Sex‑, Species‑,
and Tissue-Specific Metabolism of Empagliflozin in Male Mouse Kidney
Forms an Unstable Hemiacetal Metabolite (M466/2) That Degrades to
4‑Hydroxycrotonaldehyde, a Reactive and Cytotoxic Species
posted on 2015-01-20, 00:00authored byMitchell E. Taub, Eva Ludwig-Schwellinger, Naoki Ishiguro, Wataru Kishimoto, Hongbin Yu, Klaus Wagner, Donald Tweedie
Following oral administration of
empagliflozin (1000 mg/kg/day) to male and female CD-1 mice for 2
years, renal tubular injury was identified in male mice. Renal injury
was not detected in male mice (≤300 mg/kg/day), in female mice
(1000 mg/kg/day), or in male or female Han Wistar rats (700 mg/kg/day).
Using transfected HEK293 cells and Xenopus oocytes,
empagliflozin was found to be a substrate of various mouse and rat
organic anion transporters (oat/Oat) and organic anion transporting
polypeptide (oatp/Oatp) transporters: mouse oat3, rat Oat3, mouse
oatp1a1, and rat Oatp1a1. However, using isolated kidney slices from
male and female mice and rats, no sex-based difference in the extent
of uptake of empagliflozin occurred. Metabolism studies using hepatic
and renal microsomes from male and female mice, rats, and humans revealed
a hemiacetal metabolite of empagliflozin (M466/2), predominantly formed
in male mouse kidney microsomes. Formation of M466/2 in male mouse
kidney microsomes was 31-fold higher compared to that in female mouse
kidney microsomes and was ∼29- and ∼20-fold higher compared
to that in male and female mouse liver microsomes, respectively. M466/2
is unstable and degrades to form a phenol metabolite (M380/1) and
4-hydroxycrotonaldehyde (4-OH CTA). Formed 4-OH CTA was trapped by
reduced GSH, and the structure of the GSH adduct was confirmed by
mass spectrometry. Stoichiometric formation of M380/1 from M466/2
was observed (93–96% at 24 h); however, formation of 4-OH CTA
was considerably lower (∼17.5% at 40 h), which is consistent
with 4-OH CTA being a highly reactive species. These data represent
a highly selective tissue-, species-, and sex-specific lesion in male
CD-1 mice associated with a cytotoxic metabolite product, 4-OH CTA.
In humans, glucuronidation of empagliflozin is the most prevalent
metabolic pathway, and oxidation is a minor pathway. Thus, renal toxicity
due to the formation of 4-OH CTA from empagliflozin is not expected
in humans.