Inactivation of rat liver microsomal steroid hydroxylations by 4-alkyl analogues of 3,5-diethoxycarbonyl-1,4-dihydro-2,4,6-trimethylpyridine: evidence for selectivity among steroid-inducible cytochrome P450IIIA forms

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (12) ◽  
pp. 1533-1541 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. S. Riddick ◽  
I. McGilvray ◽  
G. S. Marks

Various 4-alkyl analogues of 3,5-diethoxycarbonyl-1,4-dihydro-2,4,6-trimethylpyridine (DDC) cause mechanism-based inactivation of cytochrome P-450 (P-450) via destruction of the heme prosthetic group. This is an important component of these compounds' porphyrinogenic mechanism. In an attempt to map the P-450 isozyme selectivities of DDC analogues, we have examined the effects of these compounds on the regioselective and stereoselective hydroxylation of androstenedione (AD) and progesterone (PG) in rat liver microsomal systems. In microsomes from phenobarbital-treated male rats, DDC analogues did not cause time-dependent inactivation of AD 7α-hydroxylase, AD 16β-hydroxylase, and PG 21-hydroxylase, selective markers for P450IIA1/2, IIB1, and IIC6, respectively. In contrast, DDC analogues were effective inactivators of PG 2α-hydroxylase and steroid 6β-hydroxylases, selective markers for P450IIC11 and IIIA forms, respectively. We conclude that differences in porphyrinogenicity observed with various DDC analogues are not likely to be due to the selective destruction of different P-450 isozymes by different analogues, but rather to properties of the DDC analogues themselves. 4-Ethyl DDC was found to be capable of discriminating between P450IIIA subfamily forms. In microsomes from untreated male rats, which express P450IIIA2 but not IIIA1, 4-ethyl DDC inactivated both AD and PG 6β-hydroxylases. However, in microsomes from dexamethasone-treated female rats, which express P450IIIA1 but not IIIA2, no inactivation of the steroid 6β-hydroxylases was observed. Thus, 4-ethyl DDC appears to be a potentially valuable tool for differentiating between P450IIIA forms.Key words: 3,5-diethoxycarbonyl-1,4-dihydro-2,4,6-trimethylpyridine, cytochrome P-450, mechanism-based inactivation, rat hepatic microsomes, steroid hydroxylations.

1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (12) ◽  
pp. 1513-1520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard J. McDonald ◽  
Greg J. Monkewich ◽  
Patrick G. Long ◽  
Diane J. Anderson ◽  
Paul E. Thomas ◽  
...  

It is generally accepted that organic nitrates act via vascular biotransformation to an activator of guanylyl cyclase (presumably NO), resulting in increased cyclic GMP accumulation and vascular smooth muscle relaxation. Previously, we have shown that cytochrome P450 can mediate the biotransformation of glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) and that at least a portion of this biotransformation results in the formation of an activator of guanylyl cyclase. To assess the role of the cytochrome P450 3A subfamily in this phenomenon, we treated male and female rats with dexamethasone (DEX) (150 mg/kg, i.p., daily for 3 days). Under anerobic conditions, hepatic microsomal biotransformation of GTN was increased three-fold in DEX-treated male rats compared with all other treatment groups. Incubation of aortic 100 000 × g supernatant fraction from untreated rats (as a source of guanylyl cyclase) with GTN and hepatic microsomes from all groups resulted in concentration-dependent increases in guanylyl cyclase activation. Microsomes from DEX-treated male and female rats demonstrated a significantly greater activation of guanylyl cyclase compared with microsomes from untreated males and females. Furthermore, GTN-induced guanylyl cyclase activation mediated by microsomes from DEX-treated male and female rats was markedly inhibited by a polyclonal antibody raised to rat CYP3A1. Since CYP3A2 is absent or very low in hepatic microsomes from DEX-treated adult female rats, this identifies CYP3A1 as an isoform capable of biotransforming GTN to an activator of guanylyl cyclase. Similarly, CYP2C11 was identified as an isoform capable of biotransforming GTN to an activator of guanylyl cyclase, since monoclonal antibody to CYP2C11 inhibited GTN-induced activation of guanylyl cyclase mediated by microsomes from control male rats. In both male and female rats, DEX treatment had no effect on GTN-induced relaxation of isolated aorta. However, biotransformation of GTN in intact aorta from DEX-treated male rats was decreased. This suggests that DEX treatment affects only the aortic biotransformation of GTN that is not involved in the formation of an activator of guanylyl cyclase.Key words: glyceryl trinitrate, dexamethasone, guanylyl cyclase, cytochrome P450, vasodilation, biotransformation.


