International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Volume 26, Issue 17 , 01/09/2025

Metabolism of Cannabidiol in Respiratory-Associated Cells and HepG2-Derived Cells and Molecular Docking of Cannabidiol and Its Metabolites with CYP Enzymes and Cannabinoid Receptors

Krittawan Tongkanarak, Pijush Kumar Paul, Muhammad A.Khumaini Mudhar Bintang, Roongnapa Suedee, Somchai Sawatdee, Teerapol Srichana

Abstract

Cannabidiol (CBD) has been reported in medical applications for various indications. The enzymatic metabolism of CBD is not fully understood in the different routes of administration. This research aimed to identify the CBD metabolites after incubation of CBD with derived hepatocyte cells (HepG2), bronchial epithelial cells (NCI-H358), alveolar cells (A549), and alveolar macrophage cells (NR8383). A liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry technique was developed to quantify the CBD and its metabolites. Molecular docking was employed to evaluate the binding affinity of CBD with different cytochrome P-450 (CYP-450) enzymes and further predict the implication of drug–drug interactions. CBD and major metabolites of CBD were also docked with cannabinoid receptors. The results revealed that only HepG2 cells metabolized CBD to 7-hydroxy-CBD (7-OH-CBD) and 7-carboxy-CBD (7-COOH-CBD), whereas other respiratory cell lines and alveolar macrophages were found to have mainly CBD in the incubated samples without any metabolites. The CYP2C19 and CYP3A4 enzymes were responsible for CBD conversion to hydroxylated CBD metabolites. The 7-OH-CBD and 7-COOH-CBD metabolites were found to bind to cannabinoid receptors with different affinities. The relative abundance of CBD and major metabolites may indicate the potential route of CBD administration.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

cannabidiolcannabinoid receptorCYP450drug deliverymetabolism

ASJC Subject Area

Chemistry : Inorganic ChemistryChemistry : SpectroscopyComputer Science : Computer Science ApplicationsChemical Engineering : CatalysisBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology : Molecular BiologyChemistry : Physical and Theoretical ChemistryChemistry : Organic Chemistry

Funding Agency

Prince of Songkla University


Bibliography


Tongkanarak, K., Paul, P., Bintang, M., Suedee, R., Sawatdee, S., & Srichana, T. (2025). Metabolism of Cannabidiol in Respiratory-Associated Cells and HepG2-Derived Cells and Molecular Docking of Cannabidiol and Its Metabolites with CYP Enzymes and Cannabinoid Receptors. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 26(17) doi:10.3390/ijms26178384

Copy | Save