AI Article Synopsis

  • Norursodeoxycholic acid (norUDCA) has shown effective anti-cholestatic effects in an animal model, but in humans, it's eliminated mainly as norUDCA-23G through glucuronidation.
  • The study focused on identifying which human UGT enzymes are responsible for this process and how genetic variations (single nucleotide polymorphisms) in UGT genes influence norUDCA-23G formation.
  • UGT1A3 was found to be the key enzyme in this glucuronidation, with variations in its gene affecting how well norUDCA is processed, which could have implications for its use in cholestasis treatment.

Article Abstract

Norursodeoxycholic acid (norUDCA) exhibits efficient anti-cholestatic properties in an animal model of sclerosing cholangitis. norUDCA is eliminated as a C(23)-ester glucuronide (norUDCA-23G) in humans. The present study aimed at identifying the human UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) enzyme(s) involved in hepatic norUDCA glucuronidation and at evaluating the consequences of single nucleotide polymorphisms in the coding region of UGT genes on norUDCA-23G formation. The effects of norUDCA on the formation of the cholestatic lithocholic acid-glucuronide derivative and of rifampicin on hepatic norUDCA glucuronidation were also explored. In vitro glucuronidation assays were performed with microsomes from human tissues (liver and intestine) and HEK293 cells expressing human UGT enzymes and variant allozymes. UGT1A3 was identified as the major hepatic UGT enzyme catalyzing the formation of norUDCA-23G. Correlation studies using samples from a human liver bank (n = 16) indicated that the level of UGT1A3 protein is a strong determinant of in vitro norUDCA glucuronidation. Analyses of the norUDCA-conjugating activity by 11 UGT1A3 variant allozymes identified three phenotypes with high, low, and intermediate capacity. norUDCA is also identified as a competitive inhibitor for the hepatic formation of the pro-cholestatic lithocholic acid-glucuronide derivative, whereas norUDCA glucuronidation is weakly stimulated by rifampicin. This study identifies human UGT1A3 as the major enzyme for the hepatic norUDCA glucuronidation and supports that some coding polymorphisms affecting the conjugating activity of UGT1A3 in vitro may alter the pharmacokinetic properties of norUDCA in cholestasis treatment.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2801239PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M109.073908DOI Listing

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Similar Publications

The human UGT1A3 enzyme conjugates norursodeoxycholic acid into a C23-ester glucuronide in the liver.

J Biol Chem

January 2010

Laboratory of Molecular Pharmacology, CHUQ Research Center, and the Faculty of Pharmacy, Laval University, Québec, Québec G1V 4G2, Canada.

Article Synopsis
  • Norursodeoxycholic acid (norUDCA) has shown effective anti-cholestatic effects in an animal model, but in humans, it's eliminated mainly as norUDCA-23G through glucuronidation.
  • The study focused on identifying which human UGT enzymes are responsible for this process and how genetic variations (single nucleotide polymorphisms) in UGT genes influence norUDCA-23G formation.
  • UGT1A3 was found to be the key enzyme in this glucuronidation, with variations in its gene affecting how well norUDCA is processed, which could have implications for its use in cholestasis treatment.
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Experiments were performed in 2 volunteers to define the biotransformation and physiological properties of norursodeoxycholic acid (norUDCA), the C(23) (C(24)-nor) homolog of UDCA. To complement the in vivo studies, the biotransformation of norUDCA ex vivo using precision-cut human liver slices was also characterized. In the human studies, both a tracer dose given intravenously and a physiological dose (7.

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