , Phenotype , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Substrate Specificity , Sulfoxides/metabolism
7.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 43(1): 163-81, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25297949

ABSTRACT

During the process of drug discovery, the pharmaceutical industry is faced with numerous challenges. One challenge is the successful prediction of the major routes of human clearance of new medications. For compounds cleared by metabolism, accurate predictions help provide an early risk assessment of their potential to exhibit significant interpatient differences in pharmacokinetics via routes of metabolism catalyzed by functionally polymorphic enzymes and/or clinically significant metabolic drug-drug interactions. This review details the most recent and emerging in vitro strategies used by drug metabolism and pharmacokinetic scientists to better determine rates and routes of metabolic clearance and how to translate these parameters to estimate the amount these routes contribute to overall clearance, commonly referred to as fraction metabolized. The enzymes covered in this review include cytochrome P450s together with other enzymatic pathways whose involvement in metabolic clearance has become increasingly important as efforts to mitigate cytochrome P450 clearance are successful. Advances in the prediction of the fraction metabolized include newly developed methods to differentiate CYP3A4 from the polymorphic enzyme CYP3A5, scaling tools for UDP-glucuronosyltranferase, and estimation of fraction metabolized for substrates of aldehyde oxidase.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism , Aldehyde Oxidase/metabolism , Drug Discovery/methods , Drug Interactions/physiology , Glucuronosyltransferase/metabolism , Humans
8.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 42(7): 1163-73, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24737844

ABSTRACT

Metabolism by cytochrome P4503A (CYP3A) is the most prevalent clearance pathway for drugs. Designation of metabolism by CYP3A commonly refers to the potential contribution by one or both of two enzymes, CYP3A4 and CYP3A5. The metabolic turnover of 32 drugs known to be largely metabolized by CYP3A was examined in human liver microsomes (HLMs) from CYP3A5 expressers (*1/*1 genotype) and nonexpressers (*3/*3 genotype) in the presence and absence of ketoconazole and CYP3cide (a selective CYP3A4 inactivator) to calculate the contribution of CYP3A5 to metabolism. Drugs with the highest contribution of CYP3A5 included atazanavir, vincristine, midazolam, vardenafil, otenabant, verapamil, and tacrolimus, whereas 17 of the 32 tested showed negligible CYP3A5 contribution. For specific reactions in HLMs from *1/*1 donors, CYP3A5 contributes 55% and 44% to midazolam 1'- and 4-hydroxylation, 16% to testosterone 6ß-hydroxylation, 56% and 19% to alprazolam 1'- and 4-hydroxylation, 10% to tamoxifen N-demethylation, and 58% to atazanavir p-hydroxylation. Comparison of the in vitro observations to clinical pharmacokinetic data showed only a weak relationship between estimated contribution by CYP3A5 and impact of CYP3A5 genotype on oral clearance, in large part because of the scatter in clinical data and the low numbers of study subjects used in CYP3A5 pharmacogenetics studies. These data should be useful in guiding which drugs should be evaluated for differences in pharmacokinetics and metabolism between subjects expressing CYP3A5 and those who do not express this enzyme.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , Catalysis , Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/drug effects , Humans , In Vitro Techniques
9.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39444174

ABSTRACT

Aldehyde oxidase (AO) contributes to the clearance of many approved and investigational small molecule drugs, which are often dual substrates of AO and drug-metabolizing enzymes such as cytochrome P450s (CYPs). As such, the lack of established framework for quantitative translation of the clinical pharmacologic correlates of AO-mediated clearance represents an unmet need. This study aimed to evaluate the utility of physiologically based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling in the development of AO and dual AO-CYP substrates. PBPK models were developed for capmatinib, idelalisib, lenvatinib, zaleplon, ziprasidone, and zoniporide, incorporating in vitro functional data from human liver subcellular fractions and human hepatocytes. Prediction of metabolic elimination with/without the additional empirical scaling factors (ESFs) was assessed. Clinical pharmacokinetics, human mass balance, and drug-drug interaction (DDI) studies with CYP3A4 modulators, where available, were used to refine/verify the models. Due to the lack of clinically significant AO-DDIs with known AO inhibitors, the fraction metabolized by AO (fmAO) was verified indirectly. Clearance predictions were improved by using ESFs (GMFE ≤1.4-fold versus up to fivefold with physiologically-based scaling only). Observed fmi from mass balance studies were crucial for model verification/refinement, as illustrated by capmatinib, where the fmAO (40%) was otherwise underpredicted up to fourfold. Subsequently, independent DDI studies with ketoconazole, itraconazole, rifampicin, and carbamazepine verified the fmCYP3A4, with predicted ratios of the area under the concentration-time curve (AUCR) within 1.5-fold of the observations. In conclusion, this study provides a novel PBPK-based framework for predicting AO-mediated pharmacokinetics and quantitative assessment of clinical DDI risks for dual AO-CYP substrates within a totality-of-evidence approach.

