Abstract:
Diclofenac was responsible for the decimation of Gyps vulture species on the
Indian subcontinent during the 1980s and 1990s. Gyps vultures are extremely sensitive
(the lethal dose 50 [LD50] ~ 0.1 mg/kg – 0.2 mg/kg), with toxicity appearing to be linked
to metabolic deficiency, demonstrated by the long T1/2 (~12 h – 17 h). This is in striking
comparison to the domestic chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus), in which the LD50 is
~10 mg/kg and the T1/2 is ~1 h. The phase 1 cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2C subfamily has
been cited as a possible reason for metabolic deficiency. The aim of this study was to
determine if CYP2C9 homolog pharmacogenomic differences amongst avian species is
driving diclofenac toxicity in Gyps vultures. We exposed each of 10 CYP-inhibited test
group chickens to a unique dose of diclofenac (as per the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development [OECD] toxicity testing guidelines) and compared the
toxicity and pharmacokinetic results to control group birds that received no CYP
inhibitor. Although no differences were noted in the LD50 values for each group
(11.92 mg/kg in the CYP-inhibited test group and 11.58 mg/kg in the control group), the
pharmacokinetic profile of the test group was suggestive of partial inhibition of
CYP metabolism. Evaluation of the metabolite peaks produced also suggested partial
metabolic inhibition in test group birds, as they produced lower amounts of metabolites
for one of the three peaks demonstrated and had higher diclofenac exposure. This
pilot study supports the hypothesis that CYP metabolism is varied amongst bird species
and may explain the higher resilience to diclofenac in the chicken versus vultures.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY : (1) The original thesis with associated raw data is available on the University of Pretoria Repository, using the following handle; https://repository.up.ac.za/handle/2263/75858. (2) The following figures have associated raw data: Table 1, Table 2 and Figure 2. (3) There are no restrictions on data availability and it can be requested from the corresponding author (S.L.).