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Vol. 29, Issue 11, 1396-1402, November 2001
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, Queen's University,
Kingston, Ontario, Canada
1,1-Dichloroethylene (DCE) causes hepatocellular necrosis that
preferentially affects centrilobular hepatocytes. The cytotoxic lesion
has been attributed to DCE oxidation mediated mainly by CYP2E1,
resulting in formation of reactive intermediates including the DCE
epoxide. Here, we have tested the hypothesis that differing levels of
hepatic CYP2E1 in A/J, CD-1, and C57BL/6 (B6) mice lead to differences
in magnitudes of DCE metabolism and severities of hepatotoxicity. Our
results showed that amounts of the CYP2E1 protein were higher in A/J
mice than in B6 and CD-1 mice. Covalent binding of DCE to liver
proteins was variable in the three strains of mice and was higher in
A/J than in B6 mice; intermediate levels were found in CD-1 mice.
Levels of a DCE epoxide-derived glutathione conjugate detected in liver
cytosol correlated with those present in bile extracts and were
significantly higher in A/J than in CD-1 and B6 mice.
Immunohistochemical studies showed that formation of DCE
epoxide-cysteine protein adducts was enhanced in the livers of A/J
mice, compared with those produced in the livers of CD-1 and B6 mice.
Similarly, centrilobular necrosis was more severe in the livers of A/J
mice than in those in either CD-1 or B6 mice. Levels of glutathione
were similar in the three strains of untreated mice and were diminished
at comparable levels in all mice. These results indicated that high
expression of hepatic CYP2E1 in A/J mice coincided with increased DCE
metabolism and enhanced severity of hepatotoxicity, relative to those
in CD-1 and B6 mice.
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E. J. Martin and P.-G. Forkert Evidence That 1,1-Dichloroethylene Induces Apoptotic Cell Death in Murine Liver J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., July 1, 2004; 310(1): 33 - 42. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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