JoVE Logo

Anmelden

5.5 : Phase I Reactions: Reductive Reactions

Phase I biotransformation reductive reactions are chemical processes that modify drugs by introducing or revealing polar functional groups via reduction. Enzymes called reductases catalyze these reactions, playing a pivotal role in drug metabolism by transforming lipophilic drugs into more polar, water-soluble metabolites for easy excretion. An essential type of reductive reaction is the carbonyl group reduction, where aldehydes and ketones are reduced to alcohols. An example is the enzyme-catalyzed conversion of acetaldehyde to ethanol by aldehyde dehydrogenase or the transformation of acetophenone to phenylethanol, signifying the reduction of ketones.

Reductive reactions also target alcohols and carbon-carbon double bonds. The enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase oxidizes alcohols to aldehydes or ketones, as exemplified by the conversion of retinol to retinaldehyde. Carbon-carbon double bonds can be diminished to single bonds through enzymes like cytochrome P450 reductase, as seen in the reduction of fumarate to succinate.

Reduction reactions extend to N-compounds such as nitro, azo, and N-oxide. Nitroreductases, for instance, reduce nitro groups to amino groups, as demonstrated by the conversion of nitrofurantoin to its amine form. Miscellaneous reductive reactions cover the reduction of diverse functional groups. For example, azoreductases reduce azo compounds to primary amines, as in the transformation of sulfasalazine to mesalamine and sulfapyridine.

Reductive reactions in phase I biotransformation contribute significantly to drug detoxification and are instrumental in drug elimination from the body.

Tags

Phase I ReactionsReductive ReactionsBiotransformationDrug MetabolismReductasesLipophilic DrugsPolar MetabolitesCarbonyl Group ReductionAldehyde DehydrogenaseAlcohol DehydrogenaseCytochrome P450 ReductaseNitroreductasesAzo CompoundsDrug DetoxificationDrug Elimination

Aus Kapitel 5:

article

Now Playing

5.5 : Phase I Reactions: Reductive Reactions

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

181 Ansichten

article

5.1 : Drug Biotransformation: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

395 Ansichten

article

5.2 : Phase I Oxidative Reactions: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

244 Ansichten

article

5.3 : Phase I Reactions: Oxidation of Aliphatic and Aromatic Carbon-Containing Systems

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

149 Ansichten

article

5.4 : Phase I Reactions: Oxidation of Carbon-Heteroatom and Miscellaneous Systems

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

68 Ansichten

article

5.6 : Phase I Reactions: Hydrolytic Reactions

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

78 Ansichten

article

5.7 : Phase II Conjugation Reactions: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

166 Ansichten

article

5.8 : Phase II Reactions: Glucuronidation

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

308 Ansichten

article

5.9 : Phase II Reactions: Sulfation and Conjugation with α-Amino Acids

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

180 Ansichten

article

5.10 : Phase II Reactions: Glutathione Conjugation and Mercapturic Acid Formation

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

155 Ansichten

article

5.11 : Phase II Reactions: Acetylation Reactions

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

188 Ansichten

article

5.12 : Phase II Reactions: Methylation Reactions

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

148 Ansichten

article

5.13 : Phase II Reactions: Miscellaneous Conjugation Reactions

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

47 Ansichten

article

5.14 : Factors Affecting Drug Biotransformation: Physicochemical and Chemical Properties of Drugs

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

191 Ansichten

article

5.15 : Factors Affecting Drug Biotransformation: Biological

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Biotransformation

117 Ansichten

JoVE Logo

Datenschutz

Nutzungsbedingungen

Richtlinien

Forschung

Lehre

ÜBER JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Alle Rechte vorbehalten