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Introduction to pharmacogenomics and personalised medicine

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Title: Introduction to pharmacogenomics and personalised medicine


1
Introduction to pharmacogenomics and personalised
medicine
  • Jerzy Jankowski, MD
  • Department of Clinical Pharmacology

2
www.zfk.ump.edu.pl
3
The Relationship Between Dose and Effect
4
Pharmacotherapy clinical problemsAdverse Drug
Reactions (ADRs)
  • 56 of drugs that cause ADRs are metabolized by
    polymorphic phase I enzymes, of which 86 are CYP
    P450
  • only 20 of drugs associated with ADRs are
    substrates for non-polymorphic enzymes
  • ADRs cause gt 100 000 deaths/y in the USA
  • Up to 7 of all hospital admissions in the UK and
    Sweden are due to ADRs
  • ADRs cost the US society US 100 billion

5
Pharmacotherapy clinical problemsEfficacy
  • 30-60 of subjects treated with drugs do not
    respond to drug therapy

6
Pharmacogenomics
  • Is the study of how an individuals genetic
    makeup affects the bodys response to drugs.
  • The key to creating personalised drugs with
    greater efficacy and safety
  • Combines traditional pharmaceutical sciences with
    an understanding of common DNA variations in the
    human genome
  • The most common DNA variations- SNPs

7
Genetic polymorphisms
  • Exist in a human population when allelic variants
    occure with a frequency of
  • 1 or greater

8
TYPES OF GENETIC VARIANTS
  • single nucleotide polymorphisms ( SNPs )
  • 1 SNP every 300 1000 base pairs
  • Insertions/deletions ( INDELS )
  • in comparison with SNPs, indels are much
    less frequent, especially in coding regions of
    genes
  • Copy number variations ( CNVs ) large segments
    of DNA ( gene duplications, gene deletions, gene
    inversions )

9
SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISM
  • SNPs in the coding region cSNPs
  • - non-synonymous or missense
  • (protein strucutre, stability,
    substrate affinty
  • or introduce a stop codon)
  • - synonymous or sense (transcript
    stability,
  • splicing)
  • Noncoding SNPs may occur in 3 and 5 UTR, in
    promoter or enhancer regions, in introns or in
    intergenic regions

10
MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF GENETIC POLYMORPHISMS
11
ETHNIC DIVERSITY
  • Polymorphisms differ in their frequencies within
    human populations
  • Polymorphisms are classified as
  • - cosmopolitan ( present in all
    ethnic group )
  • - population specific ( or ethnic
    and race )
  • Ethnic and race-specific polymorphisms are
    consistent with geographical isolation of human
    populations

12
Pharmacogenomics
  • SNPs are often linked to an individuals response
    to a drug.

13
Anticipated benefits of pharmacogenomics
  • More powerful medicine
  • Drugs more targeted to specific diseases,
    maximising therapeutic effects while decreasing
    damage to nerby healthy cells
  • Better, safer drugs the First Time
  • The best available drug therapy from the
    beginning shorter recovery time the
    likelikehood of adverse reactions is eliminated

14
Anticipated benefits of pharmacogenomics
  • More accurate methods of determinig appropriate
    drug dosages
  • Current methods of basing dosages on weight
    and age will be replaced with dosages based on
    persons genetics
  • Advanced screening for disease
  • Treatments can be introduced at the most
    appropriate stage to maximize their therapy

15
Anticipated benefits of pharmacogenomics
  • Better vaccines
  • Made of either DNA or RNA, promise all the
    benefits of existing vaccines without all the
    risks
  • Improvements in the drug discovery and approval
    process
  • The cost and risk of clinical trials will be
    reduced by targeting only those persons capable
    of responding to a drug
  • Decrease in the overall cost of health care

16
The fate of a drug in the body
  • Is affected by
  • Liberation
  • Absorption
  • Distribution
  • Metabolism
  • Excretion
  • LADME

17
Pathways of drug metabolism
  • Phase I reactions oxidation
  • reduction
  • hydrolysis
  • Phase II reactions glucuronidiation
  • sulfation
  • acetylation
  • methylation

18
PHASE I REACTIONS
  • convert the parent drug to a more polar
    (water-soluble) and/ or more reactive product by
    unmasking or inserting a polar group such as
  • -OH, -SH, -NH2

19
PHASE II REACTIONS
  • increase water solubility by conjugation of
    the drug molecule with a polar moiety such as
    glucuronate, sulfate, acete, glutathione, glycine
    and methyl groups

20
  • Both types of reaction convert relatively lipid-
    soluble original drug molecules into more
    water-soluble metabolites that are more easily
    excreted.

