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Laboratories of Biochemistry, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Phenobarbital (PB) induction of the CYP2B subfamily was studied in the
livers and spleens of male and female rats. Animals were treated with either
PB (10 mg/kg) or vehicle for 4 consecutive days. A reverse
transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), quantitative Northern
blotting, Western blotting, and a radioenzymatic assay were used to observe
differential levels of CYP2B1 and CYP2B2 mRNAs, proteins, and catalytic
activities. CYP2B2 expression was limited to the livers of PB-treated male and
female rats and was not detected in spleen. Low constitutive levels of CYP2B1
mRNA were markedly induced
7- to 17-fold in the livers of PB-treated male
and female rats, respectively. However, using the same standard
oligonucleotide probe for CYP2B1 mRNA, we observed considerably greater
constitutive concentrations of the transcript in spleen than in liver.
Putative splenic CYP2B1 mRNA was significantly elevated by the PB treatment,
although not as profoundly as the hepatic response. In contrast, only the
livers of the barbiturate-treated rats expressed CYP2B1 proteins or specific
catalytic activity (androstenedione 16ß-hydroxylase). Protein and
catalytic activities of the isoforms were undetectable in spleen of either
male or female vehicle- and PB-treated rats. In agreement, RT-PCR was unable
to demonstrate the expression of splenic CYP2B1 mRNAs. Investigating the
possibility that the Northern probe for CYP2B1 was identifying a similar
sequence isoform, we performed RT-PCR using primers for CYP2B12 and CYP2B15.
Since neither of these isoforms was expressed in spleen, we conclude that the
spurious results using the Northern probe for CYP2B1 mRNA were due to the
presence of a cross-reacting, PB-responsive transcript not currently
identifiable in existing databases.