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Identification of diet-derived constituents as potent inhibitors of intestinal glucuronidation

  • Brandon T. Gufford
  • , Gang Chen
  • , Philip Lazarus
  • , Tyler N. Graf
  • , Nicholas H. Oberlies
  • , Mary F. Paine
  • Washington State University Spokane
  • University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

43 Scopus citations

Abstract

Drug-metabolizing enzymes within enterocytes constitute a key barrier to xenobiotic entry into the systemic circulation. Furanocoumarins in grapefruit juice are cornerstone examples of diet-derived xenobiotics that perpetrate interactions with drugs via mechanism-based inhibition of intestinal CYP3A4. Relative to intestinal CYP3A4-mediated inhibition, alternate mechanisms underlying dietary substance-drug interactions remain understudied. A working systematic framework was applied to a panel of structurally diverse diet-derived constituents/extracts (n = 15) as inhibitors of intestinal UDP-glucuronosyl transferases (UGTs) to identify and characterize additional perpetrators of dietary substance-drug interactions. Using a screening assay involving the nonspecific UGT probe substrate 4-methylumbelliferone, human intestinal microsomes, and human embryonic kidney cell lysates overexpressing gut-relevant UGT1A isoforms, 14 diet-derived constituents/extracts inhibited UGT activity by >50% in at least one enzyme source, prompting IC50determination. The IC50values of 13 constituents/extracts (£10 mM with at least one enzyme source) were well below intestinal tissue concentrations or concentrations in relevant juices, suggesting that these dietderived substances can inhibit intestinal UGTs at clinically achievable concentrations. Evaluation of the effect of inhibitor depletion on IC50determination demonstrated substantial impact (up to 2.8-fold shift) using silybin A and silybin B, two key flavonolignans from milk thistle (Silybum marianum) as exemplar inhibitors, highlighting an important consideration for interpretation of UGT inhibition in vitro. Results from this work will help refine a working systematic framework to identify dietary substance-drug interactions that warrant advanced modeling and simulation to inform clinical assessment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1675-1683
Number of pages9
JournalDrug Metabolism and Disposition
Volume42
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2014

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