Abstract
U-89843 has been shown to undergo biotransformation, both in vitro and in vivo, to form U-97924 as a major primary metabolite. U-89843 was found to be positive in an in vitro UDS mutagenesis screen conducted with primary rat hepatocytes in serum-free media. In contrast to in vitro results, no evidence of genetic toxicity of U-89843 was observed in rats in the in vivo/in vitro version of the UDS test with single oral doses up to 1400 mg/kg. The negative results may be related to more robust in vivo detoxification mechanisms or relatively lower exposure to reactive metabolites formed by bioactivation of U-89843 as compared to that observed in the serum-free in vitro hepatocyte test system. Further studies showed rat serum suppressed the in vitro metabolism of U-89843 as well as the formation of the corresponding hydroxylated metabolite, U-97924, the putative precursor of proposed reactive electrophilic metabolite. The measured in vivo systemic clearance of U-89843 (0.53 l/h/kg) in rats was about 1000-fold slower than the in vitro intrinsic clearance (606 l/h/kg) estimated by measuring the formation of U-97924 in rat liver microsomal incubations. Since U-89843 is extensively associated with serum proteins a poor extraction ratio into the liver may account for the slower biotransformation of U-89843 in vivo as compared to that exhibited in in vitro serum-free hepatocyte incubations. Addition of bovine serum albumin (1–40 mg/ml) to the in vitro UDS assay medium decreased the UDS mean net grains per nucleus response of U-89843. These results suggest that the effect of serum protein should be considered when comparing serum-free in vitro UDS and in vivo UDS results for highly serum protein bound compounds.
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