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Determinants of drug biotransformation
  • biological gender
  • age
  • renal and liver fun.
  • disease- related fac.
  • lifestyle smoking
  • alkohol consumtion
  • diet
  • drug -drug interaction
  • inherited

23
Determinants of drug biotransformation
  • The potential risk factors of drug inefficacy and
    toxicity
  • Differences in drug metabolism can lead to severe
    toxicity or therapeutic failure

24
Determinants of drug biotransformation
  • Of greater importance are inherited determinants
    that affect
  • the kinetics and dynamics
  • of numerous drugs.

25
  • Pharmacokinetic variability
  • Refers to variability in delivery of drug to, or
  • removal from, key molecular sits of action
  • that mediate efficacy and/or toxicity.
  • Drug- metabolising enzymes (DMEs) and
  • drug transportes (P-gp) are involved in this
  • processes.

26
  • Pharmacodynamic variability
  • refers to variable drug effects despite
  • equivalent drug delivery to molecular sits of
    action.
  • This may reflect variability in the function
  • of the drug targets (receptors or enzymes)

27
  • Genetic variation in genes for DMEs, drug
    receptors (DR) and drug transportes (DT) is
    associated with variability in efficacy and
    toxicity of drugs

28
The fate of drug in the body
  • The majority of pharmacogenomic differences
    represent variability in drug metabolism
  • Most of the remaining represent alternations in
  • Receptors
  • Transporters
  • Protein binding
  • Pharmacogenetic differences in absorption or
    excrition of drugs are relatively uncommon

29
Polygenic Determinants of Drug Effects
30
The phenotypes of drug metabolism
  • The extensive metabolizer (EM) (dominant trait
    inherited as either homozygous or heterozygous
    for the wild- type allele (wt)
  • The poor metabolizer (PM) recessive autosomal
    trait due to mutation and/or deletion of both
    allels inherited as either homozygous or
    heterozygous for mutant allele
  • The ultra- extensive metabolizer (UEM) recessive
    autosomal trait due to gene amplification

31
Metabolism of Debrisoquin
32
Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes
  • The most important enzymatic system
  • Biosynthesis and degradation of endogenous
    compounds (steroids, lipids, vitamines)
  • Degradation of exogenous compounds (diet,
    environment, medications)
  • Highly polymorphic

33
Clasiffication of CYP450 enzymes
  • Amino acid similarities
  • Designated by a family number, a subfamily
    letter, a number of an individual enzyme within
    the subfamily and an asterisk followed by a
    number and a letter for each genetic (allelic)
    variant
  • www.imm.ki.se/CYPalleles/

34
CYP 450 ENZYMES
35
Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes
  • 57 CYP450 genes
  • CYP1, CYP2, CYP3 families appear to contribute to
    the metabolism of drugs
  • These CYP enzymes are involved in approximately
    80 of oxidative drug metabolism and account for
    50 of the overall elimination of commonly used
    drugs

36
Cytochrom P450 3A (CYP 3A)
  • 3A4, 3A5, 3A7 and 3A43 isoenzymes in adults
  • Chromosom 7q22.1
  • Probably the most important of all DMEs
  • Aboundant in intestinal epithelium and in the
    liver
  • 50 of the CYP450 activity in the liver
  • Involved in the metabolism of more then half
    drugs that undergo oxidation

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Drug interactions involving inhibition of CYP 3A
39
Drug interactions involving inhibition of CYP 3A
  • The interaction between grapefruit juice nad CYP
    3A substrates
  • 250ml of this juice inhibits intestinal CYP 3A
    for 24- 48h.
  • Grapefruit juice is contraindicated when drugs
    extensively metabolised by CYP 3A are used
  • CYP 3A inhibition is reversible 2-3 days

