Miksys Sharon, Wadji Fariba Baghai, Tolledo Edgor Cole, Remington Gary, Nobrega Jose N, Tyndale Rachel F
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, Toronto, Canada; Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto, Canada.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto, Canada.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2017 Aug 1;78:140-148. doi: 10.1016/j.pnpbp.2017.04.030. Epub 2017 Apr 26.
Risk for side-effects after acute (e.g. parkinsonism) or chronic (e.g. tardive dyskinesia) treatment with antipsychotics, including haloperidol, varies substantially among people. CYP2D can metabolize many antipsychotics and variable brain CYP2D metabolism can influence local drug and metabolite levels sufficiently to alter behavioral responses. Here we investigated a role for brain CYP2D in acutely and chronically administered haloperidol levels and side-effects in a rat model. Rat brain, but not liver, CYP2D activity was irreversibly inhibited with intracerebral propranolol and/or induced by seven days of subcutaneous nicotine pre-treatment. The role of variable brain CYP2D was investigated in rat models of acute (catalepsy) and chronic (vacuous chewing movements, VCMs) haloperidol side-effects. Selective inhibition and induction of brain, but not liver, CYP2D decreased and increased catalepsy after acute haloperidol, respectively. Catalepsy correlated with brain, but not hepatic, CYP2D enzyme activity. Inhibition of brain CYP2D increased VCMs after chronic haloperidol; VCMs correlated with brain, but not hepatic, CYP2D activity, haloperidol levels and lipid peroxidation. Baseline measures, hepatic CYP2D activity and plasma haloperidol levels were unchanged by brain CYP2D manipulations. Variable rat brain CYP2D alters side-effects from acute and chronic haloperidol in opposite directions; catalepsy appears to be enhanced by a brain CYP2D-derived metabolite while the parent haloperidol likely causes VCMs. These data provide novel mechanistic evidence for brain CYP2D altering side-effects of haloperidol and other antipsychotics metabolized by CYP2D, suggesting that variation in human brain CYP2D may be a risk factor for antipsychotic side-effects.
使用包括氟哌啶醇在内的抗精神病药物进行急性(如帕金森症)或慢性(如迟发性运动障碍)治疗后出现副作用的风险在人群中差异很大。细胞色素P450 2D6(CYP2D)可代谢多种抗精神病药物,大脑中CYP2D代谢的差异可充分影响局部药物和代谢物水平,从而改变行为反应。在此,我们在大鼠模型中研究了大脑CYP2D在急性和慢性给予氟哌啶醇后的水平及副作用中的作用。大鼠脑内注射普萘洛尔可不可逆地抑制大鼠脑而非肝脏的CYP2D活性,和/或通过皮下尼古丁预处理7天诱导其活性。在急性(僵住症)和慢性(空嚼运动,VCMs)氟哌啶醇副作用的大鼠模型中研究了大脑CYP2D变异的作用。选择性抑制和诱导大脑而非肝脏的CYP2D,分别使急性给予氟哌啶醇后的僵住症减轻和加重。僵住症与大脑而非肝脏的CYP2D酶活性相关。抑制大脑CYP2D可增加慢性给予氟哌啶醇后的VCMs;VCMs与大脑而非肝脏的CYP2D活性、氟哌啶醇水平及脂质过氧化相关。大脑CYP2D操作未改变基线指标、肝脏CYP2D活性及血浆氟哌啶醇水平。大鼠大脑CYP2D变异以相反方向改变急性和慢性氟哌啶醇的副作用;僵住症似乎由大脑CYP2D衍生的代谢物增强,而母体氟哌啶醇可能导致VCMs。这些数据为大脑CYP2D改变氟哌啶醇及其他经CYP2D代谢的抗精神病药物的副作用提供了新的机制证据,表明人脑CYP2D的变异可能是抗精神病药物副作用的一个风险因素。