Abstract

Acacetin, apigenin, chrysin, and pinocembrin are flavonoid aglycones found in foods such as parsley, honey, celery, and chamomile tea. Flavonoids can act as substrates and inhibitors of the CYP3A4 enzyme, a heme containing enzyme responsible for the metabolism of one third of drugs on the market. The aim of this study was to investigate the inhibitory effect of selected flavonoids on the CYP3A4 enzyme, the kinetics of inhibition, the possible covalent binding of the inhibitor to the enzyme, and whether flavonoids can act as pseudo-irreversible inhibitors. For the determination of inhibition kinetics, nifedipine oxidation was used as a marker reaction. A hemochromopyridine test was used to assess the possible covalent binding to the heme, and incubation with dialysis was used in order to assess the reversibility of the inhibition. All the tested flavonoids inhibited the CYP3A4 enzyme activity. Chrysin was the most potent inhibitor: IC50 = 2.5 ± 0.6 µM, Ki = 2.4 ± 1.0 µM, kinact = 0.07 ± 0.01 min−1, kinact/Ki = 0.03 min−1 µM−1. Chrysin caused the highest reduction of heme (94.5 ± 0.5% residual concentration). None of the tested flavonoids showed pseudo-irreversible inhibition. Although the inactivation of the CYP3A4 enzyme is caused by interaction with heme, inhibitor-heme adducts could not be trapped. These results indicate that flavonoids have the potential to inhibit the CYP3A4 enzyme and interact with other drugs and medications. However, possible food–drug interactions have to be assessed clinically.

Highlights

  • Food is directly linked to the overall health and well-being of humans

  • Šarić-Mustapić et al [28] and Kondža et al [29] showed that acacetin, apigenin, chrysin, and pinocembrin inhibit the CYP3A4 enzyme in the assay with testosterone

  • Šaric-Mustapicet al. [28] and Kondža et al [29] showed that acacetin, apigenin, chrysin, and pinocembrin inhibit the CYP3A4 enzyme in the assay with testosterone as a marker substrate

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Summary

Introduction

Food is directly linked to the overall health and well-being of humans. Flavonoids are secondary plant metabolites that are consumed through vegetables, fruits, teas, wines, propolis, medicinal plants, and so on. These compounds aid organoleptic characteristics of foods (e.g., color and taste of tea and wine) and are of interest due to biological properties affecting human health [1,2]. All flavonoids have a similar molecular structure—a phenylbenzoγ-pyrone (rings A, B and C)—to which hydroxyl groups are bound, and these hydroxyl groups can be methylated and glycosylated [3]. The consumption of flavonoids from foods varies between societies and countries, i.e., France has a high consumption rate (1193 mg/day) versus the United Kingdom (182 mg/day) [5,6]

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