1983 ◽  
Vol 61 (9) ◽  
pp. 983-988 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larry S. Gontovnick ◽  
Geoffrey Sunahara ◽  
Gail D. Bellward

Compounds that are known to increase the hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450 dependent monooxygenases were adminstered to adult female rats, alone or in combination, to determine whether their effects on certain substrate oxidations were additive. 3-Methyleholanthrene (3-MC) and pregnenolone-16α-carbonitrile (PCN), known to induce different forms of cytochrome P-450, when administered together increased benzo[a]pyrene oxidation to the same level as observed following 3-MC treatment alone. Phenobarbital (Pb) and PCN when administered concomitantly increased benzo[a]pyrene, aminopyrine, and ethylmorphine metabolism to the same extent as seen following PCN administration alone. Both compounds are known to induce different forms of cytochrome P-450. Nonadditive effects were also observed with Pb and spironolactone, as well as with Pb and trans-stilbene oxide. Treatment of adult male rats with either PCN or 3-MC resulted in significantly smaller increases in benzo[a]pyrene oxidation than observed in adult female rats. These results suggest that oxidative metabolism in hepatic microsomes is not the sum of activities of a number of cytochrome P-450s, but may represent the activity of a single predominant hemeprotein. In addition, it appears that the oxidation of substrate by a particular cytochrome P-450, in intact microsomes, is greatly influenced by the presence of another form.


1996 ◽  
Vol 24 (02) ◽  
pp. 143-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taira Ohnishi ◽  
Hirohito Yoneyama ◽  
Tatushichiro Hamamoto ◽  
Toshihiko Ishida ◽  
Jirou Takahara ◽  
...  

The administration of Xiao-Chaihu- Tang (TJ-9) for 2 weeks induced a 25% increase in the content of cytochrome P-450 in female rat liver microsomes, while the content in male rats remained unchanged. The enzymatic activities toward various xenobiotics were stimulated in female rats, the levels being in the range of 125-250% of those in the control rats. Among these xenobiotics, the metabolic rates for substrates of cytochrome P-450 2El were significantly enhanced in female rats. On the other hand, the activities toward various xenobiotics in male rats were unchanged. When 3-methylcholanthrene was given to rats for a week, the augmentation of cytochrome P-450 content and the stimulation ofxenobiotic metabolism were observed. However, co-administration ofTJ-9 did not alter the effect of 3-methylcholanthrene described above.


1971 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 517-530 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Wenzel

ABSTRACT With the aid of metenolon-17α-T a tritium-transfer to oestrone in rat liver slices was demonstrated. This tritium-transfer from metenolon17α-T to oestrone yielding tritium-labelled oestradiol had a higher efficiency in male than in female rat liver. Correspondingly in the presence of metenolon the relation of oestrone to oestradiol is changed more in male than in female rat liver. Looking for biochemical differences between the anabolic steroid metenolon and testosterone the oxydation at C17 was measured in different organs of the rat using 17α-T-labelled steroids. The highest oxydation rate was found for both steroids in the liver. In the sexual organs of male rats the oxydation rate of testosterone was 50–10 times higher than that of the anabolic steroid. This difference was less in sexual organs of female rats. This result of a greater biochemical difference between both steroids in males than in females leads to the question, whether the dissociation between the anabolic and the androgen effects is higher in males than in females.


1998 ◽  
Vol 335 (3) ◽  
pp. 619-630 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip J. SHERRATT ◽  
Margaret M. MANSON ◽  
Anne M. THOMSON ◽  
Erna A. M. HISSINK ◽  
Gordon E. NEAL ◽  
...  

