Teitelbaum A M, Murphy S E, Akk G, Baker T B, Germann A, von Weymarn L B, Bierut L J, Goate A, Kharasch E D, Bloom A J
Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Department of Molecular Biology and Biophysics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Pharmacogenomics J. 2018 Jan;18(1):136-143. doi: 10.1038/tpj.2016.92. Epub 2017 Mar 14.
A common haplotype of the flavin-containing monooxygenase gene FMO3 is associated with aberrant mRNA splicing, a twofold reduction in in vivo nicotine N-oxidation and reduced nicotine dependence. Tobacco remains the largest cause of preventable mortality worldwide. CYP2A6, the primary hepatic nicotine metabolism gene, is robustly associated with cigarette consumption but other enzymes contribute to nicotine metabolism. We determined the effects of common variants in FMO3 on plasma levels of nicotine-N-oxide in 170 European Americans administered deuterated nicotine. The polymorphism rs2266780 (E308G) was associated with N-oxidation of both orally administered and ad libitum smoked nicotine (P⩽3.3 × 10 controlling for CYP2A6 genotype). In vitro, the FMO3 G308 variant was not associated with reduced activity, but rs2266780 was strongly associated with aberrant FMO3 mRNA splicing in both liver and brain (P⩽6.5 × 10). Surprisingly, in treatment-seeking European American smokers (n=1558) this allele was associated with reduced nicotine dependence, specifically with a longer time to first cigarette (P=9.0 × 10), but not with reduced cigarette consumption. As N-oxidation accounts for only a small percentage of hepatic nicotine metabolism we hypothesized that FMO3 genotype affects nicotine metabolism in the brain (unlike CYP2A6, FMO3 is expressed in human brain) or that nicotine-N-oxide itself has pharmacological activity. We demonstrate for the first time nicotine N-oxidation in human brain, mediated by FMO3 and FMO1, and show that nicotine-N-oxide modulates human α4β2 nicotinic receptor activity in vitro. These results indicate possible mechanisms for associations between FMO3 genotype and smoking behaviors, and suggest nicotine N-oxidation as a novel target to enhance smoking cessation.
含黄素单加氧酶基因FMO3的一种常见单倍型与异常mRNA剪接、体内尼古丁N-氧化降低两倍以及尼古丁依赖性降低有关。烟草仍然是全球可预防死亡的最大原因。CYP2A6是主要的肝脏尼古丁代谢基因,与香烟消费密切相关,但其他酶也参与尼古丁代谢。我们测定了FMO3常见变异对170名服用氘代尼古丁的欧裔美国人血浆中尼古丁-N-氧化物水平的影响。多态性rs2266780(E308G)与口服和随意吸烟尼古丁的N-氧化有关(在控制CYP2A6基因型的情况下,P⩽3.3×10)。在体外,FMO3 G308变异与活性降低无关,但rs2266780与肝脏和大脑中FMO3 mRNA异常剪接密切相关(P⩽6.5×10)。令人惊讶的是,在寻求治疗的欧裔美国吸烟者(n = 1558)中,该等位基因与尼古丁依赖性降低有关,特别是与首次吸烟时间延长有关(P = 9.0×10),但与香烟消费量减少无关。由于N-氧化仅占肝脏尼古丁代谢的一小部分,我们推测FMO3基因型影响大脑中的尼古丁代谢(与CYP2A6不同,FMO3在人类大脑中表达),或者尼古丁-N-氧化物本身具有药理活性。我们首次证明了人脑中由FMO3和FMO1介导的尼古丁N-氧化,并表明尼古丁-N-氧化物在体外调节人α4β2烟碱型受体活性。这些结果表明了FMO3基因型与吸烟行为之间关联的可能机制,并提示尼古丁N-氧化作为增强戒烟的新靶点。