Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics
Online ISSN : 1880-0920
Print ISSN : 1347-4367
ISSN-L : 1347-4367
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Flavonoids Diosmetin and Hesperetin are Potent Inhibitors of Cytochrome P450 2C9-mediated Drug Metabolism in vitro
Luigi QUINTIERISara BORTOLOZZOStefano STRAGLIOTTOStefano MOROMartina PAVANETTOAlberto NASSIPietro PALATINIMaura FLOREANI
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2010 Volume 25 Issue 5 Pages 466-476

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Abstract

  The aim of this study was to examine in vitro, by means of kinetic analysis and molecular docking simulations, the effects of the flavone diosmetin and its flavanone analog hesperetin on CYP (cytochrome P450) 2C9-mediated drug metabolism. To this purpose, the conversion of diclofenac to 4′-hydroxydiclofenac by human liver microsomes was used as a model assay for assessing the CYP2C9 inhibitory activity of these two flavonoids. Kinetic analyses showed that diosmetin and hesperetin were reversible, dead-end inhibitors of 4′-hydroxydiclofenac formation; their mean Ki (inhibitor dissociation constant) values were 1.71±0.58 and 21.50±3.62 μM, respectively. Diosmetin behaved as a competitive inhibitor, since it increased markedly the Km (substrate concentration yielding 50% of Vmax) of the reaction without affecting the Vmax (maximum velocity of reaction). Hesperetin modified markedly Km and to a lesser extent also modified Vmax, thus acting as a mixed competitive-noncompetitive inhibitor. The results of molecular docking simulations were consistent with those of kinetic analysis, since they showed that the putative binding sites of both diosmetin and hesperetin coincided with the CYP2C9 substrate binding site.
   The demonstration that diosmetin and hesperetin inhibit CYP2C9-mediated diclofenac metabolism at low micromolar concentrations is of potential clinical relevance because CYP2C9 is responsible for the biotransformation of various therapeutically important drugs that have narrow therapeutic indexes.

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© 2010 by The Japanese Society for the Study of Xenobiotics
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