Abstract
Dichloroacetate (DCA) is an investigational drug for certain metabolic disorders, a by-product of water chlorination and a metabolite of certain industrial solvents and drugs. DCA is biotransformed to glyoxylate by glutathione S-transferase zeta (GSTz1-1), which is identical to maleylacetoacetate isomerase, an enzyme of tyrosine catabolism. Clinically relevant doses of DCA (mg/kg/day) decrease the activity and expression of GSTz1-1, which alters tyrosine metabolism and may cause hepatic and neurological toxicity. The effect of environmental DCA doses (μg/kg/day) on tyrosine metabolism and GSTz1-1 is unknown, as is the time course of recovery from perturbation following subchronic DCA administration. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (200 g) were exposed to 0 μg, 2.5 μg, 250 μg, or 50 mg DCA/kg/day in drinking water for up to 12 weeks. Recovery was followed after the 8-week exposure. GSTz specific activity and protein expression (Western immunoblotting) were decreased in a dose-dependent manner by 12 weeks of exposure. Enzyme activity and expression decreased 95% after a 1-week administration of high-dose DCA. Eight weeks after cessation of high-dose DCA, GSTz activity had returned to control levels. At the 2.5 or 250 μg/kg/day doses, enzyme activity also decreased after 8 weeks' exposure and returned to control levels 1 week after DCA was withdrawn. Urinary excretion of the tyrosine catabolite maleylacetone increased from undetectable amounts in control rats to 60 to 75 μg/kg/24 h in animals exposed to 50 mg/kg/day DCA. The liver/body weight ratio increased in the high-dose group after 8 weeks of DCA. These studies demonstrate that short-term administration of DCA inhibits rat liver GSTz across the wide concentration range to which humans are exposed.
Footnotes
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This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants ES07375 and ES07355.
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Preliminary accounts were presented at meetings of the International Society for the Study of Xenobiotics [Guo X, Dixit V, Henderson GN, James MO, and Stacpoole PW (2003) Time course of inhibition and recovery of hepatic glutathione S-transferase zeta (GSTz) by dichloroacetate (DCA), in Abstracts from the 8th European ISSX Meeting, 2003 April 27–May 1; Dijon, France. Drug Metab Rev35 (Suppl 1): 92; and Stacpoole PW, Guo X, Shroads AL, Shelton GD, Calcutt NA, James MO, Eskin TA, Henderson GH, and Notterpek-Fletcher L (2003) Mechanisms of dichloroacetate-induced peripheral neuropathy in patients with mitochondrial diseases, in Abstracts from the 12th North American ISSX Meeting; 2003 October 12–26; Providence, Rhode Island. Drug Metab Rev35 (Suppl 2): 229].
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Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at http://dmd.aspetjournals.org.
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doi:10.1124/dmd.105.003996.
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ABBREVIATIONS: DCA, dichloroacetate; GSTz1-1 or GSTz, glutathione S-transferase zeta; MA, maleylacetone.
- Received February 8, 2005.
- Accepted September 23, 2005.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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