Abstract

Two cytochromes P450 (PB1 and PB2) have been isolated from the livers of rats treated with phenobarbital. PB2 (mol. wt. 53 500) is novel and is the first example of a phenobarbital-inducible enzyme with a Soret peak at 447 nm. Using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, some immunochemical and structural similarities were observed between these cytochromes. PB1 and PB2 were induced by phenobarbital, Aroclor 1254, trans-stilbene oxide and to a lesser extent by isosafrole. Immunohistochemical localization of these proteins in the liver of untreated rats showed PB1 to be localized in a large area and PB2 in a narrow range of cells around the central vein. This demonstrates the heterogeneity of hepatocytes even within the centrilobular area and indicates that the synthesis of these two proteins is regulated differently although both are induced by the same agent, phenobarbital. Two 3-methylcholanthrene inducible cytochromes MC1 (mol. wt. 54 500) and MC2 (mol. wt. 57 000) were present at very low levels, MC2 mostly in the periportal region but also diffusely distributed throughout the lobule including some centrilobular cells, MC1 concentrated in the centrilobular region. The localization of two major groups of glutathione transferases (GST's) was also different. 'C' type proteins (Yb Yb') and microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EH), were concentrated around the central vein, whereas the 'B' type proteins (Ya Yc) and cytochrome P450 reductase were distributed in a larger area of this region. Thus, the localization was different for some members of the same enzyme family, whilst similarities in the localization existed across the border of the families: (i) PB2, MC1, EH and GST 'C' type proteins were concentrated in a narrow area around the central vein; (ii) PB1 and GST 'B' type proteins occupied a large centrilobular area; (iii) MC2 levels were very low, predominantly periportal but also diffusely distributed throughout the lobule. Treatment of the animals with inducers increased the staining intensity and in several cases extended the areas of cells containing these proteins over the adjacent zone without fundamentally altering their distributions. However, treatment with beta-naphthoflavone led to a shift of MC1 to the periportal area. This suggests that the expression of these proteins in certain cells is not an irreversible quality of differentiation but depends on the degree of suppression and derepression of regulatory components.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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