Use of 11alpha-deuterium labeled cortisol as a tracer for assessing reduced 11beta-HSD2 activity in vivo following glycyrrhetinic acid ingestion in a human subject
- PMID: 15631868
- DOI: 10.1016/j.steroids.2004.10.006
Use of 11alpha-deuterium labeled cortisol as a tracer for assessing reduced 11beta-HSD2 activity in vivo following glycyrrhetinic acid ingestion in a human subject
Abstract
This study describes an oral administration of 5 mg of [1,2,4,19-13C4,11alpha-2H]cortisol (cortisol-13C4,2H1) to a human subject performed on two separate occasions, one with cortisol-13C4,2H1 alone and the other with cortisol-13C4,2H1 plus 130 mg per day of glycyrrhetinic acid for 6 days. The stable isotope methodology employed allowed for the evaluation of the individual in vivo activities of the two isozymes of 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11beta-HSD), 11beta-HSD1 and 11beta-HSD2, and to demonstrate the sensitivity of changes in cortisol elimination half-life for detecting inhibition of 11beta-HSD2 activity induced with glycyrrhetinic acid. The kinetic analysis associated with the loss of 11alpha-2H during the conversion of cortisol-13C4,2H1 to cortisone-13C4 by 11beta-HSD2 clearly indicated reduced 11beta-HSD2 activity with glycyrrhetinic acid ingestion, as observed by an increase in the elimination half-life of cortisol-13C4,2H1. The elimination half-life of cortisol-13C4,2H1 provided sensitive in vivo measures of 11beta-HSD2 activity and was more sensitive for detecting changes in renal 11beta-HSD2 activity than the measurement of the urinary ratio of free cortisol and free cortisone (UFF/UFE). The 2H-labeling in the 11alpha-position of cortisol served as an appropriate tracer for assessing the reduced 11beta-HSD2 activity in vivo induced by glycyrrhetinic acid.
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