Mass spectrometric characterization of circulating covalent protein adducts derived from a drug acyl glucuronide metabolite: multiple albumin adductions in diclofenac patients

Covalent protein modifications by electrophilic acyl glucuronide (AG) metabolites are hypothetical causes of hypersensitivity reactions associated with certain carboxylate drugs. The complex rearrangements and reactivities of drug AG have been defined in great detail, and protein adducts of carboxyl...

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Published inThe Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics Vol. 350; no. 2; pp. 387 - 402
Main Authors Hammond, Thomas G, Meng, Xiaoli, Jenkins, Rosalind E, Maggs, James L, Castelazo, Anahi Santoyo, Regan, Sophie L, Bennett, Stuart N L, Earnshaw, Caroline J, Aithal, Guruprasad P, Pande, Ira, Kenna, J Gerry, Stachulski, Andrew V, Park, B Kevin, Williams, Dominic P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 01.08.2014
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Summary:Covalent protein modifications by electrophilic acyl glucuronide (AG) metabolites are hypothetical causes of hypersensitivity reactions associated with certain carboxylate drugs. The complex rearrangements and reactivities of drug AG have been defined in great detail, and protein adducts of carboxylate drugs, such as diclofenac, have been found in liver and plasma of experimental animals and humans. However, in the absence of definitive molecular characterization, and specifically, identification of signature glycation conjugates retaining the glucuronyl and carboxyl residues, it cannot be assumed any of these adducts is derived uniquely or even fractionally from AG metabolites. We have therefore undertaken targeted mass spectrometric analyses of human serum albumin (HSA) isolated from diclofenac patients to characterize drug-: derived structures and, thereby, for the first time, have deconstructed conclusively the pathways of adduct formation from a drug AG and its isomeric rearrangement products in vivo. These analyses were informed by a thorough understanding of the reactions of HSA with diclofenac AG in vitro. HSA from six patients without drug-: related hypersensitivities had either a single drug-: derived adduct or one of five combinations of 2-8 adducts from among seven diclofenac N-acylations and three AG glycations on seven of the protein's 59 lysines. Only acylations were found in every patient. We present evidence that HSA modifications by diclofenac in vivo are complicated and variable, that at least a fraction of these modifications are derived from the drug's AG metabolite, and that albumin adduction is not inevitably a causation of hypersensitivity to carboxylate drugs or a coincidental association.
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Current affiliation: Safety Science Consultant, Macclesfield, United Kingdom.
Current affiliation: Division of Molecular and System Toxicology, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Basel, Pharmacenter, Basel, Switzerland.
ISSN:0022-3565
1521-0103
1521-0103
DOI:10.1124/jpet.114.215079