Document Type

Article

Date of Original Version

2021

Department

Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences

Abstract

Background and Objective

The use of herbal medicines is common in Africa, and patients often use a combination of herbs and drugs. Concurrent herbal and pharmaceuticals treatments can cause adverse effects through herb-drug interactions (HDI). This study evaluated the potential risk of HDI for five medicinal plants, Vernonia amygdalina, Ocimum gratissimum, Moringa oleifera, Azadirachta indica, and Picralima nitida, using in vitro assays. Patients with diabetes and some other disease conditions commonly use these medicinal plants in Nigeria, and little is known regarding their potential for drug interaction, despite their enormous use.

Methods

Crude extracts of the medicinal plants were evaluated for reversible and time-dependent inhibition (TDI) activity of six cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes using pooled human liver microsomes and cocktail probe-based assays. Enzyme activity was determined by quantifying marker metabolites' formation using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry. The drug interaction potential was predicted for each herbal extract using the in vitro half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) values and the percentage yield.

Results

O. gratissimum methanol extracts reversibly inhibited CYP 1A2, 2C8, 2C9 and 2C19 enzymes (IC50: 6.21 µg/ml, 2.96 µg/ml, 3.33 µg/ml and 1.37 µg/ml, respectively). Additionally, V. amygdalina methanol extract inhibited CYP2C8 activity (IC50: 5.71 µg/ml); P. nitida methanol and aqueous extracts inhibited CYP2D6 activity (IC50: 1.99 µg/ml and 2.36 µg/ml, respectively) while A. indica methanol extract inhibited CYP 3A4/5, 2C8 and 2C9 activity (IC50: 7.31 µg/ml, 9.97 µg/ml and 9.20 µg/ml, respectively). The extracts showed a potential for TDI of the enzymes when incubated at 200 µg/ml; V. amygdalina and A. indica methanol extracts exhibited TDI potential for all the major CYPs.

Conclusions

The medicinal plants inhibited CYP activity in vitro, with the potential to cause in vivo HDI. Clinical risk assessment and proactive monitoring are recommended for patients who use these medicinal plants concurrently with drugs that are cleared through CYP metabolism.

Publication Title, e.g., Journal

European Journal of Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetics

Volume

46

Slitt_CytochromeP450Enzymes_2021_SuppMat.pdf (109 kB)
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