RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 The formation of procainamide hydroxylamine by rat and human liver microsomes. JF Drug Metabolism and Disposition JO Drug Metab Dispos FD American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics SP 37 OP 43 VO 15 IS 1 A1 R A Budinsky A1 S M Roberts A1 E A Coats A1 L Adams A1 E V Hess YR 1987 UL http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/15/1/37.abstract AB A method is described, using HPLC and electrochemical detection, which permits the direct quantitation of procainamide hydroxylamine. Procainamide hydroxylamine was formed from procainamide by hepatic microsomes from both rat and human, with rat microsomes showing higher apparent formation rates. The apparent Km for formation of procainamide hydroxylamine was 0.044 mM for rat liver microsomes, with an apparent Vmax of 2.81 nmol/min/mg of protein. Estimates of Km from three human microsomal samples were 6.29, 2.89, and 6.88 mM. Vmax estimates were 0.31, 0.74, and 0.74 nmol/min/mg of protein, respectively, roughly an order of magnitude less than that observed for the rat. Microsomal formation in both species was inhibited by boiling the microsomes, eliminating NADPH from the incubation system, by preincubation with SKF 525A, cimetidine, or n-octylamine, or by gassing the microsomal incubation mixture with carbon monoxide. These observations suggest that procainamide hydroxylamine formation is cytochrome P-450 mediated. Procainamide hydroxylamine could not be detected in the blood of rats treated with a single dose of procainamide, 100 mg/kg, po. One potential reason for the inability to detect this metabolite in blood is indicated by the rapid disappearance in vitro of procainamide hydroxylamine added to whole blood. Most of this disappearance appears to be due to an interaction with hemoglobin.