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Molecular Diagnostics and Genetics |
Departments of1
Clinical Pharmacology and2
Clinical Chemistry, Georg-August University, Goettingen, Germany.
3 Dr. Margarete Fischer-Bosch-Institute of Clinical Pharmacology, Stuttgart, Germany.
4 Department of Pharmacology, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany.
aAddress correspondence to this author at: Department of Pharmacology, Johannes Gutenberg University, Obere Zahlbacher Strasse 67, 55131 Mainz, Germany. Fax 49-941-5992-36727; e-mail wojnowski{at}uni-mainz.de.
| Abstract |
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Methods: cDNA-expressed CYP3A enzymes and a bank of human liver microsomes with known CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 content were used to investigate the contribution of CYP3A5 to the metabolism of tacrolimus to 13-O-demethyltacrolimus as quantified by liquid chromatographytandem mass spectrometry.
Results: Demethylation of tacrolimus to 13-O-demethyltacrolimus was the predominant clearance reaction. Calculated Km and Vmax values for CYP3A4, CYP3A5, and CYP3A7 cDNA-expressed microsomes were 1.5 µmol/L and 0.72 pmol · (pmol P450)1 · min1, 1.4 µmol/L and 1.1 pmol · (pmol P450)1 · min1, and 6 µmol/L and 0.084 pmol · (pmol P450)1 · min1, respectively. Recombinant CYP3A5 metabolized tacrolimus with a catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km) that was 64% higher than that of CYP3A4. The contribution of CYP3A5 to 13-O-demethylation of tacrolimus in human liver microsomes varied from 1.5% to 40% (median, 18.8%). There was an inverse association between the contribution of CYP3A5 to 13-O-demethylation and the amount of 3A4 protein (r = 0.90; P <0.0001). Mean 13-O-demethylation clearances in CYP3A5 high and low expressers, estimated by the parallel-tube liver model, were 8.6 and 3.57 mL · min1 · (kg of body weight)1, respectively (P = 0.0088).
Conclusions: CYP3A5 affects metabolism of tacrolimus, thus explaining the association between CYP3A5 genotype and tacrolimus dosage. The importance of CYP3A5 status for tacrolimus clearance is also dependent on the concomitant CYP3A4 activity.
| Introduction |
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CYP3A concentrations and activity display interindividual variability, which may in part explain some of the variation in the bioavailability of tacrolimus. Historically, tacrolimus has been considered to be a substrate for the most extensively investigated CYP3A isoenzyme, CYP3A4. However, several independent clinical studies recently demonstrated significant associations between blood concentrations of tacrolimus and/or maintenance dose in transplant patients and the CYP3A5 concentration. Unlike CYP3A4, CYP3A5 is expressed polymorphically, with expression controlled by only a few genetic variants (12)(13). In Caucasians, the expression of CYP3A5 appears to be controlled exclusively by only 1 genetic variant (CYP3A5*1). CYP3A5 "high expressers" account for
10% of Caucasian, 33% of Japanese, and 55%70% of African or African-American populations. Several clinical studies have demonstrated that carriers of CYP3A5*1 alleles (CYP3A5 high expressers) require higher doses of tacrolimus to achieve target blood concentrations than do homozygous carriers of the CYP3A5*3 allele (CYP3A5 "low expressers") (14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19)(20)(21).
At present, the potential of CYP3A5 genotyping in tacrolimus therapies is unclear (22). Target tacrolimus concentrations in plasma can be ultimately achieved in all patients, irrespective of genotype, by means of drug monitoring-based dose adjustments. More important may be the reported impact of the polymorphism during the early period after transplantation. CYP3A5 high expressers had lower mean tacrolimus concentrations during the first week after renal transplantation, and rejection occurred earlier in these patients (23). On the basis of these results, it has been proposed that a CYP3A5 genotype-based adjusted initial dosing regimen for tacrolimus, subsequently guided by concentration measurements, has the potential to improve transplant survival.
On the other hand, it has been noted that a significant portion of interindividual variability for tacrolimus cannot be explained by the CYP3A5 polymorphisms. This could reflect the effect of other tacrolimus-metabolizing enzymes (e.g., CYP3A4), transporters (P-glycoprotein), or of CYP3A5 induction (24). Better understanding of the role of CYP3A5 in tacrolimus disposition has been hampered by the paucity of in vitro data on tacrolimus metabolism by CYP3A5. Indeed, although tacrolimus metabolism to 13-O-demethyltacrolimus by CYP3A5 has been demonstrated (25), a detailed investigation on the kinetics of this reaction is lacking. Particularly informative would be a direct comparison with CYP3A4. We therefore set out to assess the relative contributions of CYP3A5 and CYP3A4 to the formation of the main tacrolimus metabolite (13-O-demethyltacrolimus), using cDNA-expressed enzymes and a bank of human liver microsomes derived from low and high CYP3A5 expressers.
