posted on 2015-12-17, 00:32authored byA. Kenneth MacLeod, Tuo Zang, Zoe Riches, Colin J. Henderson, C. Roland Wolf, Jeffrey T.-J. Huang
The modulation of
drug metabolism enzyme (DME) expression by therapeutic
agents is a central mechanism of drug–drug interaction and
should be assessed as early as possible in preclinical drug development.
Direct measurement of DME levels is typically achieved by Western
blotting, qPCR, or microarray, but these techniques have their limitations;
antibody cross-reactivity among highly homologous subfamilies creates
ambiguity, while discordance between mRNA and protein expression undermines
observations. The aim of this study was to design a simple targeted
workflow by combining in vivo SILAC and label-free
proteomics approaches for quantification of DMEs in mouse liver, facilitating
a rapid and comprehensive evaluation of metabolic potential at the
protein level. A total of 197 peptides, representing 51 Phase I and
Phase II DMEs, were quantified by LC-MS/MS using targeted high resolution
single ion monitoring (tHR/SIM) with a defined mass-to-charge and
retention time window for each peptide. In a constitutive androstane
receptor (Car) activated mouse model, comparison of tHR/SIM-in vivo SILAC with Western blotting for analysis of the
expression of cytochromes P450 was favorable, with agreement in fold-change
values between methods. The tHR/SIM-in vivo SILAC
approach therefore permits the robust analysis of multiple DME in
a single protein sample, with clear utility for the assessment of
the drug–drug interaction potential of candidate therapeutic
compounds.