Cytochrome P4502D6 catalyzes the O-demethylation of the psychoactive
alkaloid ibogaine to 12-hydroxyibogamine.
Obach RS, Pablo J, Mash DC
Department of Drug Metabolism, Central Research Division, Pfizer, Inc., Groton,
CT 06340, USA.
Ibogaine is a psychoactive alkaloid that possesses potential as an agent to
treat opiate and cocaine addiction. The primary metabolite arises via O-demethylation
at the 12-position to yield 12-hydroxyibogamine. In this report, evidence
is presented that the O-demethylation of ibogaine observed in human hepatic
microsomes is catalyzed primarily by the polymorphically expressed cytochrome
P-4502D6 (CYP2D6). An enzyme kinetic examination of ibogaine O-demethylase
activity in pooled human liver microsomes suggested that two (or more) enzymes
are involved in this reaction: one with a low KMapp (1.1 microM) and the other
with a high KMapp (>200 microM). The low KMapp activity comprised >95%
of total intrinsic clearance. Human liver microsomes from three individual
donors demonstrated similar enzyme kinetic parameters (mean KMapp = 0.55 +/-
0.09 microM and 310 +/- 10 microM for low and high KM activities, respectively).
However, a fourth human microsome sample that appeared to be a phenotypic
CYP2D6 poor metabolizer possessed only the high KMapp activity. In hepatic
microsomes from a panel of human donors, the low KMapp ibogaine O-demethylase
activity correlated with CYP2D6-catalyzed bufuralol 1'-hydroxylase activity
but not with other P450 isoform-specific activities. Quinidine, a CYP2D6-specific
inhibitor, inhibited ibogaine O-demethylase (IC50 = 0.2 microM), whereas other
P450 isoform-specific inhibitors did not inhibit this activity. Also, of a
battery of recombinant heterologously expressed human P450 isoforms, only
rCYP2D6 possessed significant ibogaine O-demethylase activity. Thus, it is
concluded that ibogaine O-demethylase is catalyzed by CYP2D6 and that this
isoform is the predominant enzyme of ibogaine O-demethylation in humans. The
potential pharmacological implications of these findings are discussed.