Abstract

Acetaminophen (APAP) nephrotoxicity has been observed both in humans and research animals. Our recent investigations have focused on the possible involvement of glutathione-derived APAP metabolites in APAP nephrotoxicity and have demonstrated that administration of acetaminophen-cysteine (APAP-CYS) potentiated APAP-induced renal injury with no effects on APAP-induced liver injury. Additionally, APAP-CYS treatment alone resulted in a dose-responsive renal GSH depletion. This APAP-CYS-induced renal GSH depletion could interfere with intrarenal detoxification of APAP or its toxic metabolite N-acetyl- p-benzoquinoneimine (NAPQI) and may be the mechanism responsible for the potentiation of APAP nephrotoxicity. Renal-specific GSH depletion has been demonstrated in mice and rats following administration of amino acid γ-glutamyl acceptor substrates for γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (γ-GT). The present study sought to determine if APAP-CYS-induced renal glutathione depletion is the result of disruption of the γ-glutamyl cycle through interaction with γ-GT. The results confirmed that APAP-CYS-induced renal GSH depletion was antagonized by the γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (γ-GT) inhibitor acivicin. In vitro analysis demonstrated that APAP-CYS is a γ-glutamyl acceptor for both murine and bovine renal γ-GT. Analysis of urine from mice pretreated with acivicin and then treated with APAP, APAP-CYS, or acetaminophen-glutathione identified a γ-glutamyl-cysteinyl-acetaminophen metabolite. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that APAP-CYS contributes to APAP nephrotoxicity by depletion of renal GSH stores through interaction with the γ-glutamyl cycle.

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