posted on 2015-01-20, 00:00authored byXiaoli Meng, James
L. Maggs, Toru Usui, Paul Whitaker, Neil S. French, Dean J. Naisbitt, B. Kevin Park
Isoniazid
(INH), a widely used antituberculosis drug, has been
associated with serious drug-induced liver injury (DILI). INH-modified
proteins have been proposed to play important roles in INH DILI; however,
it remains to be determined whether INH or reactive metabolites bind
irreversibly to proteins. In this study, mass spectrometry was used
to define protein modifications by INH in vitro and
in patients taking INH therapy. When INH was incubated with N-acetyl lysine (NAL), the same isonicotinic-NAL (IN-NAL)
adducts were detected irrespective of the presence or absence of any
oxidative enzymes, indicating auto-oxidation may have been involved.
In addition, we found that INH could also bind to human serum albumin
(HSA) via an auto-oxidation pathway, forming isonicotinic amide adducts
with lysine residues in HSA. Similar adducts were detected in plasma
samples isolated from patients taking INH therapy. Our results show
that INH forms protein adducts in the absence of metabolism.