A characteristic feature of the class Theta glutathione S-transferase (GST) T1-1 is its ability to activate dichloromethane and dibromoethane by catalysing the formation of mutagenic conjugates. The level of the GSTT1 subunit within tissues is an important determinant of susceptibility to the carcinogenic effects of these dihaloalkanes. In the present study it is demonstrated that hepatic GST activity towards these compounds can be elevated significantly in female and male Fischer-344 rats by feeding these animals on diets supplemented with cancer chemopreventive agents. Immunoblotting experiments showed that increased activity towards the dihaloalkanes is associated with elevated levels of the GSTT1 subunit in rat liver. Sex-specific effects were observed in the induction of GSTT1 protein. Amongst the chemopreventive agents tested, indole-3-carbinol proved to be the most potent inducer of hepatic GSTT1 in male rats (6.2-fold), whereas coumarin was the most potent inducer of this subunit in the livers of female rats (3.5-fold). Phenobarbital showed significant induction of GSTT1 only in male rat liver and had little effect in female rat liver. Western blotting showed that class Alpha, Mu and Pi GST subunits are not co-ordinately induced with GSTT1, indicating that the expression of GSTT1 is determined, at least in part, by mechanisms distinct from those that regulate levels of other transferases. The increase in amount of hepatic GSTT1 protein was also reflected by an increase in the steady-state level of mRNA in response to treatment with chemopreventive agents and model inducers. Immunohistochemical detection of GSTT1 in rat liver supported the Western blotting data, but showed, in addition to cytoplasmic staining, significant nuclear localization of the enzyme in hepatocytes from some treated animals, including those fed on an oltipraz-containing diet. Significantly, the hepatic level of cytochrome P-450 2E1, an enzyme which offers a detoxification pathway for dihaloalkanes, was unchanged by the various inducing agents studied. It is concluded that the induction of GSTT1 by dietary components and its localization within cells are important factors that should be considered when assessing the risk dihaloalkanes pose to human health.


1990 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 267-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Porsch Hällstöm ◽  
J.-Å. Gustafsson ◽  
A. Blanck

ABSTRACT Expression of the c-myc gene was studied in the livers of male and female Wistar rats. Furthermore, the effects on hepatic c-myc expression of neonatal and adult castration, with or without testosterone supplementation, as well as of continuous administration of GH to intact males, were analysed. Expression of c-myc was low in 6-day-old animals of both sexes, reached a maximum at 35 days of age and declined to the level of adult animals at 70 days. In prepubertal animals, expression was higher in females, but was higher in males after the onset of puberty, the postpubertal female rat liver exhibiting 50–70% of the expression in males. Treatment of adult male rats with bovine GH in osmotic minipumps for 1 week reduced c-myc expression to the level of female rats. Castration, both neonatally and of adults, also feminized hepatic c-myc expression. Testosterone supplementation of the castrated animals increased the expression towards the level in sham-operated controls. These results indicate that the c-myc gene is regulated by the hypothalamo-pituitary-liver axis via the sex-differentiated pattern of GH secretion, in analogy with other sex-differentiated hepatic functions, such as metabolism of steroids and xenobiotics. Neuroendocrine regulation of a gene such as c-myc, which is involved in the control of cell proliferation and differentiation, represents another aspect of the complex influence of GH on various somatic functions.


1960 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. KORNER

SUMMARY 1. Microsomes, isolated from rat liver a day after adrenalectomy, incorporate more radioactive amino acid into their protein in vitro than microsomes from normal rat liver. This enhanced rate of incorporation progressively declines with time after adrenalectomy until it reaches a plateau level which is below the normal rate of incorporation. 2. Following adrenalectomy microsomes isolated from liver of male rats show a greater rise in incorporating ability than those from liver of female rats, and maintain it longer. 3. Most of the increased incorporation observed in the in vitro system soon after adrenalectomy of the rat, and most of the decreased incorporation observed in rats adrenalectomized for some time, results from alterations in the microsomes which change their ability to incorporate activated amino acids into proteins. 4. Treatment of rats with cortisol acetate results in an increase in the ability of liver microsomes to incorporate amino acid into protein. This heightened incorporating ability is probably a secondary result of the breakdown of extrahepatic tissue protein which is stimulated by cortisol. 5. Somewhat similar responses to acute adrenalectomy and to treatment with cortisol were found in hypophysectomized rats. 6. The protein anabolic response of adrenalectomized rats to treatment with insulin, and of adrenalectomized-hypophysectomized rats to treatment with insulin or growth hormone, is greater than that shown by rats which possess adrenal glands.


