Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin
Online ISSN : 1347-5215
Print ISSN : 0918-6158
ISSN-L : 0918-6158
Notes
Extremely High Drug-Reductase Activity Based on Aldehyde Oxidase in Monkey Liver
Shigeyuki KITAMURAKeiko NAKATANIKoji OHASHIKazumi SUGIHARARyuji HOSOKAWAYasumasa AKAGAWAShigeru OHTA
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2001 Volume 24 Issue 7 Pages 856-859

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Abstract
Drug-reducing ability of monkey liver cytosol was examined in this study. Monkey liver cytosol exhibited significant reductase activities toward zonisamide, sulindac and imipramine N-oxide in the presence of 2-hydroxy-pyrimidine or benzaldehyde, an electron donor to aldehyde oxidase. These activities were abolished by inhibitors of aldehyde oxidase, such as menadione. These reductase activities in monkeys were extremely high compared to those in other animals. The zonisamide reductase activity of monkey liver cytosol was about 40-fold higher than that of the liver microsomes. It appears that the high levels of aldehyde oxidase exists in monkey liver, and zonisamide, sulindac and imipramine N-oxide are mainly reduced by this enzyme, not by cytochrome P450.
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© 2001 The Pharmaceutical Society of Japan
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