Zhou Shufeng, Chan Eli, Duan Wei, Huang Min, Chen Yu-Zong
Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Science, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Drug Metab Rev. 2005;37(1):41-213. doi: 10.1081/dmr-200028812.
A number of therapeutic drugs with different structures and mechanisms of action have been reported to undergo metabolic activation by Phase I or Phase II drug-metabolizing enzymes. The bioactivation gives rise to reactive metabolites/intermediates, which readily confer covalent binding to various target proteins by nucleophilic substitution and/or Schiff's base mechanism. These drugs include analgesics (e.g., acetaminophen), antibacterial agents (e.g., sulfonamides and macrolide antibiotics), anticancer drugs (e.g., irinotecan), antiepileptic drugs (e.g., carbamazepine), anti-HIV agents (e.g., ritonavir), antipsychotics (e.g., clozapine), cardiovascular drugs (e.g., procainamide and hydralazine), immunosupressants (e.g., cyclosporine A), inhalational anesthetics (e.g., halothane), nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDSs) (e.g., diclofenac), and steroids and their receptor modulators (e.g., estrogens and tamoxifen). Some herbal and dietary constituents are also bioactivated to reactive metabolites capable of binding covalently and inactivating cytochrome P450s (CYPs). A number of important target proteins of drugs have been identified by mass spectrometric techniques and proteomic approaches. The covalent binding and formation of drug-protein adducts are generally considered to be related to drug toxicity, and selective protein covalent binding by drug metabolites may lead to selective organ toxicity. However, the mechanisms involved in the protein adduct-induced toxicity are largely undefined, although it has been suggested that drug-protein adducts may cause toxicity either through impairing physiological functions of the modified proteins or through immune-mediated mechanisms. In addition, mechanism-based inhibition of CYPs may result in toxic drug-drug interactions. The clinical consequences of drug bioactivation and covalent binding to proteins are unpredictable, depending on many factors that are associated with the administered drugs and patients. Further studies using proteomic and genomic approaches with high throughput capacity are needed to identify the protein targets of reactive drug metabolites, and to elucidate the structure-activity relationships of drug's covalent binding to proteins and their clinical outcomes.
据报道,许多具有不同结构和作用机制的治疗药物会通过I相或II相药物代谢酶进行代谢活化。生物活化会产生反应性代谢物/中间体,它们很容易通过亲核取代和/或席夫碱机制与各种靶蛋白发生共价结合。这些药物包括镇痛药(如对乙酰氨基酚)、抗菌剂(如磺胺类和大环内酯类抗生素)、抗癌药(如伊立替康)、抗癫痫药(如卡马西平)、抗HIV药(如利托那韦)、抗精神病药(如氯氮平)、心血管药物(如普鲁卡因胺和肼屈嗪)、免疫抑制剂(如环孢素A)、吸入性麻醉剂(如氟烷)、非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)(如双氯芬酸)以及类固醇及其受体调节剂(如雌激素和他莫昔芬)。一些草药和膳食成分也会被生物活化成能够共价结合并使细胞色素P450(CYPs)失活的反应性代谢物。通过质谱技术和蛋白质组学方法已经鉴定出许多药物的重要靶蛋白。药物与蛋白质加合物的共价结合和形成通常被认为与药物毒性有关,药物代谢物与蛋白质的选择性共价结合可能导致选择性器官毒性。然而,尽管有人提出药物 - 蛋白质加合物可能通过损害修饰后蛋白质的生理功能或通过免疫介导机制导致毒性,但蛋白质加合物诱导毒性所涉及的机制在很大程度上仍不明确。此外,基于机制的CYPs抑制可能会导致有毒的药物 - 药物相互作用。药物生物活化和与蛋白质共价结合的临床后果是不可预测的,这取决于许多与所给药药物和患者相关的因素。需要使用具有高通量能力的蛋白质组学和基因组学方法进行进一步研究,以确定反应性药物代谢物的蛋白质靶点,并阐明药物与蛋白质共价结合的构效关系及其临床结果。