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Metabolism of sumatriptan revisited

Timo Pöstges, Matthias Lehr

2023Pharmacology Research & Perspectives12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Scientific literature describes that sumatriptan is metabolized by oxidative deamination of its dimethylaminoethyl residue by monoamine oxidase A (MAO A) and not by cytochrome P450 (CYP)-mediated demethylation, as is usual for such structural elements. Using recombinant human enzymes and HPLC-MS analysis, we found that CYP enzymes may also be involved in the metabolism of sumatriptan. The CYP1A2, CYP2C19, and CYP2D6 isoforms converted this drug into N-desmethyl sumatriptan, which was further demethylated to N,N-didesmethyl sumatriptan by CYP1A2 and CYP2D6. Otherwise, sumatriptan and its two desmethyl metabolites were metabolized by recombinant MAO A but not by MAO B to the corresponding acetaldehyde, with sumatriptan being only a poor substrate for MAO A compared to the N-demethylated and the N,N-didemethylated derivatives.

Topics & Concepts

SumatriptanOxidative deaminationCYP2A6PharmacologyChemistryCYP1A2DextromethorphanMonoamine oxidaseDemethylationDesmethylCYP2D6Cytochrome P450Monoamine oxidase BBiochemistryMetabolismEnzymeMedicineMetaboliteReceptorDNA methylationGene expressionAgonistGeneAmino Acid Enzymes and MetabolismAsymmetric Hydrogenation and CatalysisMetalloenzymes and iron-sulfur proteins
Metabolism of sumatriptan revisited | Litcius