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Vol. 293, Issue 2, 343-350, May 2000

Microsomal Binding of Amitriptyline: Effect on Estimation of Enzyme Kinetic Parameters In Vitro1

Karthik Venkatakrishnan , Lisa L. von Moltke , R. Scott Obach and David J. Greenblatt

Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts (K.V., L.L.v.M., D.J.G.); Division of Clinical Pharmacology, New England Medical Center Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts (K.V., L.L.v.M., D.J.G.); and Department of Drug Metabolism, Pfizer Central Research, Groton, Connecticut (R.S.O.)

The effect of binding of amitriptyline to human liver microsomes and to microsomes from human B-lymphoblastoid cells on the estimation of enzyme kinetic parameters describing N-demethylation to nortriptyline was investigated using a combination of microsomal binding and in vitro enzyme kinetic studies. Quantitative binding in both matrices increased with higher microsomal protein concentrations (free fractions 0.88-0.32 at 100-500 µg protein/ml in human liver microsomes and 0.82-0.26 at 250-1000 µg protein/ml in microsomes from B-lymphoblastoid cells) and was independent of amitriptyline concentration over a concentration range of 0.2 to 200 µM. Addition of heat-inactivated microsomal protein (50-450 µg/ml) to native human liver microsomes (50 µg/ml) reduced the amitriptyline N-demethylation rate in a protein concentration dependent manner. This effect was greater at lower substrate concentrations and was overcome by saturating concentrations of substrate, thereby decreasing the apparent affinities of the high- and low-affinity components of the N-demethylation process, with minimal effect on the net Vmax. Addition of metabolically inactive microsomes from untransfected human lymphoblastoid cells (750 µg/ml) to CYP2C19 (250 µg/ml protein) increased the apparent Km value for amitriptyline N-demethylation by 3.5-fold and increased the uncompetitive substrate inhibition constant (Ks) by 2.2-fold, making substrate inhibition essentially undetectable. A similar effect was seen with CYP3A4, with a 1.8-fold increase in the S50 (substrate concentration at which half-maximal velocity of a Hill enzyme is achieved). Microsomal binding did not alter the Vmax of either CYP isoform to any appreciable extent. These findings emphasize the importance of incorporating microsomal binding in the estimation of enzyme kinetic parameters in vitro and making appropriate corrections for unbound drug concentrations.


1 This work was supported by Grants MH-34223, DA-05258, MH-19924, and RR-00054 from the Department of Health and Human Services. L.L.v.M. is the recipient of a Scientist Development Award (K21-MH-01237) from the National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health.


0022-3565/00/2932-0343$03.00/0
THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS
Copyright © 2000 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics



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