Carbon monoxide-mediated alterations in paracellular permeability and vesicular transport in acetaminophen-treated perfused rat liver
Open Access
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hepatology
- Vol. 30 (1) , 160-168
- https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.510300110
Abstract
This study aimed to examine whether acetaminophen (AAP), an anti-inflammatory agent producing hepatocellular damages with its overdose, evokes hepatocellular dysfunction through mechanisms involving carbon monoxide (CO) generated by heme oxygenase (HO). In perfused rat livers, CO and bilirubin were determined in venous perfusate and bile samples as indices of heme degradation. Biliary excretion of transportally injected horseradish peroxidase was also determined to assess paracellular junctional permeability and vesicular transport across hepatocytes. AAP at 20 mmol/L induced a transient choleresis, followed by a reduction of bile output. Under these circumstances, the release of CO and bilirubin IXα, terminal products of the HO-mediated heme degradation, became 2.5-fold greater than the control. The rate of CO production appeared stoichiometric to the degradation rate of microsomal cytochrome P-450. Mechanisms for the AAP-induced cholestasis involved an increase in the junctional permeability that coincided with a reduction of vesicular transport across hepatocytes. Clotrimazole, a cytochrome P-450 inhibitor, or zinc protoporphyrin IX, an HO inhibitor, but not copper protoporphyrin IX, which did not inhibit HO, attenuated these AAP-induced changes. Furthermore, administration of CO at concentrations comparable with those induced by AAP elicited a marked elevation of the paracellular junctional permeability concurrent with a reduction of transcellular vesicular transport, mimicking effects of the AAP administration. Thus, CO serves as a putative regulator of hepatocellular function that is overproduced through acute heme degradation during xenobiotic transformationKeywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Carbon monoxide as a regulator of bile canalicular contractility in cultured rat hepatocytesHepatology, 1998
- Distribution of heme oxygenase isoforms in rat liver. Topographic basis for carbon monoxide-mediated microvascular relaxation.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1998
- Carbon monoxide: an endogenous modulator of sinusoidal tone in the perfused rat liver.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1995
- Bilirubin Is Oxidized in Rats Treated with Endotoxin and Acts as a Physiological Antioxidant Synergistically with Ascorbic Acid in VivoBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1995
- Smooth muscle cell-derived carbon monoxide is a regulator of vascular cGMP.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Carbon Monoxide as an Endogenous Modulator of Hepatic Vascular PerfusionBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1994
- Carbon Monoxide: a Putative Neural MessengerScience, 1993
- Rat liver cytochrome P-450b, P-420b, and P-420c are degraded to biliverdin by heme oxygenaseArchives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 1988
- Suicidal Destruction of Cytochrome P-450 During Oxidative Drug MetabolismAnnual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1983
- Metabolic Regulation of Heme Catabolism and Bilirubin Production. I. HORMONAL CONTROL OF HEPATIC HEME OXYGENASE ACTIVITYJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972