Hepatic Metabolism of Carcinogenic β-Asarone
Alexander T. Cartus
1
,
Simone Stegmüller
1
,
Nadine Simson
1
,
Andrea Wahl
1
,
Sylvia Neef
1
,
Harald Kelm
2
,
Dieter Schrenk
1
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2015-08-26
scimago Q1
wos Q2
SJR: 0.957
CiteScore: 7.5
Impact factor: 3.8
ISSN: 0893228X, 15205010
PubMed ID:
26273788
General Medicine
Toxicology
Abstract
β-Asarone (1) belongs to the group of naturally occurring phenylpropenes like eugenol or anethole. Compound 1 is found in several plants, e.g., Acorus calamus or Asarum europaeum. Compound 1-containing plant materials and essential oils thereof are used to flavor foods and alcoholic beverages and as ingredients of many drugs in traditional phytomedicines. Although 1 has been claimed to have several positive pharmacological effects, it was found to be genotoxic and carcinogenic in rodents (liver and small intestine). The mechanism of action of carcinogenic allylic phenylpropenes consists of the metabolic activation via cytochrome P450 enzymes and sulfotransferases. In vivo experiments suggested that this pathway does not play a major role in the carcinogenicity of the propenylic compound 1 as is the case for other propenylic compounds, e.g., anethole. Since the metabolic pathways of 1 have not been investigated and its carcinogenic mode of action is unknown, we investigated the metabolism of 1 in liver microsomes of rats, bovines, porcines, and humans using (1)H NMR, HPLC-DAD, and LC-ESI-MS/MS techniques. We synthesized the majority of identified metabolites which were used as reference compounds for the quantification and final verification of metabolites. Microsomal epoxidation of the side chain of 1 presumably yielded (Z)-asarone-1',2'-epoxide (8a) which instantly was hydrolyzed to the corresponding erythro- and threo-configurated diols (9b, 9a) and the ketone 2,4,5-trimethoxyphenylacetone (13). This was the main metabolic pathway in the metabolism of 1 in all investigated liver microsomes. Hydroxylation of the side chain of 1 led to the formation of three alcohols at total yields of less than 30%: 1'-hydroxyasarone (2), (E)- and (Z)-3'-hydroxyasarone (4 and 6), with 6 being the mainly formed alcohol and 2 being detectable only in liver microsomes of Aroclor 1254-pretreated rats. Small amounts of 4 and 6 were further oxidized to the corresponding carbonyl compounds (E)- and (Z)-3'-oxoasarone (5, 7). 1'-Oxoasarone (3) was probably also formed in incubations with 1 but was not detectable, possibly due to its rapid reaction with nucleophiles. Eventually, three mono-O-demethylated metabolites of 1 were detected in minor concentrations. The time course of metabolite formation and determined kinetic parameters show little species-specific differences in the microsomal metabolism of 1. Furthermore, the kinetic parameters imply a very low dependence of the pattern of metabolite formation from substrate concentration. In human liver microsomes, 71-75% of 1 will be metabolized via epoxidation, 21-15% via hydroxylation (and further oxidation), and 8-10% via demethylation at lower as well as higher concentrations of 1, respectively (relative values). On the basis of our results, we hypothesize that the genotoxic epoxides of 1 are the ultimate carcinogens formed from 1.
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Citations from 2025:
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GOST
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Cartus A. T. et al. Hepatic Metabolism of Carcinogenic β-Asarone // Chemical Research in Toxicology. 2015. Vol. 28. No. 9. pp. 1760-1773.
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Cartus A. T., Stegmüller S., Simson N., Wahl A., Neef S., Kelm H., Schrenk D. Hepatic Metabolism of Carcinogenic β-Asarone // Chemical Research in Toxicology. 2015. Vol. 28. No. 9. pp. 1760-1773.
Cite this
RIS
Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.5b00223
UR - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemrestox.5b00223
TI - Hepatic Metabolism of Carcinogenic β-Asarone
T2 - Chemical Research in Toxicology
AU - Cartus, Alexander T.
AU - Stegmüller, Simone
AU - Simson, Nadine
AU - Wahl, Andrea
AU - Neef, Sylvia
AU - Kelm, Harald
AU - Schrenk, Dieter
PY - 2015
DA - 2015/08/26
PB - American Chemical Society (ACS)
SP - 1760-1773
IS - 9
VL - 28
PMID - 26273788
SN - 0893-228X
SN - 1520-5010
ER -
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors)
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@article{2015_Cartus,
author = {Alexander T. Cartus and Simone Stegmüller and Nadine Simson and Andrea Wahl and Sylvia Neef and Harald Kelm and Dieter Schrenk},
title = {Hepatic Metabolism of Carcinogenic β-Asarone},
journal = {Chemical Research in Toxicology},
year = {2015},
volume = {28},
publisher = {American Chemical Society (ACS)},
month = {aug},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemrestox.5b00223},
number = {9},
pages = {1760--1773},
doi = {10.1021/acs.chemrestox.5b00223}
}
Cite this
MLA
Copy
Cartus, Alexander T., et al. “Hepatic Metabolism of Carcinogenic β-Asarone.” Chemical Research in Toxicology, vol. 28, no. 9, Aug. 2015, pp. 1760-1773. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemrestox.5b00223.