Abstract

Differences in cofactor (NADPH and UDP-glucuronic acid) supply for various processes of biotransformation were studied by investigating the interrelations between glucose production (gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis) and drug ( p-nitrophenol, aminopyrine, phenolphthalein) biotransformation (hydroxylation and conjugation) in isolated murine hepatocytes. In glycogen-depleted hepatocytes prepared from animals fasted for 48 h (i) p-nitrophenol conjugation was decreased by 80% compared to the fed control, while aminopyrine oxidation was unaltered, (ii) addition of glucose or gluconeogenic substrates failed to increase the rate of p-nitrophenol conjugation, while the rate of p-nitrophenol and also aminopyrine oxidation was increased and (iii) gluconeogenesis was inhibited by 80% by aminopyrine oxidation: it was moderately decreased by p-nitrophenol oxidation and conjugation and remained unchanged by phenolphthalein conjugation. In hepatocytes prepared from fed mice (i) p-nitrophenol conjugation was independent of the extracellular glucose concentration, (ii) it was linked to the consumption of glycogen - addition of fructose inhibited p-nitrophenol glucuronidation only, while sulfation was unaltered and (iii) p-nitrophenol oxidation was not detectable: aminopyrine oxidation was not affected by fructose addition. It is suggested that UDP-glucuronic acid for glucuronidation derives predominantly from glycogen, while the NADPH generation for mixed function oxidation is linked to glucose uptake and / or gluconeogenesis in the liver.

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