| Materials and Methods |
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tacrolimus metabolism by hlm- and baculovirus-expressed cytochrome p450
Stock solutions of tacrolimus were prepared in methanol. Samples were evaporated under N2, dissolved in 100 mmol/L potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), and supplemented with either HLM- or baculovirus-expressed cytochrome P450. The final incubation volume was 100 µL. The reaction mixture with CYP3A4/OR or CYP3A5/OR was additionally supplemented with purified cytochrome b5 (P450:b5 ratio, 1:1) according to a previously described method (26) before the start of the reaction with NADPH. The reaction was initiated through addition of NADPH, was allowed to proceed for 10 min, and then was stopped by addition of a freshly prepared stop solution composed of 0.3 mol/L ZnSO4methanol (3:7 by volume) containing internal standard (25 µg/L ascomycin). After reaction termination, the incubation mixtures were centrifuged at 10 000g for 5 min. Supernatants were transferred to new tubes, and 100 µL was used for the liquid chromatographytandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis. The formation of 13-O-demethyltacrolimus was linear with time between 5 and 20 min and with protein over the range from 5 to 50 µg for HLMs and from 1 to 8 pmol for baculovirus-expressed CYP3A. The end concentrations of tacrolimus ranged from 0 to 12.5 µmol/L. The substrate consumption was <15% over the incubation time (10 min).
lc-ms/ms analysis
An on-line extraction method with a column-switching technique combined with analytical LC and electrospray MS/MS was used to quantify 13-O-demethyltacrolimus. The supernatants obtained from microsomal incubations were injected with a series 200 autoinjector (Perkin-Elmer). The extraction cartridge used was a security guard C18 cartridge (4.0 x 3.0 mm; Phenomenex), and the analytical column was a Nucleosil C18 reversed-phase column [250 x 2.1 mm (i.d.); 5 µm; MZ-Analysentechnik] maintained at 65 °C with a DuPont column oven. The sample was introduced on the extraction column at a flow rate of 1500 µL/min with deionized water (solvent A) for 0.5 min. After the diverter valve was switched, analytes were eluted at a flow rate of 500 µL/min onto the analytical column with the following stepwise elution protocol: 0.5 to 3 min, 65% solvent B (0.01 g/L formic acid and 2 mmol/L ammonium acetate in methanol); 3 to 4 min, 75% B; 4 to 6 min, 80% B; 6 to 9.5 min, 100% B. The extraction column was then reequilibrated with solvent A for 0.5 min at 1500 µL/min before the next injection. An API 2000 triple-stage quadrupole instrument was used for quantification in the positive-ion mode. Multiple reaction monitoring with argon as collision gas and the following mass transitions (ammonium adducts) was used for quantification: 13-O-demethyltacrolimus, m/z 807.5
754.5; ascomycin, m/z 809.5
756.5. Peak areas for 13-O-demethyltacrolimus were linear from 0.5 to 5 µg/L. The limit of quantification for 13-O-demethyltacrolimus was 0.25 µg/L. The limit of detection was 0.1 µg/L. The between-run imprecision (n = 20) was 7.0% at 3 µg/L and 2.7% at 5 µg/L 13-O-demethyltacrolimus.
calculation of relative contributions
The relative contribution of each CYP3A isoform (i) to the overall rate of tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation (fi) was predicted as a function of substrate concentration (s) by use of the relative hepatic abundance (Ai) of each recombinant CYP3A, as determined by quantitative Western blotting using isoenzyme-specific antibodies, and the reaction velocity, Vi(s), based on the recombinant enzyme kinetic parameters (Km and Vmax) determined for each enzyme (27):
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prediction of pharmacokinetic clearance
The kinetic parameters of baculovirus-expressed isoforms were used to estimate the in vitro intrinsic clearance of tacrolimus to 13-O-demethyltacrolimus. The intrinsic clearance was calculated as the Vmax/Km ratio (28). The net in vitro human liver microsomal intrinsic clearance was calculated for each CYP isoform, weighted by the respective baculovirus relative activity factor estimates, as defined previously (29). This was then scaled up to in vivo intrinsic clearance by use of previously published values of scaling factors: 50 mg microsomal protein/g of liver, and 20 g liver/kg of body weight (30). The resulting estimated intrinsic clearance of tacrolimus via 13-O-demethylation (CLint') was used in conjunction with estimates of human hepatic blood flow (Q; 20 mL min1 · kg1) and the free fraction of tacrolimus in human plasma (fu; 0.01) (31) to predict intravenous clearance via 13-O-demethylation. This was done according to the well-stirred (CLp1) and parallel-tube (CLp2) models (32)(33) and the respective, following equations (34)(35):
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data analysis
The enzyme kinetic parameters (Km and Vmax) were determined by nonlinear least-squares regression (SigmaPlot 8.0; SPSS). The significance of differences in predicted clearance values between different groups was assessed by the MannWhitney U-test. The association between 2 variables was assessed by the Spearman rank test in the case of nonparametric data or by the Pearson correlation coefficient (SPSS 12.0) in the case of gaussian-distributed data.