10.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 40(9): 1686-97, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22645092

ABSTRACT

CYP3cide (PF-4981517; 1-methyl-3-[1-methyl-5-(4-methylphenyl)-1H-pyrazol-4-yl]-4-[(3S)-3-piperidin-1-ylpyrrolidin-1-yl]-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine) is a potent, efficient, and specific time-dependent inactivator of human CYP3A4. When investigating its inhibitory properties, an extreme metabolic inactivation efficiency (k(inact)/K(I)) of 3300 to 3800 ml · min⁻¹ · µmol⁻¹ was observed using human liver microsomes from donors of nonfunctioning CYP3A5 (CYP3A5 *3/*3). This observed efficiency equated to an apparent K(I) between 420 and 480 nM with a maximal inactivation rate (k(inact)) equal to 1.6 min⁻¹. Similar results were achieved with testosterone, another CYP3A substrate, and other sources of the CYP3A4 enzyme. To further illustrate the abilities of CYP3cide, its partition ratio of inactivation was determined with recombinant CYP3A4. These studies produced a partition ratio approaching unity, thus underscoring the inactivation capacity of CYP3cide. When CYP3cide was tested at a concentration and preincubation time to completely inhibit CYP3A4 in a library of genotyped polymorphic CYP3A5 microsomes, the correlation of the remaining midazolam 1'-hydroxylase activity to CYP3A5 abundance was significant (R² value equal to 0.51, p value of <0.0001). The work presented here supports these findings by fully characterizing the inhibitory properties and exploring CYP3cide's mechanism of action. To aid the researcher, multiple commercially available sources of CYP3cide were established, and a protocol was developed to quantitatively determine CYP3A4 contribution to the metabolism of an investigational compound. Through the establishment of this protocol and the evidence provided here, we believe that CYP3cide is a very useful tool for understanding the relative roles of CYP3A4 versus CYP3A5 and the impact of CYP3A5 genetic polymorphism on a compound's pharmacokinetics.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A Inhibitors , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Liver/drug effects , Pyrazoles/pharmacology , Pyrimidines/pharmacology , Biotransformation , Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/genetics , Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drug Interactions , Enzyme Inhibitors/metabolism , Genotype , High-Throughput Screening Assays , Humans , Hydroxylation , Kinetics , Liver/enzymology , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , Midazolam/metabolism , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Genetic , Pyrazoles/metabolism , Pyrimidines/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Substrate Specificity , Tacrolimus/metabolism , Testosterone/metabolism
11.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 38(12): 2195-203, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20841376

ABSTRACT

Drug promiscuity (i.e., inhibition of multiple enzymes by a single compound) is increasingly recognized as an important pharmacological consideration in the drug development process. However, systematic studies of functional or physicochemical characteristics that correlate with drug promiscuity are handicapped by the lack of a good way of quantifying promiscuity. In this article, we present a new entropy-based index of drug promiscuity. We apply this index to two high-throughput data sets describing inhibition of cytochrome P450 isoforms by small-molecule drugs and drug candidates, and we demonstrate how drug promiscuity or specificity can be quantified. For these drug-metabolizing enzymes, we find that there is essentially no correlation between a drug's potency and specificity. We also present an index to quantify the susceptibilities of different enzymes to inhibition by diverse substrates. Finally, we use partial least-squares regression to successfully predict isoform specificity and promiscuity of small molecules, using a set of fingerprint-based descriptors.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme Inhibitors , Enzyme Inhibitors/pharmacology , Isoenzymes/antagonists & inhibitors , Entropy , Least-Squares Analysis
12.
Clin Pharmacol Ther ; 106(3): 525-543, 2019 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31175671

ABSTRACT

Quantitative translation of information on drug absorption, disposition, receptor engagement, and drug-drug interactions from bench to bedside requires models informed by physiological parameters that link in vitro studies to in vivo outcomes. To predict in vivo outcomes, biochemical data from experimental systems are routinely scaled using protein quantity in these systems and relevant tissues. Although several laboratories have generated useful quantitative proteomic data using state-of-the-art mass spectrometry, no harmonized guidelines exit for sample analysis and data integration to in vivo translation practices. To address this gap, a workshop was held on September 27 and 28, 2018, in Cambridge, MA, with 100 experts attending from academia, the pharmaceutical industry, and regulators. Various aspects of quantitative proteomics and its applications in translational pharmacology were debated. A summary of discussions and best practices identified by this expert panel are presented in this "White Paper" alongside unresolved issues that were outlined for future debates.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Pharmacology/organization & administration , Proteomics/organization & administration , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Translational Research, Biomedical/organization & administration , Chromatography, Liquid/standards , Humans , Pharmacokinetics , Pharmacology/standards , Proteomics/standards , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/standards , Translational Research, Biomedical/standards
13.
Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol ; 9(2): 153-68, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23231678

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Aldehyde oxidase (AO) is a drug-metabolizing molybdo-flavoenzyme with profound species differences in expression and activity toward various substrates. The contribution of this enzyme to the metabolism and clearance of heterocyclic-containing xenobiotics appears to have increased in recent years, but has not always been identified prior to clinical studies. As a result, drug candidates have been negatively impacted in development. AREAS COVERED: This review provides the most recent in vitro and in vivo strategies for the drug metabolism-pharmacokinetic (DMPK) scientist. The review details approaches for confirmation of AO as an operable metabolic pathway, estimating clearance and fraction of total metabolism, and identification of an appropriate surrogate species for human AO activity for evaluating safety of clinically relevant metabolites. EXPERT OPINION: As the role of AO in metabolism of new drug molecules continues to emerge, it is critical that DMPK scientists have the most updated methodologies to enable formulation of a thorough experimental plan to understand the potential implications of this metabolic pathway. Whether it is higher-than-expected clearance, contributing to an unfavorable half-life, or the formation of an AO-derived disproportionate human metabolite (DHM), such a plan would serve to minimize complications or attrition of drug candidates due to unforeseen issues in the clinic.


Subject(s)
Aldehyde Oxidase/metabolism , Metabolic Networks and Pathways/physiology , Pharmaceutical Preparations/metabolism , Aldehyde Oxidase/chemistry , Animals , Humans
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