1234572-10-1Relevant articles and documents
Biotransformation of prasugrel, a novel thienopyridine antiplatelet agent, to the pharmacologically active metabolite
Hagihara, Katsunobu,Kazui, Miho,Kurihara, Atsushi,Iwabuchi, Haruo,Ishikawa, Minoru,Kobayashi, Hiroyuki,Tanaka, Naoki,Okazaki, Osamu,Farid, Nagy A.,Ikeda, Toshihiko
, p. 898 - 904 (2010)
Prasugrel, a novel thienopyridine antiplatelet agent, undergoes rapid hydrolysis in vivo to a thiolactone, R-95913, which is further converted to its thiol-containing, pharmacologically active metabolite, R-138727, by oxidation via cytochromes P450 (P450). We trapped a sulfenic acid metabolite as a mixed disulfide with 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid in an incubation mixture containing the thiolactone R-95913, expressed CYP3A4, and NADPH. Further experiments investigated one possible mechanism for the conversion of the sulfenic acid to the active thiol metabolite in vitro. A mixed disulfide form of R-138727 with glutathione was found to be a possible precursor of R-138727 in vitro when glutathione was present. The rate constant for the reduction of the glutathione conjugate of R-138727 to R-138727 was increased by addition of human liver cytosol to the human liver microsomes. Thus, one possible mechanism for the ultimate formation of R-138727 in vitro can be through formation of a sulfenic acid mediated by P450s followed possibly by a glutathione conjugation to a mixed disulfide and reduction of the disulfide to the active metabolite R-138727. Copyright