40
Drug interactions involving inhibition of CYP 3A
  • The problem of drug interactions can be serious
  • For exapmle interaction of erythromycin and
    inhibitory drugs (nitroimidazole, diltiazem,
    verapamil, troleandomycin)
  • When an orally administered drug undergoes
    extensive first-pass metabolism, its
    bioavailability in the face of CYP3A inhibition
    may increase severalfold, thus prolonging the
    presence of the drug in the body

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42
Cytochrom P450 3A (CYP 3A)
  • Activity vary markedly among individuals of a
    given population
  • Multiple genes are involved in its regulation
  • Activity modulated by several factors including
    drugs
  • Drug interactions may increase or reduce CYP 3A
    activity (expanding the range of variablility to
    about 400-fold)

43
Cytochrom P450 3A (CYP 3A)
  • Variability in drug levels of this magnitude,
    potentially presents a major therapeutic problem
    in dosage optimization.
  • For example dosage of cyclosporine in patiens
    receiving also ketoconazole
  • For example dosage of cyclosporine in patients
    receiving also rifampin

44
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45
Drug interactions involving induction of CYP 3A
  • The induction of CYP 3A significantlly decreases
    (up to 95) the plasma levels of certain drugs
    administered concurrently
  • CYP 3A activity is especially sesnitive to
    modulation
  • Previously effective drug dosages become
    ineffective

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Drug interactions involving induction of CYP 3A
  • The consequences of CYP 3A induction are not
    immediate
  • Steady- state levels are reached in 2-3 weeks
  • Washing out the induction effect also takes
    several weeks
  • Effectivnes of drug therapy

48
CYP 3A4
  • 42 alleles ( to date )
  • Functional characterisations of most CYP 3A4
    variants a limited impact on protein expresion
    and activity
  • CYP 3A41B and CYP 3A420 alter CYP function
  • CYP 3A41B 4 in Caucasians, 67 in Black sub.

49
CYP 3A5
  • 25 alleles ( to date )
  • CYP 3A53A decreased enzymatic activity in
    vivo and in vitro
  • Alleles 3B - 3L only in vitro

50
CYP 3A7 AND CYP 3A43
  • 7 alleles ( to date )
  • CYP 3A71A, 1B, 1C, 1D, 1E, 2, 3
  • 5 alleles ( to date )
  • CYP 3A431A, 1B, 2A, 2B, 3
  • No significant role in drug metabolism

51
CYP 3A
  • CYP 3A genes are under the transcriptional
    control of nuclear receptors such as
  • - the pregnane X receptor ( PXR )
  • - the constitutive androstane
    receptor ( CAR )
  • - the hepatocyte nuclear factor-4a
    ( HNF4a )
  • CAR and HNF4a regulates the constitutive CYP3A
  • PXR mediates the induction by exogenous comp.

52
CYP 3A GENES REGULATION
  • Genetic polymorphisms of nuclear receptors may
    influence CYP 3A gene expression and CYP activity
  • Becouse of the simultaneous effect of nuclear
    receptors on CYP 3A genes, marked increases of
    CYP 3A activity are observed following the
    exposure to CYP 3A inducers


53
Cytochrom P450 2D6
  • Plays a role in the metabolism of 100 most
    commonly used drugs
  • 78 variants
  • Mechanisms of gentic polymorphism
  • SNPs (insertions/ deletions)
  • Complete gene deletion
  • Gene duplication or multiplication

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CYP2D6 genetic polymorphism
56
Cytochrom P450 2D6
  • The CYP 2D6 polymorphisms are associated with
  • The PM phenotype (complete lack of active
    proteine, a recesive trait)
  • CYP 2D64 allele 70 in PMs
  • CYP 2D65 allele 25 in
    PMs
  • CYP 2D63 allele 3 in
    PMs
  • Heterozygous individuals
  • normal metabolic ratio
    (SNP)
  • increased metabolic ratio
    (multipoint mutant allele)
  • 35 of individuals with a
    heterozygous genotype

