TY - JOUR
T1 - Killing of cultured hepatocytes by the mixed-function oxidation of ethoxycoumarin
AU - Gerson, Ronald J.
AU - Serroni, Ada
AU - Gilfor, Donna
AU - Ellen, Jonathan M.
AU - Farber, John L.
N1 - Funding Information:
The study of such hepatotoxins as carbon tetrachloride \[1\],b romobenzene \[2\]a nd acetaminophen \[2\]h as provided considerable insight into the mechanisms whereby chemicals can injure cells. A unifying concept derived from the early studies of toxic liver necrosis is the dependence of liver cell injury on the metabolism of the particular hepatotoxin. This conclusion served to focus subsequent studies on the mechanisms coupling metabolism of hepatotoxic chemicals to the consequent development of lethal cell injury. The most commonly studied hepatotoxic chemicals are typically metabolized by cytochrome P-450-dependent mixed-function oxidation. For over a decade now, the mechanism generally assumed to couple mixed-function oxidation to liver cell injury has been the formation of an electrophilic and, therefore, reactive intermediate metabolite that can, in turn, interact with cellular macromolecules \[2\].T he covalent binding of such reactive electrophiles to critical cellular macromolecules has been invoked repeatedly to account for the liver cell injury resulting from the metabolism of a great many hepatotoxic chemicals as well as other chemicals with differing * This work was supported by Grant AM-31114 from the National Institutes of Health.
PY - 1986/12/1
Y1 - 1986/12/1
N2 - Ethoxycoumarin is metabolized by mixed-function oxidation to give 7-hydroxycoumarin (umbelliferone) and acetaldehyde, without formation of an intermediate electrophile. Ethoxycoumarin was found, nevertheless, to injure cultured rat hepatocytes. Male hepatocytes were more sensitive than female to ethoxycoumarin. Phenobarbital increased cell killing, and SKF 525A, an inhibitor of ethoxycoumarin metabolism, prevented it. Neither umbelliferone nor acetaldehyde were toxic. Cellular glutathione decreased and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) accumulated in the culture medium. Sulfhydryl reagents prevented the cell killing without inhibiting metabolism. Lipid peroxidation was detected prior to evidence of cell death, and the antioxidant N,N′-diphenyl-phenylenediamine prevented both the lipid peroxidation and cell killing without inhibiting metabolism. Inhibition of glutathione reductase with 1,3-bis(chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea potentiated the cell killing without increasing metabolism. Pretreatment of the cells with the ferric iron chelator deferoxamine reduced cell killing, again without inhibiting metabolism. Ferric chloride restored the sensitivity of deferoxamine-pretreated hepatocytes to ethoxycoumarin. These data define a new experimental model in which lethal liver cell injury is dependent on the metabolism of ethoxycoumarin but unrelated to its two known metabolites. Anoxidative stress accompanying the cytochrome P-450-dependent metabolism of ethoxycoumarin is proposed as the mechanism coupling metabolism to lethal cell injury.
AB - Ethoxycoumarin is metabolized by mixed-function oxidation to give 7-hydroxycoumarin (umbelliferone) and acetaldehyde, without formation of an intermediate electrophile. Ethoxycoumarin was found, nevertheless, to injure cultured rat hepatocytes. Male hepatocytes were more sensitive than female to ethoxycoumarin. Phenobarbital increased cell killing, and SKF 525A, an inhibitor of ethoxycoumarin metabolism, prevented it. Neither umbelliferone nor acetaldehyde were toxic. Cellular glutathione decreased and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) accumulated in the culture medium. Sulfhydryl reagents prevented the cell killing without inhibiting metabolism. Lipid peroxidation was detected prior to evidence of cell death, and the antioxidant N,N′-diphenyl-phenylenediamine prevented both the lipid peroxidation and cell killing without inhibiting metabolism. Inhibition of glutathione reductase with 1,3-bis(chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea potentiated the cell killing without increasing metabolism. Pretreatment of the cells with the ferric iron chelator deferoxamine reduced cell killing, again without inhibiting metabolism. Ferric chloride restored the sensitivity of deferoxamine-pretreated hepatocytes to ethoxycoumarin. These data define a new experimental model in which lethal liver cell injury is dependent on the metabolism of ethoxycoumarin but unrelated to its two known metabolites. Anoxidative stress accompanying the cytochrome P-450-dependent metabolism of ethoxycoumarin is proposed as the mechanism coupling metabolism to lethal cell injury.
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U2 - 10.1016/0006-2952(86)90711-2
DO - 10.1016/0006-2952(86)90711-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 3790155
AN - SCOPUS:0023025785
SN - 0006-2952
VL - 35
SP - 4311
EP - 4319
JO - Biochemical Pharmacology
JF - Biochemical Pharmacology
IS - 23
ER -