Abstract
An experimental model of porphyria cutanea tarda, consisting of depressed hepatic uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase (URO-D) activity and accumulation of highly carboxylated porphyrins in the liver, was produced in 3 weeks in Fischer 344 rats. A single administration of a polychlorinated biphenyl mixture (Aroclor 1254) to iron-loaded female rats maintained continuously on δ-aminolevulinic acid supplemented drinking water produced the porphyric state. Without iron loading, URO-D activity appeared slightly less inhibited (33% of normal vs 23% of normal) but porphyrin accumulation was dramatically less (70 vs 605 μg porphyrin/g liver). Similar treatment in male rats produced URO-D activities of 54 and 70% of normal with and without iron loading, respectively, and porphyrin concentrations of 76 and 17 μg/g. When hexachlorobenzene was substituted for Aroclor 1254 treatment in female rats, URO-D activity was 61 and 69% of normal (with and without iron loading, respectively) and liver porphyrin concentrations were 96 and 25 μg/g, respectively. Hexachlorobenzene did not produce significant porphyric effects in male rats. Aroclor 1254 induced CYP1A to a greater extent in females than in males and to a greater extent than hexachlorobenzene, which showed a greater propensity to induce CYP2B. Overall correlation between URO-D activity depression and porphyrin accumulation was highest when fitted to an exponential curve, indicating the importance of the extreme of the depression URO-D activity in evoking experimental porphyria cutanea tarda.
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