Abstract
Rat liver microsomes and isolated rat hepatocytes metabolized bromobenzene to watersoluble and protein-bound metabolites. The latter fraction—which normally accounted for 2–5% of the total products—was slightly increased when 1,2-epoxy-3,3,3-trichloropropane, an inhibitor of microsomal epoxide hydrase, was added to the microsomal incubate. The presence of reduced glutathione (GSH), on the other hand, caused an almost complete inhibition of the formation of protein-bound metabolites from bromobenzene in microsomes. The rates of bromobenzene metabolism were similar in liver microsomes and hepatocytes, and increased severalfold after phenobarbital pretreatment of the rats. Metyrapone and SKF 525-A were inhibitory in both systems. Bromobenzene metabolism in hepatocytes isolated from phenobarbital-treated rats was associated with a rapid and marked decrease in the level of intracellular GSH. When the cells were incubated in a complete medium, however, the decrease in GSH leveled off at about 40% of the original concentration and there was no evidence of any accelerated rate of cell death even when the incubation with bromobenzene was prolonged to 10 h. This was most probably due to resynthesis of GSH by the hepatocytes, which partly compensated for the loss of this thiol associated with bromobenzene metabolism. Accordingly, in a deficient medium (lacking amino acids), the cytotoxic effect of bromobenzene metabolism was pronounced—less than 5% of the zerotime level of GSH and only 25% cell viability remaining after 5 h of incubation. It is concluded that the intracellular level of GSH is of major importance in regard to the cytotoxic effect of bromobenzene metabolism and that hepatocytes incubated in a complete medium are protected against toxicity by their ability to resynthesize this thiol.
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