Examination of metabolic pathways and identification of human liver cytochrome P450 isozymes responsible for the metabolism of barnidipine, a calcium channel blocker.
1. In a human liver microsomal system, barnidipine was converted into three primary metabolites, an N-debenzylated product (M-1), a hydrolyzed product of the benzyl-pyrrolidine ester (M-3) and an oxidized product of the dihydropyridine ring (M-8). 2. Involvement of CYP3A in the three primary metabolic pathways was revealed by the following studies: (a) inhibition of CYP3A, (b) a correlation study using 10 individual human liver microsomes and (c) cDNA-expression studies. The secondary metabolites, M-2 and M-4 (pyridine forms of M-1 and M-3), were most likely generated from M-8 but were unlikely from M-1 or M-3. Involvement of CYP3A in the secondary pathways of metabolism is also suggested. 3. The possibility of interactions between barnidipine and coadministered drugs was examined in vitro. The formation rate of the primary metabolites was little affected by warfarin, theophylline, phenytoin, diclofenac and amitriptyline at concentrations of 200 microM, but was inhibited by glibenclamide, simvastatin and cyclosporin A. IC50 for the latter drugs was estimated to be > 200, 200 and 20 microM respectively, which was roughly > 200, 6000 and 50 times higher than their respective therapeutic plasma levels, suggesting that interactions with cyclosporin A, a CYP3A inhibitor, are of possible clinical relevance.[1]References
- Examination of metabolic pathways and identification of human liver cytochrome P450 isozymes responsible for the metabolism of barnidipine, a calcium channel blocker. Teramura, T., Fukunaga, Y., Van Hoogdalem, E.J., Watanabe, T., Higuchi, S. Xenobiotica (1997) [Pubmed]
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