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Vol. 29, Issue 8, 1088-1095, August 2001
Department of Toxicology and Louisiana Institute of Toxicology,
College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, University of Louisiana at
Monroe, Monroe, Louisiana
Earlier studies have shown highly exaggerated mechanism-based liver
injury of thioacetamide (TA) in rats following moderate diet
restriction (DR) and in diabetes. The objective of the present study
was to investigate the mechanism of higher liver injury of TA in DR
rats. Since both DR and diabetes induce CYP2E1, we hypothesized that
hepatic CYP2E1 plays a major role in the bioactivation-based liver
injury of TA. When male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-275 g) were
maintained on diet restriction (DR, 35% of ad libitum fed rats, 21 days) the total hepatic microsomal cytochrome P450 (CYP450) was
increased 2-fold along with a 4.6-fold increase in CYP2E1 protein,
which corresponded with a 3-fold increase in CYP2E1 activity as
measured by chlorzoxazone hydroxylation. To further test the involvement of CYP2E1, 24 and 18 h after pretreatment with
pyridine (PYR) and isoniazid (INZ), specific inducers of CYP2E1, male
Sprague-Dawley rats received a single administration of 50 mg of
TA/kg (i.p.). TA liver injury was >2.5- and >3-fold higher at 24 h in PYR + TA and INZ + TA groups, respectively, compared with the rats
receiving TA alone. Pyridine pretreatment resulted in significantly
increased total CYP450 content accompanied by a 2.2-fold increase in
CYP2E1 protein and 2-fold increase in enzyme activity concordant with increased liver injury of TA, suggesting mechanism-based bioactivation of TA by CYP2E1. Hepatic injury of TA in DR rats pretreated with diallyl sulfide (DAS), a well known irreversible in vivo inhibitor of
CYP2E1, was significantly decreased (60%) at 24 h.
CCl4 (4 ml/kg i.p.), a known substrate of CYP2E1, caused
lower liver injury and higher animal survival confirming inhibition of
CYP2E1 by DAS pretreatment. The role of flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO) in TA bioactivation implicated by previous in vitro studies, and
consequent increased TA-induced liver injury in DR rats was tested in
vivo with a relatively selective inhibitor of FMO, indole-3-carbinol, and then treated with 50 mg of TA/kg. FMO activity and alanine aminotransferase levels measured at different time points revealed that
TA liver injury was not decreased although FMO activity was significantly decreased, suggesting that hepatic FMO is unlikely to
bioactivate TA. These findings suggest induction of CYP2E1 as the
primary mechanism of increased bioactivation-based liver injury of TA
in DR rats.
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