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Summary Metabolism and Toxicology lectures

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MeTox
Introduction
De Graaf
27-11-2020

Metabolism: chemical transformations that compounds undergo in the body (what does the body do
to a compound)
Toxicology: adverse effects of chemicals on the body (what does the compound do to the body)

Fat-soluble compounds stay in the blood by binding to plasma-protein > efficiently absorbed >
clearance is slow. To be excreted > compounds need to become water-soluble.
Metabolism > lipophilic compounds > water-soluble compound > excretion.

Toxification/bioactivation: metabolites are more toxic than parent compound
Detoxification: metabolites less toxic than parent compound.

On-target toxicity: undesirable effect due to exaggerated pharmacological effect (e.g. increased
exposure of the target, interaction with the same target on another cell)
Off-target toxicity: undesirable effect via a completely different mechanism (different target) than
the pharmacological effect.

Normal range = variation in the range of controls
Responder = all above normal range

Hormesis = low concentrations of toxic compound has positive
effect on organ

Measures of toxicity: potential of a compound to be toxic
- LD50 = lethal dose concentration, the dose/concentration to kill half the members tested
- T(oxicity)D50 = dose of a drug necessary get 50% of maximal toxic effect or dose at which
50% of the population shows the toxic effect
- T(oxicity)C50 = plasma concentration to get 50% of toxic effect or plasma concentration to
get 50% of population to get toxic effect
- E(fficacy)D50 = dose of drug necessary to get 50% of desired effect or dose at which 50% of
population show desired effect
- E(fficacy)C50 = plasma concentration of drug necessary to get 50% of desired effect or
plasma concentration of a drug necessary to get 50% of population to get desired effect

LOAEL = lowest observed adverse effect level: first tested dose/concentration that gives a significant
toxic effect.
NOAEL = no observed adverse effect level: dose/concentration just lower than the LOAEL.

Hazard = biological property/potential
Risk = chance on toxicity

,Research phase:
- Screening toxicity
- Screening metabolism
- HTS: high throughput screening
Development phase:
- Toxicity and safety pharmacology
- ADME
- Excretion (in vivo/vitro): 2 test animal species
Clinical phase:
- ‘’non-clinical’’: laboratory animals
- Human pharmacokinetics
- Human toxicity/safety
Post-marketing:
- Side effects
- Pharmacovigilance
- Post marketing surveillance

Adverse drug reactions (ADR):
- Affects 10-20% of hospitalized patients
- 1-5% of hospital admissions are caused by ADR
- 13% of new drugs withdrawn or black box warning because of ADR
 Lareb = central collection point for all side effects of pharmaceutical drugs in the NL

REACH:
- Registration, evaluation and authorization of chemical substance
- New European community regulations for substance produced or imported
- Data about safe use


Metox
Mechanisms of toxicity
Salvati
08/12/2020

Why understand the mechanism?
- Change and improve drug
- Understand how to protect from side effect
- Understand how to detoxify
- Understand if mechanisms observed in animals are relevant in humans

4 steps to toxicity:
1. Delivery form site of exposure > target
(absorption, distribution)
2. Reaction of ultimate toxicant with the
target
3. Cellular dysfunction (dysregulation or
alteration of cellular maintenance)
4. Repair vs disrepair or adaptation
 Toxicity

,Factors that increase vs factors that decrease delivery of a drug in the body




Detoxication:
- Nucleophiles: conjugation of a functional group > prevents conversion to radicals
- Electrophiles: conjugation with nucleophile
- Fee radicals: SOD and GSH

Reaction of ultimate toxicant with the target:
- Direct interaction
- Adverse alteration of environment: e.g. CO toxicity and carboxyhaemoglobin > CNS and heart
affected




Toxicant and target:
Attributed of target
- Reactive
- Accessible
- Critical function
Reaction types
- Noncovalent binding
- Covalent binding
- Hydrogen abstraction
- Electron transfer
- Enzymatic reaction
Outcomes
- Dysfunction
- Destruction
- Neoantigen formation

Ultimate toxicants: reactive substances
Radicals
- Metabolites of xenobiotics/O2
Electrophiles
- Epoxides

, - Isocyanates
- Ketones
- Acyl halides
- Aromatic amines
- Ester glucuronides

Types of reactions with target: LowMolecularWeight compounds
- Noncovalent binding (reversible): electrostatic/hydrophobic/hydrogen/vdW > influence on
the activity of receptors/enzymes/transporters/etc
- Covalent bond (irreversible): common with electrophilic toxicant that react with nucleophilic
atoms (proteins and DNA/RNA)
- Hydrogen abstraction: e.g. lipids with radicals (peroxidative degradation)
- Election transfer: oxidation/reduction > ROS formation
- Enzymatic reactions

Biologicals reacting with target: proteins, DNA gene therapy, siRNA, antibodies
- Immunological reaction (antigen) and inflammation
- Side effects by receptor binding high species-specific > hard to translate to humans

Attributes of target molecules: reactive, accessible, critical function
- Receptors
- Structural proteins, enzymes, transporters
- Membrane lipids
- DNA/RNA
- Ca2+ homeostasis
- Ion channels
- Mitochondria




Identify a target responsible toxicity:
- Toxicant reacts with it and affect its function
- Toxicant reaches effective concentration at target
- Toxicant alters the target in a way mechanistically related to the observed toxicity

Effect of toxicant on the target
Dysfunction of target:
- Inhibition
- Activation
- Change in tertiary structure
- Disruption homeostasis of the cell
Destruction of target:
- Proteins: degradation by chaperones and ubiquitination
- Lipids: lipid peroxidation
- DNA: fragmentation
Neoantigen formation:
- Immunological reactions and inflammation

Effects depending of target type
Proteins: often to -SH or -NH2 groups
- Impaired function, disturbed homeostasis, many effects, direct and indirect

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