4-Dimethylamino-4′-(imidazol-1-yl)chalcone (RL3142) is a newly developed antimalarial cysteine protease inhibitor. Four metabolites (M1–M4) were found in human liver microsomes and their structures were identified by LC/MS/MS. Two primary metabolites, M2 (minor) and M4 (major), were determined to be the N-demethylated product (M2) and the product (M4) resulting from 1,2-hydrogenation of the α,β-unsaturated ketone moiety of the parent compound. A combined approach utilizing selective P450 inhibitors, immunoinhibition with CYP3A and NADPH P450 reductase antibodies, and cDNA expressed human CYP3A4 and NADPH P450 reductase, was used for identification of enzymes responsible for the biotransformation. For formation of M2, both a rabbit CYP3A polyclonal antibody (110 µl/mg microsomal protein) and ketoconazole (2 µmol/l), a CYP3A inhibitor, showed about 50% inhibitory effects; other specific inhibitors of CYP1A2, CYP2B6, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6 and CYP2E1 showed no significant effects. For formation of M4, neither CYP3A antibody nor the above mentioned CYP inhibitors exhibited inhibitory effects. Anti-rat NADPH P450 reductase serum (50 µl/100 µg microsomal protein) exhibited 70 and 58% inhibitory effects on M2 and M4 formation, respectively. Incubation of RL3142 with cDNA expressed human NADPH P450 reductase yielded formation of M4, but not M2. Carbon monoxide inhibited formation of M2 and M1 (the reduced product of M2), but had no effect on M4 and M3 (the reduced product of M4) formation. Collectively, NADPH P450 reductase solely catalyzed reduction of RL3142 to M4, whereas CYP3A contributed in part to formation of M2.

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