1993 ◽  
Vol 294 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
P K Srivastava ◽  
D J Waxman

The sex-dependent expression and growth hormone (GH) regulation of rat liver glutathione S-transferase (GST) was examined using oligonucleotide probes that distinguish between closely related class Alpha (Ya1, Ya2, Yc) and class Mu (Yb1, Yb2, Yb3) GST mRNAs [Waxman, Sundseth, Srivastava and Lapenson (1992) Cancer Res. 52, 5797-5802]. Northern-blot analysis revealed that the steady-state levels of GST Ya1, Yb1 and Yb2 mRNAs are 2.5-3-fold higher in male as compared with female rat liver. In contrast, GST Yc and Ya2 mRNAs were expressed at a 2-3-fold higher level in female rat liver. Microsomal GST mRNA did not exhibit significant sex-dependent differences in rat liver. Treatment of male rats with GH by continuous infusion suppressed expression of the male-dominant GST Ya1, Yb1 and Yb2 mRNAs to levels at or below those found in female rat liver. This suppressive effect of GH was liver-specific, insofar as GH treatment did not alter kidney GST Ya1 mRNA levels. Hypophysectomy increased expression of the male-dominant GSTs, particularly in female rats (e.g. 8-fold elevation of GST Ya1 mRNA). GST Yc mRNA was increased approx. 2-fold in hypophysectomized males, indicating that this mRNA is subject to negative regulation by one or more pituitary-dependent factors. Continuous GH treatment of the hypophysectomized rats suppressed the expression of mRNA of GSTs Ya1, Yb1 and Yb2 when given as a continuous infusion, but not when given by an intermittent (twice daily) GH-injection schedule. Combination of continuous exposure to GH with thyroxine treatment resulted in a more complete suppression of GSTs Ya1, Yb1 and Yb2. In contrast, thyroxine increased the expression of GST Yc in hypophysectomized rats. These studies establish that several Alpha and Mu class GSTs are expressed in a sex-dependent fashion in adult rat liver, where they are regulated by multiple pituitary-dependent hormones through pretranslational mechanisms.


1977 ◽  
Vol 166 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
I N H White ◽  
U Muller-Eberhard

1. 19-Nor-17alpha-pregna-1,3,5(10)-trien-20-yne-3,17-diol (ethynyloestradiol) or 17beta-hydroxy-19-nor-17alpha-pregn-4-en-20-yn-3-one (norethindrone) but not 17alpha-ethyl-17beta-hydroxy-19-norandrost-4-en-3-one (norethandrolone) caused a time-dependent loss of cytochrome P-450 when incubated in vitro with rat liver microsomal fractions and NADPH-generating systems. 2. The enzyme system catalysing the norethindrone-mediated loss of cytochrome P-450 had many characteristics of the microsomal mixed-function oxidases. It required NADPH and air, and was inhibited by Co. However, it was unaffected by 1 mM-compound SKF 525A. 3. In microsomal fractions from phenobarbitone-pretreated rats the norethindrone-mediated loss of cytochrome P-450 was increased relative to controls. The norethindrone-mediated cytochrome P-450 loss was less pronounced when the animals were pretreated with 3beta-hydroxy-pregn-5-en-2-one 16alpha-carbonitrile (pregnenolone 16alpha-carbonitrile). Pretreatment with 3-methylcholanthrene rendered the animals resistant to the norethindrone effect. 4. Administration in vivo [100mg/kg, intraperitoneally] of norethindrone or ethinyl oestradiol also produced a time-dependent loss of liver cytochrome P-450. Norethandrolone had a similar, though much less-marked, effect. All three steroids lead to an induction of 5-aminolaevulinate synthase and an accumulation of porphyrins in the liver. 5. The loss of cytochrome P-450 and the accumulation of porphyrins in the liver 2 h after the administration of norethindrone to female rats was similar to that seen in males. 6. Rats pretreated with phenobarbitone and given norethindrone or ethynyloestradiol (100mg/kg, intraperitoneally) formed green pigments in their livers. These had characteristics similar to the green pigments produced in the livers of rats after the administration of 2-allyl-2-isopropylacetamide. No green pigments could be extracted from the livers of control rats or those given norethandrolone, oestradiol or progesterone.


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