57
Cytochrom P450 2D6
  • The UEM phenotype duplication/amplification of
    CYP2D62 (indentified in the heterozygous form)
  • The amplified gene product has functionally the
    same but catalytically increased activity

58
Cytochrom P450 2D6
59
Cytochrom P450 2D6
  • Clinical importance of CYP 2D6 polymorphism
  • The greater risk of adverese reactions in PMs
    (high plasma level of the affected drug)
  • Lack of efficacy in UEMs (low plasma level of the
    affected drug)

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Cytochrom P450 2D6
  • CYP 2D6 inhibitors (qinidine, fluoxetine,
    paroxetine) are able to convert EMs into PMs.
  • Phenomenon termed PHENOCOPYING

62
Cytochrom P450 2D6
  • Clinical relevance of phenocopying
  • Combination of SSRI and TAD
  • (2-4- fold increase in plasma level of
    tricyclic antidepressant, inhibition last for
    several weeks because of persistant inhibitory
    metabolites)
  • Codeine

63
Cytochrom P450 2D6
  • Inhibitory interactions dont occur in persons
    with PM, who lack active enzyme.

64
Cytochrom P450 2C19
  • Proton- pump inhibitors (omeprazole, lansoprazole
    ) diazepan, propranolol
  • Chromosome 10q24.1
  • 36 alleles ( to date )
  • CYP 2C19 polymorphism associated with either PMs
    or UEMs phenotype
  • CYP 2C192 CYP 2C193 account for more than 95
    of cases of PM

65
CYP 2C19 POLYMORPHISM
  • CYP 2C192 681 G?A in exon 5 leading to a
    splice-defective site
  • CYP 2C193 636 G?A in exon 4 leading to a
    premature stop codon
  • Loss of function variants
  • CYP 2C1917 806 C?T in 5 flanking region of
    the gene leading to an increased transcription
    and increased CYP 2C19 activity

66
CYP 2C19 POLYMORPHISM CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE
  • Eradication of Helicobacter pylori with PPIs is
    more effective in CYP 2C192 and CYP 2C193
    homozygotes and CYP 2C19 2/3 heterozygotes then
    in patients who are CYP 2C191 homozygotes
  • Clopidogrel, an inactive prodrug, requires
    metabolisation and activation by hepatic CYPs
    including CYP 2C19. Loss-of-function alleles are
    associated with reduced effectiveness of the drug

67
CYP 2C19 POLYMORPHISM CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE
  • CYP 2C1917 allele is significantly associated
    with enhanced response to clopidogrel and
    increased risk of bleeding

68
Cytochrom P450 2C9
  • Warfarin, tolbutamid, phenytoin, glipizide,
    losartan, NSAIDs

69
Cytochrom P450 2E1
  • Metabolism and bioactivation of pro- carcinogens
    and some drugs
  • Alternative system of metabolising ethanol
  • Gene located on chromosom 10 with seven different
    loci
  • Indentified two variants of the gene (C, c2)
    Clinical significance hasnt yet been established

70
PHASE II DRUG METABOLISM
71
UDP-GLUCURONOSYLTRANSFERASE
  • Prevent the accumulation of toxic lipophilic
    compounds and initiate their elimination through
    more hydrophilic vehicules
  • Hydrophilic sugar moiety ( glucuronide ) from
    uridine diphosphate glucuronic acid
  • Two families UGT1A and UGT2 ( 2A, 2B )
  • UGT1A members are all encoded by a singel-gene
    locus on chromosome 2q37.1
  • UGT2B and UGT2A3 encoded by several likely
    duplicated genes located on 4q13.2

72
UDP-GLUCURONOSYLTRANSFERASE
  • UGT1A family has the ability to conjugate several
    xenobiotics such as drugs and carcinogens

73
UDP-GLUCURONOSYLTRANSFERASE
  • UGT 1A1 has over 30 genetic variants
  • One of the genetic variants of UGT 1A1 occurs in
    the TATA promoter region and has variable repeats
    of thymine-adenine ( TA )
  • The wild-type promoter ( UGT1A11 ) has 6 TA
    repeats
  • UGT 1A128 variant has ( TA )?
  • An increase in TA repeats within TATA region
    results in reduced UGT 1A1 activity

