PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - J L Boucher AU - M Delaforge AU - J P Salaün AU - F Pinot AU - F Durst AU - P Pflieger AU - C Mioskowski TI - In vitro hydroxylation and epoxidation of some isomeric lauric acid analogs by rat liver microsomes. Identification of metabolites and effects of clofibrate or phenobarbital pretreatment. DP - 1996 Apr 01 TA - Drug Metabolism and Disposition PG - 462--468 VI - 24 IP - 4 4099 - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/24/4/462.short 4100 - http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/content/24/4/462.full SO - Drug Metab Dispos1996 Apr 01; 24 AB - The primary metabolites of a series of unsaturated lauric acid analogs (8-, 9-, 10-, and 11-dodecenoic acids) used as radiolabeled substrates for rat liver microsomes were quantitated by TLC and reverse phase-HPLC analysis, and identified by chemical derivation and GC/MS. Isomeric epoxidodecanoic acids and omega- and (omega-1)-monohydroxydodecenoic acids were essentially the only products formed from the incubations of the unsaturated fatty acids. Rat liver microsomes predominantly oxidized the terminal carbons of all substrates, leading to omega- and (omega-1)-hydroxylated metabolites, with the exception of 11-dodecenoic acid, which was efficiently converted to the epoxide. The E and Z isomers of dodecenoic acids were metabolized with the same efficiency and gave rise to the same pattern of hydroxylated vs. epoxidized products. The hydroxylation/epoxidation ratio was directly related to the position, but not to the geometry of the double bond in the aliphatic chain. Clofibrate pretreatment of the animals resulted in a strong induction of omega-oxidation, with a decrease in the ability to catalyze epoxidation of internal olefins, whereas phenobarbital pretreatment only stimulated (omega-1)-hydroxylation without any effect on epoxidation. In contrast to higher plants in which carbon 9 is the major target, rat liver cytochromes P450 selectively carried out hydroxylation (or epoxidation) at carbons 12 and 11 of lauric acid, as well as its unsaturated isomeric analogs.