| Results |
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tacrolimus metabolism by HLMS
We next investigated the tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation activity in a bank of 15 human liver samples, including 12 high expressers and 3 low expressers for CYP3A5. The relevant data are given in Table 1
. There was an almost 19-fold variation in the Vmax for tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation with values ranging from 199.3 pmolmg1min1 to 3746.7 pmolmg1min1 (median, 564.8 pmolmg1min1; Table 1
). Variation was smaller for the respective Km values (median, 0.74 µmol/L; range, 0.381.20 µmol/L).
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We next compared the Vmax values obtained for the individual HLMs with corresponding CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 protein content. The correlation coefficient (r) between the Vmax for tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation and CYP3A5 protein concentration was higher than that for Vmax and CYP3A4 protein concentration: 0.65 (P = 0.008) vs 0.49 (P = 0.09; Fig. 2 of the online Data Supplement). We also observed a good correlation (r = 0.64; P = 0.01; Fig. 2 of the online Data Supplement) between Vmax values for tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation and those for testosterone 6ß-hydroxylation (supplied in the package insert for each HLM). Because the latter reaction is a marker of CYP3A activity (36), this result further confirms that tacrolimus is mostly metabolized by CYP3A. The data in Fig. 2 of the online Data Supplement were also analyzed after omission of an outlier, liver HH31, and correlations between Vmax and either CYP3A5 protein (r = 0.56; P = 0.03) or testosterone 6ß-hydroxylation (r = 0.57; P = 0.03) remained significant. We observed no significant correlation between Vmax and CYP3A4 protein concentration (r = 0.35; P = 0.265).
relative contribution of cyp3a5 to 13-o-demethylation of tacrolimus
We investigated the contribution of CYP3A5 to 13-O-demethylation of tacrolimus in the liver bank, using the relative hepatic abundance approach and assuming that the enzyme kinetic constants that were determined for the individual recombinant CYP3A isoenzymes were also valid for the hepatic liver microsomes. At 5 µmol/L tacrolimus, a concentration within the range measured in hepatic tissue in vivo, CYP3A5 accounted for 1.5%40% of 13-O-demethylation of tacrolimus. We found no significant association between the contribution of CYP3A5 to 13-O-demethylation and the amount of CYP 3A5 protein (Fig. 2A
; r = 0.20; P = 0.51), but there was an inverse association with the amount of 3A4 protein (Fig. 2B
; r = 0.90; P <0.0001). Similar results were obtained at 0.5 and 50 µmol/L tacrolimus (data not shown).
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prediction of pharmacokinetic clearance
When we used the relative activity factor approach (29) and the parallel-tube model, the predicted tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation clearance values (CLp2) in livers from CYP3A5 high and low expressers were, on average, 8.60 and 3.57 mL · min1 · (kg of body weight)1, respectively (P = 0.0088, MannWhitney U-test; Fig. 3 of the online Data Supplement). The predicted tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation clearance values (CLp1) obtained with the well-stirred model were also calculated and were similar to the CLp2 values (Table 1
).
| Discussion |
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Using cDNA-expressed P450 enzymes, we could show that tacrolimus is indeed metabolized predominantly by members of the CYP3A subfamily to 13-O-demethyltacrolimus. The metabolites 13,15-O-demethyltacrolimus and 13,31-O-demethyltacrolimus were also detected, but their concentrations were 10- to 20-fold lower than the corresponding concentrations of 13-O-demethyltacrolimus. Recombinant CYP3A5 metabolized tacrolimus with an affinity comparable to that of CYP3A4 but with a catalytic efficiency (Vmax/Km) that was 64% higher than that of CYP3A4. This further supports the growing recognition that the specific activities of CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 are comparable for certain substrates, including ethylmorphine, lidocaine, testosterone, and alfentanil (36)(37)(38)(39). In contrast, the metabolism of tacrolimus by CYP3A7 was characterized by a much lower substrate affinity and reaction velocity and a catalytic efficiency that was only 29% of that observed with CYP3A4. Contrary to initial observations, CYP3A7 is produced polymorphically in livers and small intestines of
15% of adult Caucasians (13)(40). The low affinity and capacity of CYP3A7 toward tacrolimus suggest that this P450 will, however, play no role in tacrolimus metabolism in vivo.