74
UGT1A128 POLYMORPHISM AND TOXICITY OF IRINOTECAN
  • An inverse relationship between SN-38
    glucuronidation rates and frequency of diarrhea
  • An association between UGT1A128 and
    pharmacokinetic values and toxicity endpoints
    with irinotecan therapy ( grade 4 neutropenia,
    grade 3 diarrhea )
  • 9-fold higher risk of developing grade 4
    neutropenia in patients who were homozygous for
    the UGT1A128

75
THIOPURINE S-METHYLTRANSFERASE ( TPMT )
  • Thiopurine drugs mercaptopurine, azathioprine,
    thioguanine are all prodrugs converted to
    thioguanine nucleotide (TGN) metabolites
  • Purine antimetabolites used as immunosuppresants
    and to treat neoplasias ( ALL of Chiledhood )
  • White populations can be separated into 3 groups
    based on the level of TPMT activity in their red
    cells
  • TPMT activity is inherited as a monogenic
    autosomal co-dominant trait

76
THIOPURINE S-METHYLTRANSFERASE ( TPMT )
  • The phenotypic test for the level of TPMT
    activity in red cells
  • The genotypic tests based on DNA
  • TPMT3A is the most common variant allele (4)
    associated with very low levels of TPMT in whites
  • TPMT3A no observed in China, Korea, Japan

77
P- glycoprotein (P- gp) pump
  • The multidrug resistance pump
  • A transmembrane protein
  • A member of the ATP- binding cassette family of
    transport proteins
  • Encoded by the multidrug resistance gene
  • (MDR1/ABCB1) on chromosome 7q21.1
  • MDR1 (ABCB1) appears to be involved in drug
    transport and the development of drug resistance

78
P- glycoprotein (P- gp) pump
  • The apical surface of epithelial cell of the
  • small and large intestines
  • biliary ductules
  • ductules of the pancreas
  • proximal tubules of the kidneys
  • Choroid plexus

79
The role of P-gp
  • P-gp acts as a transmembrane efflux pump (removes
    drugs from the cell)
  • Sites of expression of P-gp suggest a role in
  • decreasing absorption from the gut
  • secretion of endogenous and exogenous hydrophobic
    toxins

80
List of P-glycoprotein substrates
  • Steroid compounds Aldosterone Progesterone Hydroc
    ortisone Cortisol  Corticosterone Dexamethasone
  • Anticancer agents
  • Doxorubicin Daunorubicin Vinca
    alkaloids    Actinomycin D    Epotoside
  • Immunosuppressive agents
  • Cyclosporin    FK 506    Methotrexate
  • Protease inhibitors
  • Indinavir    Nelfinavir    Ritonavir
  • Antibiotics 
  • Erythromycin    Rifampicin
  • Cardiac drugs
  • Digoxin    Quinidine    Lovastatin
  • Antihistamines
  • Terfenadine
  • Others 
  • Domperidone    Loperamide

81
P- glycoprotein (P- gp) pump
  • The same site of expression for both P-gp and CYP
    3A4 in the small intestinal epithelial cells is
    the reason that P-gp
  • Can influence the intracellular levels of many
    CYP 3A substrates
  • It may also affect the availability of those
    substrates to CYP 3A and thereby the extent of
    their CYP3A- mediated metabolism

82
P- glycoprotein (P- gp) pump
  • P- gp expression and function shows wide
    interindividual differences influcenced by both
  • Environmental
  • Genetic factors (SNP in exon 26 3435C?T, exon 21
    2677G?T)

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84
Assessment of Individuals Polymorphism
  • Phenotyping administration of the respective
    drug, followed by determination of the metabolic
    ratio
  • Genotyping identification of specific DNA
    variations that result in a specific phenotype
    over
    expresion (gene duplication)
    absence of active enzyme (null allele)
    formation of a mutant protein with ?
    activity (inactivating allele)

85
Indications for genotyping
  • signs of toxicity or therapeutic failure upon
    therapy administration
  • Drugs selection that require genotyping before
    therapy introduction
  • Drug of choice is a substrate for a polymorphic
    enzyme
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