The cytochrome P450 (P450) enzymes are the predominant enzyme system involved in human drug metabolism. Alterations in the expression and/or activity of these enzymes result in changes in pharmacokinetics (and consequently the pharmacodynamics) of drugs that are metabolized by this set of enzymes. Apart from changes in activity as a result of drug-drug interactions (by P450 induction or inhibition), the P450 enzymes can exhibit substantial interindividual variation in basal expression and/or activity, leading to differences in the rates of drug elimination and response. This interindividual variation can result from a myriad of factors, including genetic variation in the promoter or coding regions, variation in transcriptional regulators, alterations in microRNA that affect P450 expression, and ontogenic changes due to exposure to xenobiotics during the developmental and early postnatal periods. Other than administering a probe drug or cocktail of drugs to obtain the phenotype or conducting a genetic analysis to determine genotype, methods to determine interindividual variation are limited. Phenotyping via a probe drug requires exposure to a xenobiotic, and genotyping is not always well correlated with phenotype, making both methodologies less than ideal. This article describes recent work evaluating the effect of some of these factors on interindividual variation in human P450-mediated metabolism and the potential utility of endogenous probe compounds to assess rates of drug metabolism among individuals.
The major objective of this study was to investigate the association of genetic and nongenetic factors with variability in protein abundance and in vitro activity of the androgen-metabolizing enzyme UGT2B17 in human liver microsomes ( = 455). UGT2B17 abundance was quantified by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry proteomics, and enzyme activity was determined by using testosterone and dihydrotestosterone as in vitro probe substrates. Genotyping or gene resequencing and mRNA expression were also evaluated. Multivariate analysis was used to test the association of UGT2B17 copy number variation, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), age, and sex with its mRNA expression, abundance, and activity. UGT2B17 gene copy number and SNPs (rs7436962, rs9996186, rs28374627, and rs4860305) were associated with gene expression, protein levels, and androgen glucuronidation rates in a gene dose-dependent manner. UGT2B17 protein (mean ± S.D. picomoles per milligram of microsomal protein) is sparsely expressed in children younger than 9 years (0.12 ± 0.24 years) but profoundly increases from age 9 years to adults (∼10-fold) with ∼2.6-fold greater abundance in males than in females (1.2 vs. 0.47). Association of androgen glucuronidation with UGT2B15 abundance was observed only in the low UGT2B17 expressers. These data can be used to predict variability in the metabolism of UGT2B17 substrates. Drug companies should include UGT2B17 in early phenotyping assays during drug discovery to avoid late clinical failures.
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