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Vol. 27, Issue 2, 269-273, February 1999
Merck Research Laboratories, Merck & Co., Inc., Three Bridges, New
Jersey
The enzyme system responsible for the
N-deacetylation of eprinomectin in rats was
characterized. Tissue and subcellular studies showed that the
hydrolysis activity was localized mainly in liver microsomes. Apparent
KM and Vmax
values calculated from Lineweaver-Burk plots were 53 µM and 0.81 nmol/mg/min for male rats and 70 µM and 4.99 nmol/mg/min for female
rats, respectively. Pretreatment of male rats with dexamethasone,
phenobarbital, and pregnenolone 16
-carbonitrile increased the
activity by more than 3-fold. Paraoxon and bis-4-nitrophenylphosphate
strongly inhibited the deacetylase activity at concentrations as low as
1 µM. The hydrolysis activity also was inhibited by SKF525, but less
effectively. Eserine strongly inhibited the activity at 1 × 10
4 M. HgCl2 decreased the activity to about
40% at a concentration of 1 × 10
4 M. FeCl3, CaCl2, MgCl2, and EDTA had
little effect on the hydrolysis of eprinomectin, whereas NaF slightly
increased the activity to 118%. Thus, the inhibition study suggested
that eprinomectin deacetylase resembled "B" type
carboxylesterase/amidases. The hydrolysis activity of eprinomectin and
isocarboxazid, a specific substrate of RL2 [Hosokawa, M, Maki T and
Satoh T (1987) Mol Pharmacol 31:579-584], by
liver microsomes from rats treated with various cytochrome P-450
inducers correlated well (r = 0.92). Also, elusion
profiles of esterase by gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography demonstrated that the active protein(s) for eprinomectin and
isocarboxazid hydrolysis coeluted. Thus, RL2 or an enzyme system
similar to RL2 is responsible for the N-deacetylation of eprinomectin.