The Km values observed for recombinant CYP3A4 (1.5 µmol/L) and CYP3A5 (1.4 µmol/L) were similar to the Km values obtained for the transformation of tacrolimus to 13-O-demethyltacrolimus in a bank of 15 HLMs (median, 0.74 µmol/L; range, 0.381.20 µmol/L). Using the kinetic constants derived from the recombinant enzyme experiments and the concentrations of CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 protein in the respective microsomes, we were able to estimate the contribution of CYP3A5 to the transformation of tacrolimus in each microsomal preparation. The contribution of CYP3A5 to the 13-O-demethylation of tacrolimus in HLMs varied from 1.5% to 40% and was particularly strong in livers with low CYP3A4, whereas it was lower in those with high CYP3A4 and in the 3 CYP3A5 low expressers. These findings support the observations that CYP3A5 is an important source of interindividual variability for CYP3A when CYP3A5 content represents a significant fraction of the total hepatic CYP3A pool (36)(38)(41). Conversely, the share of CYP3A5 in tacrolimus metabolism undergoes "dilution" in individuals with high concentrations of CYP3A4. In other words, the relative contribution of CYP3A5 strongly depends on the concomitant amount of CYP3A4. The predominant role of CYP3A isoforms in the 13-O-demethylation of tacrolimus is in agreement with the good correlation observed between tacrolimus 13-O-demethylation activity and 6ß-hydroxylation of testosterone in the liver samples investigated. The latter is widely used as a marker of CYP3A activity (36)(42).
In our hands, the mean predicted tacrolimus pharmacokinetic clearances in CYP3A5 low expressers (3.57 mL · min1 · kg1) and CYP3A5 high expressers (8.60 mL · min1 · kg1) were in general in the same range as in vivo (0.686 mL · min1 · kg1) (2). Clearance values >6 mL · min1 · kg1 observed in some liver samples may have been caused by high CYP3A concentrations.
Taken together, our results explain, at least in part, the recently reported positive association between CYP3A5 genotype and tacrolimus dosage (14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19)(20)(21). Furthermore, our data offer an explanation for the substantial variability in tacrolimus dosage independent of CYP3A5 genotype, i.e., that observed within the groups of high and low CYP3A5 expressers (14). It is likely that part of this variability is brought about by genotype-independent differences in CYP3A5 concentrations. Indeed, CYP3A5 concentrations varied 2-fold (range, 6.914 pmol/mg) among the 12 high-expresser livers. We speculate that an even bigger variability in tacrolimus maintenance dose is caused by differences in CYP3A4 concentrations. For comparison, the expression of this CYP3A isoenzyme varied 11-fold (27300 pmol/mg) within the same set of 12 samples. Further variability may be attributable to differential inhibition or induction by exogenous substances (24)(43)(44) and by the expression of CYP3A5 and CYP3A4 in the small intestine (45). This is particularly important for corticosteroids because these compounds are often used concomitantly with tacrolimus after organ transplantation and they are substrates, inducers, and inhibitors of CYP3A (2).
In addition to CYP3A, tacrolimus is a substrate for the P-glycoprotein encoded by the MDR1 gene, and the trough concentration of tacrolimus is indeed affected by the intestinal production of MDR-1 during the first week after transplantation. Subsequently, it is mostly hepatic metabolism that contributes to tacrolimus clearance (46). A polymorphism in the MDR1 gene has been associated with tacrolimus clearance (15)(18), although these findings have not been confirmed by other investigators (14)(16)(45). Interestingly, MDR1 and CYP3A5 (as well as CYP3A4) share transcriptional activators such as pregnane X receptor (24)(47). This latter mechanism may explain the intriguing findings by Goto et al. (46), who described an association between an MDR1 polymorphism and CYP3A4 concentrations.
Tacrolimus emerges as another clinically relevant substrate of CYP3A5. Previously, Katz et al. (48) found that in vivo drug disposition of ABT-773, a ketolide antibiotic that is a substrate for both CYP3A and P-glycoprotein, depends on the CYP3A5, but not the MDR1 genotype. CYP3A5 expressers had higher metabolism of lovastatin, simvastatin, and atorvastatin (49), whereas no association was found between the polymorphism and efficacy of statins that are not metabolized by CYP3A5 (fluvastatin and pravastatin).
What are the implications of our findings for the currently discussed (22) prospect of CYP3A5 genotyping in patients treated with tacrolimus? Certainly, CYP3A5 genotyping will not eliminate the need to monitor blood tacrolimus concentrations because CYP3A4 also contributes to its metabolism, and production of both CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 (24) undergoes strong modulation by nongenetic (environmental) factors. However, a CYP3A5 genotypebased adjusted initial dosing regimen for tacrolimus may allow more rapid and efficient attainment of therapeutic blood concentrations in the early postoperative period. Indeed, CYP3A5 high expressers had lower mean tacrolimus concentrations during the first week after transplantation, and rejection occurred earlier in these patients (23). Prospective studies are now needed to validate this hypothesis.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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| References |
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